While high resolution melting analysis offers the ability to differentiate between single nucleotide polymorphisms in a heterogeneous population, mutant allele amplification bias can increase its ability to detect alleles present at relatively low percentages within a sample. This protocol describes improvements that improve the sensitivity of high resolution melting analysis.
Despite decades of eradication efforts, malaria remains a global burden. Recent renewed interest in regional elimination and global eradication has been accompanied by increased genomic information about Plasmodium parasite species responsible for malaria, including characteristics of geographical populations as well as variations associated with reduced susceptibility to anti-malarial drugs.
One common genetic variation, single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), offers attractive targets for parasite genotyping. These markers are useful not only for tracking drug resistance markers but also for tracking parasite populations using markers not under drug or other selective pressures.
SNP genotyping methods offer the ability to track drug resistance as well as to fingerprint individual parasites for population surveillance, particularly in response to malaria control efforts in regions nearing elimination status.
While informative SNPs have been identified that are agnostic to specific genotyping technologies, high-resolution melting (HRM) analysis is particularly suited to field-based studies. Compared to standard fluorescent-probe based methods that require individual SNPs in a single labeled probe and offer at best 10% sensitivity to detect SNPs in samples that contain multiple genomes (polygenomic), HRM offers 2-5% sensitivity. Modifications to HRM, such as blocked probes and asymmetric primer concentrations as well as optimization of amplification annealing temperatures to bias PCR towards amplification of the minor allele, further increase the sensitivity of HRM. While the sensitivity improvement depends on the specific assay, we have increased detection sensitivities to less than 1% of the minor allele.
In regions approaching malaria eradication, early detection of emerging or imported drug resistance is essential for prompt response. Similarly, the ability to detect polygenomic infections and differentiate imported parasite types from cryptic local reservoirs can inform control programs.
This manuscript describes modifications to high resolution melting technology that further increase its sensitivity to identify polygenomic infections in patient samples.
Despite renewed interest in malaria control and eradication, malaria remains a worldwide burden, with nearly half of the world’s population at risk of infection and more than 550,000 deaths annually, particularly children in sub-Saharan Africa1.
These new control and eradication programs have been supported by the genomic renaissance, with large numbers of malaria parasites sequenced and analyzed for mutations associated with reduced drug sensitivity, increased virulence, and for population characteristics2,3. Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are among the most commonly identified genetic variants 4-7.
Portable SNP genotyping methods offer on-site and real-time population surveillance and tracking8. In addition to fingerprinting individual parasites, the ‘molecular barcode’ is also used to detect dramatic temporal shifts in allele frequency as well as variance effective population size and complexity of infection9.
While this set of informative SNPs is easily adapted to many genotyping platforms, high resolution melting (HRM) analysis is particularly well-suited to field-based studies, where sensitive and simple operation and detection of novel mutations at low costs compared to sequencing and other approaches are attractive in resource-poor settings.
HRM starts with standard polymerase chain reaction (PCR) that incorporates a fluorescent dye. Post-PCR melting analysis determines the peak amplicon melting temperature; a single SNP difference in a short amplicon can result in substantial peak melting temperature (Tm) differences.
Several refinements to this method offer better genotyping resolution to differentiate SNPs including class IV (A-T) SNPs, and detect minor mutant alleles in samples with multiple alleles present (polygenomic infections). First, the assays incorporate short probes centered over the SNP region in addition to forward and reverse primers that are present at different concentrations. These blocked probes are not amplified during PCR, but bind to the strand produced in excess due to asymmetric primer concentrations that increase production of the probe-template product. These separate double-stranded amplicons consisting of probe bound to the excess template strand are ~20-30 bp; their significantly decreased length compared to the entire amplicon (80-150 bp) lead to much larger Tm differences associated with single or multiple base probe-template mismatches10.
Second, mutant allele amplification bias (MAAB) lowers the reaction annealing temperature to bias the reaction towards mutant alleles present at low ratios in polygenomic infections. The annealing temperature is set between the Tms of perfectly matched (wild-type) and mismatched (mutant) probes. At this temperature, the binding of the wild-type allele is stable enough that amplification is hindered compared to its mismatch equivalent, thus biasing the amplification towards the mutant allele when both are present in a single sample10.
With these HRM refinements, this technology has allowed tracking of origins and identity of parasites associated with epidemic infections in South America11 and detection of new mutations, differentiation of multiple SNPs located immediately next to each other in sequence, and mutations present in less than 1% of the alleles in polygenomic samples10.
Increased sensitivity is particularly important in regions approaching pre-elimination status and those at risk for emerging drug resistance. The ability to quickly and easily identify imported parasites and SNPs associated with reduced sensitivity on-site informs surveillance efforts and control programs about the effectiveness of their implementations and identifies hotspots for increased malaria eradication and elimination efforts. This protocol describes the methods for blocked-probe-based and MAAB for increased HRM genotyping sensitivity.
Note: This protocol includes volumes and concentrations for 96-well plate, 8-tube strips, and capillary-based systems (10 µl reaction volume); however, HRM can also be performed in 384-well plate-based systems with a 5 µl reaction volume by scaling all volumes correspondingly. The range of detection for most systems is 10 pg to 10 ng template DNA.
1. Prepare Templates
2. PCR Amplification
3. HRM Analysis
Data can be visualized in several different ways, depending on the analysis software and instrument. Typically, a plot of the negative derivative of normalized fluorescence with respect to temperature (–dF/dT) against temperature results is most straightforward for visualizing melting peaks and determining genotypes.
A full melting window (40°C–80°C) will result in both amplicon and probe melting regions. Figure 1 shows an example of normalized melting peaks for both regions. Setting the analysis window to just the probe region results in clear differentiation of peaks corresponding to specific SNPs (Figure 2).
Probe-based analysis clearly shows the presence of both alleles as individual peaks with melting temperatures that match homozygous SNP peaks (Figure 3).
Figure 4 shows that progressively reducing the annealing temperature during amplification (MAAB) results in a bias towards the mutant allele (left-side peak) (Figure 4A), resulting in increased sensitivity for the mutant allele in a population of mixed alleles (Figure 4B).
Figure 1. Probe and amplicon melting regions. Plotting the negative derivative of the normalized fluorescence with respect to temperature over a wide melting window results in both probe (lower temperature) and amplicon melting peaks that can be analyzed. (Adapted from Daniels et al. DOI: 10.1128/AAC.05737-11) Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. Probe melting peaks. Perfect matches (typically wild-type alleles) result in higher melting peaks (red), while SNP mismatches have lower melting temperatures (grey). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. Polygenomic melting peaks. When both alleles are present in a sample, probe-based HRM analysis represents both alleles as two-peak curves (orange) with peaks that match single-allele samples (red and grey). (Adapted from Daniels et al. DOI: 10.1128/AAC.05737-11) Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4. Mutant allele amplification bias (MAAB). A. Progressively lowering the amplification annealing temperature biases the melting peak reaction towards peak corresponding to the mutant (lower temperature) allele in a polygenomic or polyallelic sample. B. MAAB results in HRM sensitivity to detect minor alleles present at less than 1% in polygenomic or polyallelic samples. (Part B adapted from Daniels et al. DOI: 10.1128/AAC.05737-11) Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Table 1. Set-up of probe-based high resolution melting amplification reactions.
Component | Volume per reaction (96-well plate and capillary tube) | Volume per reaction (384-well plate) | Final concentration |
HRM Master Mix | 4–5 µl | 2-2.5 µl | 1 x |
10 x Excess primer | 1 µl | 0.5 µl | 0.50 µM |
10 x Other primer | 1 µl | 0.5µl | 0.1 µM |
10x Probe | 1 µl | 0.5 µl | 0.40 µM |
PCR-grade water | 1–2 µl | 0.5-1 µl | |
Template DNA | 1 µl | 0.5 µl | 0.01-10 ng/µl |
10 µl | 5 µl |
Table 2. Standard high resolution melting amplification conditions.
Temperature | Time | |
Hold | 95 °C | 120 sec |
45 cycles | 95 °C | 30 sec |
68 °C* | 30 sec | |
1 cycle | 95 °C | 30 sec |
28 °C | 30 sec |
* this temperature is amplicon-dependent
Table 3. Amplification conditions for mutant allele amplification bias.
Temperature | Time | Cycles | Ramp rate | Acquisition mode | Analysis mode | |
Denature | 95 °C | 30 sec | 1 | 20 | None | None |
Cycle | 95 °C | 2 sec | 55 | 20 | None | Quantification |
56 °C* | 15 sec | 20 | Single | |||
Melt | 40 °C | 0 sec | 0.3 | None | None | |
45 °C* | 0 sec | Continous | Melt | |||
90 °C* | 0 sec |
* this temperature is amplicon-dependent and will be reduced when performing MAAB
Continous HRM is a post-PCR analysis step; therefore, sample and assay setup is similar to standard PCR protocols, with the additional incorporation of a fluorescent intercalating dye used to track the transition from double-stranded to single-stranded DNA during the high-resolution melting step. The single most important factor for successful HRM analysis is a robust PCR product. Assay design is key, and several tools optimized for HRM assay design are available commercially and online13. Amplicon lengths of 80-150 base pairs with accompanying ~20 base pair blocked probes centered over the SNP or SNPs of interest work best to differentiate SNPs as well as haplotypes of multiple SNPs within the probe region. Probes can be blocked using either a 3’ C3 spacer or a 2 base pair mismatch at the 3’ end, which prevent extension during amplification. Probes can be designed to match the Watson or Crick template strand; the choice depends on empirical testing to determine which probe design produces acceptable melting peaks. Excess forward or reverse primers are used to produce single-stranded amplification product that anneals to the blocked probes. If the probe contains the forward strand sequence, then reverse primer is used in excess, typically in a 1:5 ratio, and vice-versa for probes that match the reverse strand.
Similarly, HRM works best with sufficient and robust PCR product. PCR reaction optimization requires gradient PCR and agarose gels or Bioanalyzer analysis to determine optimal annealing temperatures. Template concentration can be increased using methods such as pre-amplification, biased multiplexed amplification of all targets using low primer concentration and cycle numbers to increase the template concentration13.
Only a handful of instruments are compatible with MAAB. The thermal properties of the glass capillaries tubes used in these systems facilitate this method. The small interior diameter of the capillaries as well as the rapid heat transfer through glass offer more stringent temperature control than standard PCR plasticware, which has slower transition rates between annealing and denaturation cycles due to the thermal insulating properties of the plastics. With this method, detection sensitivities can be reduced from 2-5% to less than 1% of a mutant allele in a mixture of wild-type and mutant alleles10.
HRM is a facile, efficient, and economical tool for SNP genotyping in a variety of settings and numerous applications, from infectious disease surveillance to scanning for cancer gene variants. Several other instruments, such as the Roche Nano and LightCycler systems (480 and 96) as well as the Eco Real-time PCR system offer HRM in addition to standard amplification, real-time, and copy-number functionality. Using higher-throughput machines, HRM barcoding costs less than $0.50 per assay in our hands, including all reagents and consumables.
In the context described here, field-based applications allow real-time population surveillance for changes associated with malaria control efforts, including reduced population diversity, detection of imported parasite types, and the appearance and spread of SNPs associated with reduced drug sensitivity. Refinements to the method offer additional sensitivity useful for informing progress towards malaria elimination and eradication.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors thank the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation for its support of technology development and training.
LightScanner Master Mix | BioFire Defense | HRLS-ASY-0003 | |
Light mineral oil | Sigma | M5904 | for BioFire Defense plate-based HRM systems |
TE | Teknova | T0226 | |
Te | Teknova | T0221 | TE buffer with reduced EDTA |
PCR grade water | Teknova | W3330 | |
Plasmodium falciparum standards | MR4 | MRA-151, 156, 205, 330 | MR4.org offers free genomic DNA |
Light Scanner Primer Design Software | BioFire Defense | commercial sofware for HRM assay design | |
LightCycler 480 High Resolution Melting Master Mix | Roche | 4909631001 | For use in LightCycler-480, -96, and nano. 2x concentration |
Bioanalyzer | Agilent | G2938A | Agilent 2100 bioanalyzer |
LightCycler 2.0 | Roche | 3531414001 | Capillary-based system for MAAB |
LightCycler Nano | Roche | 6407773001 | Strip tube-based HRM and amplification |
LightCycler 96 | Roche | 5815916001 | Strip-tube and plate-based HRM and amplification |
LightCycler 480 | Roche | 5015278001 | plate-based HRM (96 and 384-well plates) and amplification |
LightScanner-96 | BioFire Defense | LSCN-ASY-0011 | plate-based HRM (96-well) |
LightScanner-384 | BioFire Defense | LSCN-ASY-0001 | plate-based HRM (96-well) |
96-well plates | Roche | 4729692001 | 96-well plates for HRM (LightCycler |
384-well plates | Roche | 4729749001 | 384-well plates for HRM (LightCycler) |
96-well plates | Bio-Rad | HSP-9665 | 96-well plates for HRM (LightScanner) |
384-well plates | Bio-Rad | HSP-3865 | 384-well plates for HRM (LightScanner) |
LightCycler 8-Tube Strips (clear) | Roche | 6327672001 | strip tubes for HRM (Light Cycler 96 and Light Cycler Nano) |
LightCycler Capillaries (20 μl) | Roche | 4929292001 | capillaries for HRM |
Optical plate seals | Roche | 4729757001 | other brands also work |