Pentacyclic adenine: a versatile and exceptionally bright fluorescent DNA base analogue.
Mattias BoodAnders Foller FüchtbauerMoa S WranneJong Jin RoSangamesh SarangamathAfaf Helmy El-SagheerDéborah L M RupertRachel S FisherSteven W MagennisAnita C JonesFredrik HöökTom BrownByeang Hyean KimAnders DahlénL Marcus WilhelmssonMorten GrøtliPublished in: Chemical science (2018)
Emissive base analogs are powerful tools for probing nucleic acids at the molecular level. Herein we describe the development and thorough characterization of pentacyclic adenine (pA), a versatile base analog with exceptional fluorescence properties. When incorporated into DNA, pA pairs selectively with thymine without perturbing the B-form structure and is among the brightest nucleobase analogs reported so far. Together with the recently established base analog acceptor qAnitro, pA allows accurate distance and orientation determination via Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) measurements. The high brightness at emission wavelengths above 400 nm also makes it suitable for fluorescence microscopy, as demonstrated by imaging of single liposomal constructs coated with cholesterol-anchored pA-dsDNA, using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy. Finally, pA is also highly promising for two-photon excitation at 780 nm, with a brightness (5.3 GM) that is unprecedented for a base analog.
Keyphrases
- energy transfer
- single molecule
- quantum dots
- high resolution
- living cells
- circulating tumor
- photodynamic therapy
- cell free
- molecular docking
- high throughput
- high speed
- optical coherence tomography
- label free
- molecular dynamics simulations
- mass spectrometry
- solid phase extraction
- low density lipoprotein
- single cell
- nucleic acid