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A non-FRET DNA reporter that changes fluorescence colour upon nuclease digestion.

Soonwoo HongJada N WalkerAaron T LuongJonathan MathewsSamuel W J ShieldsYu-An KuoYuan-I ChenTrung Duc NguyenYujie HeAnh-Thu NguyenMadhav L GhimireMin Jun KimJennifer S BrodbeltHsin-Chin Yeh
Published in: Nature nanotechnology (2024)
Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) reporters are commonly used in the final stages of nucleic acid amplification tests to indicate the presence of nucleic acid targets, where fluorescence is restored by nucleases that cleave the FRET reporters. However, the need for dual labelling and purification during manufacturing contributes to the high cost of FRET reporters. Here we demonstrate a low-cost silver nanocluster reporter that does not rely on FRET as the on/off switching mechanism, but rather on a cluster transformation process that leads to fluorescence color change upon nuclease digestion. Notably, a 90 nm red shift in emission is observed upon reporter cleavage, a result unattainable by a simple donor-quencher FRET reporter. Electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry results suggest that the stoichiometric change of the silver nanoclusters from Ag 13 (in the intact DNA host) to Ag 10 (in the fragments) is probably responsible for the emission colour change observed after reporter digestion. Our results demonstrate that DNA-templated silver nanocluster probes can be versatile reporters for detecting nuclease activities and provide insights into the interactions between nucleases and metallo-DNA nanomaterials.
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