Structure-Informed Design of an Ultra Bright RNA-activated Fluorophore.
John S SchneeklothMo YangPeri PrestwoodLuiz PassalacquaSumirtha BalaratnamChristopher FullenkampWinston ArneyKevin M WeeksAdrian Ferre-D'AmarePublished in: Research square (2024)
Fluorogenic RNAs such as the Mango aptamers are uniquely powerful tools for imaging RNA. A central challenge has been to develop brighter, more specific, and higher affinity aptamer-ligand systems for cellular imaging. Here, we report an ultra-bright fluorophore for the Mango II system discovered using a structure-informed, fragment-based small molecule microarray approach. The new dye, Structure informed, Array-enabled LigAnD 1 (SALAD1) exhibits 3.5-fold brighter fluorescence than TO1-Biotin and subnanomolar aptamer affinity. Improved performance comes solely from alteration of dye-RNA interactions, without alteration of the chromophore itself. Multiple high-resolution structures reveal a unique and specific binding mode for the new dye resulting from improved pocket occupancy, a more defined binding pose, and a novel bonding interaction with potassium. The dye notably improves in-cell confocal RNA imaging. This work provides both introduces a new RNA-activated fluorophore and also a powerful demonstration of how to leverage fragment-based ligand discovery against RNA targets.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- small molecule
- nucleic acid
- mass spectrometry
- highly efficient
- gold nanoparticles
- single cell
- fluorescent probe
- gene expression
- high throughput
- tandem mass spectrometry
- genome wide
- single molecule
- protein protein
- quantum dots
- fluorescence imaging
- optical coherence tomography
- liquid chromatography
- energy transfer