Bioconjug Chem, 2008, 19(10):1995-2007

Perylene attached to 2′-amino-LNA: Synthesis, incorporation into oligonucleotides, and remarkable fluorescence properties in vitro and in cell culture

During recent years, fluorescently labeled oligonucleotides have been extensively investigated within diagnostic approaches. Among a large variety of available fluorochromes, the polyaromatic hydrocarbon perylene is an object of increasing interest due to its high fluorescence quantum yield, long-wave emission compared to widely used pyrene, and photostability. These properties make perylene an attractive label for fluorescence-based detection in vitro and in vivo. Herein, the synthesis of 2′-N-(perylen-3-yl)carbonyl-2′- amino-LNA monomer X and its incorporation into oligonucleotides is described. Modification X induces high thermal stability of DNA:DNA and DNA:RNA duplexes, high Watson-Crick mismatch selectivity, red-shifted fluorescence emission compared to pyrene, and high fluorescence quantum yields. The thermal denaturation temperatures of duplexes involving two modified strands are remarkably higher than those for double-stranded DNAs containing modification X in only one strand, suggesting interstrand communication between perylene moieties in the studied 'zipper' motifs. Fluorescence of single-stranded oligonucleotides having three monomers X is quenched compared to modified monomer (quantum yields ΦF= 0.03-0.04 and 0.67, respectively). However, hybridization to DNA/RNA complements leads to ΦF increase of up to 0.20-0.25. We explain it by orientation of the fluorochrome attached to the 2′-position of 2′-amino-LNA in the minor groove of the nucleic acid duplexes, thus protecting perylene fluorescence from quenching with nucleobases or from the environment. At the same time, the presence of a single mismatch in DNA or RNA targets results in up to 8-fold decreased fluorescence intensity of the duplex. Thus, distortion of the duplex geometry caused by even one mismatched nucleotide induces remarkable quenching of fluorescence. Additionally, a perylene-LNA probe is successfully applied for detection of mRNA in vivo providing excitation wavelength, which completely eliminates cell autofluorescence. © 2008 American Chemical Society.

Astakhova IV, Korshun VA, Jahn K, Kjems J, Wengel J

IBCH: 632
Ссылка на статью в журнале: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/bc800202v
Кол-во цитирований на 03.2024: 46
Информация пока не проверена модераторами