Toward Complete Sequence Flexibility of Nucleic Acid Base Analogue FRET
Author(s) -
Moa S. Wranne,
Anders Foller Füchtbauer,
Blaise Dumat,
Mattias Bood,
Afaf H. ElSagheer,
Tom Brown,
Henrik Gradén,
Morten Grøtli,
L. Marcus Wilhelmsson
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.7b04517
Subject(s) - förster resonance energy transfer , chemistry , base pair , dna , cytosine , acceptor , nucleobase , nucleic acid , phosphoramidite , crystallography , stereochemistry , fluorescence , oligonucleotide , biochemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , condensed matter physics
Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) using fluorescent base analogues is a powerful means of obtaining high-resolution nucleic acid structure and dynamics information that favorably complements techniques such as NMR and X-ray crystallography. Here, we expand the base-base FRET repertoire with an adenine analogue FRET-pair. Phosphoramidite-protected quadracyclic 2'-deoxyadenosine analogues qAN1 (donor) and qA nitro (acceptor) were synthesized and incorporated into DNA by a generic, reliable, and high-yielding route, and both constitute excellent adenine analogues. The donor, qAN1, has quantum yields reaching 21% and 11% in single- and double-strands, respectively. To the best of our knowledge, this results in the highest average brightness of an adenine analogue inside DNA. Its potent emissive features overlap well with the absorption of qA nitro and thus enable accurate FRET-measurements over more than one turn of B-DNA. As we have shown previously for our cytosine analogue FRET-pair, FRET between qAN1 and qA nitro positioned at different base separations inside DNA results in efficiencies that are highly dependent on both distance and orientation. This facilitates significantly enhanced resolution in FRET structure determinations, demonstrated here in a study of conformational changes of DNA upon binding of the minor groove binder netropsin. Finally, we note that the donor and acceptor of our cytosine FRET-pair, tC O and tC nitro , can be conveniently combined with the acceptor and donor of our current adenine pair, respectively. Consequently, our base analogues can now measure base-base FRET between 3 of the 10 possible base combinations and, through base-complementarity, between all sequence positions in a duplex.
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