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TAMRA-polypyrrole for A/T sequence visualization on DNA molecules
Author(s) -
Seonghyun Lee,
Yusuke Kawamoto,
Thangavel Vaijayanthi,
Jihyun Park,
JaeYoung Bae,
Jeongsil KimHa,
Hiroshi Sugiyama,
Kyubong Jo
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gky531
Subject(s) - dna , biology , polypyrrole , fluorophore , sequence (biology) , base pair , dna sequencing , genome , dna nanoball sequencing , microbiology and biotechnology , computational biology , biophysics , genetics , gene , fluorescence , base sequence , materials science , genomic library , polymer , physics , quantum mechanics , composite material , polymerization
Fluorophore-linked, sequence-specific DNA binding reagents can visualize sequence information on a large DNA molecule. In this paper, we synthesized newly designed TAMRA-linked polypyrrole to visualize adenine and thymine base pairs. A fluorescent image of the stained DNA molecule generates an intensity profile based on A/T frequency, revealing a characteristic sequence composition pattern. Computer-aided comparison of this intensity pattern with the genome sequence allowed us to determine the DNA sequence on a visualized DNA molecule from possible intensity profile pattern candidates for a given genome. Moreover, TAMRA-polypyrrole offers robust advantages for single DNA molecule detection: no fluorophore-mediated photocleavage and no structural deformation, since it exhibits a sequence-specific pattern alone without the use of intercalating dyes such as YOYO-1. Accordingly, we were able to identify genomic DNA fragments from Escherichia coli cells by aligning them to the genomic A/T frequency map based on TAMRA-polypyrrole-generated intensity profiles. Furthermore, we showed band and interband patterns of polytene chromosomal DNA stained with TAMRA-polypyrrole because it prefers to bind AT base pairs.

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