62 research outputs found

    Carbazole ligands as c-myc G-quadruplex binders

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    The interactions of c-myc G-quadruplex with three carbazole derivatives were investigated by UV-Vis spectrophotometry, fluorescence, CD spectroscopy, and molecular modeling. The results showed that a combination of carbazole scaffold functionalized with ethyl, triazole and imidazole groups resulted in stabilization of the intramolecular G-quadruplex formed by the DNA sequence derived from the NHE III1 region of c-myc oncogene (Pu22). Binding to the G-quadruplex Pu22 resulted in the significant increase in fluorescence intensity of complexed ligands 1-3. All ligands were capable of interacting with G4 DNA with binding stoichiometry indicating that two ligand molecules bind to G-quadruplex with comparable affinity, which agrees with binding model of end-stacking on terminal G-tetrads

    Nucleic acid-based fluorescent probes and their analytical potential

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    It is well known that nucleic acids play an essential role in living organisms because they store and transmit genetic information and use that information to direct the synthesis of proteins. However, less is known about the ability of nucleic acids to bind specific ligands and the application of oligonucleotides as molecular probes or biosensors. Oligonucleotide probes are single-stranded nucleic acid fragments that can be tailored to have high specificity and affinity for different targets including nucleic acids, proteins, small molecules, and ions. One can divide oligonucleotide-based probes into two main categories: hybridization probes that are based on the formation of complementary base-pairs, and aptamer probes that exploit selective recognition of nonnucleic acid analytes and may be compared with immunosensors. Design and construction of hybridization and aptamer probes are similar. Typically, oligonucleotide (DNA, RNA) with predefined base sequence and length is modified by covalent attachment of reporter groups (one or more fluorophores in fluorescence-based probes). The fluorescent labels act as transducers that transform biorecognition (hybridization, ligand binding) into a fluorescence signal. Fluorescent labels have several advantages, for example high sensitivity and multiple transduction approaches (fluorescence quenching or enhancement, fluorescence anisotropy, fluorescence lifetime, fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), and excimer-monomer light switching). These multiple signaling options combined with the design flexibility of the recognition element (DNA, RNA, PNA, LNA) and various labeling strategies contribute to development of numerous selective and sensitive bioassays. This review covers fundamentals of the design and engineering of oligonucleotide probes, describes typical construction approaches, and discusses examples of probes used both in hybridization studies and in aptamer-based assays

    Bioanalytical Application of Peroxidase-Mimicking DNAzymes: Status and Challenges

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    2’-OMe-RNA Analogues of Peroxidase-mimicking DNAzymes

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    Molecular beacon – peroxidase-mimicking DNAzyme system for DNA detection

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    Increasing the activity of DNAzyme based on the telomeric sequence: 2’-OMe-RNA and LNA modifications

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    Abstract2’-OMe-RNA analogues and LNA point modifications of DNA oligonucleotides were applied for the modulation of the G-quadruplex topology and enhancement of peroxidase activity of the resulting DNAzymes. The effect of the 2’-OMe-RNA analogue was studied for full length modified oligonucleotides with various sequences. In the case of LNA-point modification, we have chosen a telomeric DNA sequence and investigated various numbers of modifications. Our main goal was to prove that the application of these modifications can influence the activity of DNAzyme, especially those, which normally form poor DNAzymes. As an example, we have chosen the telomeric HT22 sequence which is known to form DNAzyme characterized by low activity. In all cases, the DNAzymes formed by a telomeric sequence with the application of the 2’-OMe-RNA analogue as well as LNA-point modification, showed significantly higher peroxidase activity. We were also able to shift the formation of hybrid or antiparallel topology to parallel topology. These results are important for the development of probes for biological applications as well as for the design of probes based on DNA sequences that normally form DNAzymes with low activity. This paper also provides information on how the application of nucleotide analogues can transform the topology of G-quadruplexes.</jats:p

    Increasing the activity of DNAzyme based on the telomeric sequence: 2’-OMe-RNA and LNA modifications

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    2’-OMe-RNA analogues and LNA point modifications of DNA oligonucleotides were applied for the modulation of the G-quadruplex topology and enhancement of peroxidase activity of the resulting DNAzymes. The effect of the 2’-OMe-RNA analogue was studied for full length modified oligonucleotides with various sequences. In the case of LNA-point modification, we have chosen a telomeric DNA sequence and investigated various numbers of modifications. Our main goal was to prove that the application of these modifications can influence the activity of DNAzyme, especially those, which normally form poor DNAzymes. As an example, we have chosen the telomeric HT22 sequence which is known to form DNAzyme characterized by low activity. In all cases, the DNAzymes formed by a telomeric sequence with the application of the 2’-OMe-RNA analogue as well as LNA-point modification, showed significantly higher peroxidase activity. We were also able to shift the formation of hybrid or antiparallel topology to parallel topology. These results are important for the development of probes for biological applications as well as for the design of probes based on DNA sequences that normally form DNAzymes with low activity. This paper also provides information on how the application of nucleotide analogues can transform the topology of G-quadruplexes

    Dataset on characterization of hemin-azide derivative and DNA oligonucleotide-hemin conjugate

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    In this article newly synthesized azide derivative of hemin and DNA-hemin conjugate are characterized. Hemin-azide was purified using HPLC and characterized using elemental analysis, IR and NMR. The DNA-hemin conjugate was obtained via click chemistry [1] and click reaction was carried out using traditional Cu-catalyzed and Cu-free approaches. The final product was successfully obtained using Cu-free cycloaddition. The identity of product was confirmed using Maldi TOF spectrometry. Obtained hemin-DNA conjugate exhibited peroxidase-like activity
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