Benzothiazole-based cyanines as fluorescent light-up probes for duplex and quadruplex DNA
Overview of Turaev AV et al.
Authors | Turaev AV  Tsvetkov VB  Tankevich MV  Smirnov IP  Aralov AV  Pozmogova GE  Varizhuk AM   |
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Affiliation | Biophysics Department   Research and Clinical Center for Physical Chemical Medicine   Malaya Pirogovskaya Str. 1a   Moscow   119435   Russia; Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology   Russian Academy of Sciences   Vavilov Str. 32   Moscow   119991   Russia.   |
Journal | Biochimie |
Year | 2019 |
Abstract
Analogs of benzothiazole orange (BO) with one, two or three methylbenzothiazolylmethylidene substituents in the 1-methylpyridinium ring were obtained from the respective picolinium, lutidinium or collidinium salts. Fluorescence parameters of the known and new dyes in complexes with various DNA structures, including G-quadruplexes (G4s) and i-motifs (IMs), were analyzed. All dyes efficiently distinguished G4s and ss-DNA. The bi- and tri-substituted derivatives had basically similar distributions of relative fluorescence intensities. The mono-substituted derivatives exhibited enhanced sensitivity to parallel G4s. All dyes were particularly sensitive to a G4 structure with an additional duplex module (the thrombin-binding aptamer TBA31), presumably due to a distinctive binding mode (interaction with the junction between the two modules). In particular, BO showed a strong (160-fold) enhancement in fluorescence quantum yield in complex with TBA31 compared to the free dye. The fluorescence quantum yields of the 2,4-bisubstituted derivative in complex with well-characterized G4s from oncogene promoters were in the range of 0.04-0.28, i.e. comparable to those of ThT. The mono/bi-substituted derivatives should be considered as possible light-up probes for G4 formation.