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Benzothiazole-based cyanines as fluorescent light-up probes for duplex and quadruplex DNA

Overview of Turaev AV et al.

AuthorsTuraev AV  Tsvetkov VB  Tankevich MV  Smirnov IP  Aralov AV  Pozmogova GE  Varizhuk AM  
AffiliationBiophysics 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.  
JournalBiochimie
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.