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Designed thiazole orange nucleotides for the synthesis of single labelled oligonucleotides that fluoresce upon matched hybridization

Version 2 2024-03-12, 12:02
Version 1 2023-10-18, 07:40
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 12:02 authored by Lucas Bethge, Ishwar Singh, Oliver Seitz
<p>Probe molecules that enable the detection of specific DNA sequences are used in diagnostic and basic research. Most methods rely on the specificity of hybridization reactions, which complicates the detection of single base mutations at low temperature. Significant efforts have been devoted to the development of oligonucleotides that allow discrimination of single base mutations at temperatures where both the match and the mismatch probe-target complexes coexist. Oligonucleotides that contain environmentally sensitive fluorescence dyes such as thiazole orange (TO) provide single nucleotide specific fluorescence. However, most previously reported dye-DNA conjugates showed only little if any difference between the fluorescence of the single and the double stranded state. Here, we introduce a TO-containing acyclic nucleotide, which is coupled during automated oligonucleotide synthesis and provides for the desired fluorescence-up properties. The study reveals the conjugation mode as the most important issue. We show a design that leads to low fluorescence of the unbound probe (background) yet permits TO to adopt fluorescent binding modes after the probe-target complex has formed. In these probes, TO replaces a canonical nucleobase. Of note, the fluorescence of the ``TO-base'' remains low when a base mismatch is positioned in immediate vicinity.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Pharmacy (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry

Volume

8

Issue

10

Pages/Article Number

2439-2448

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

ISSN

1477-0520

eISSN

1477-0539

Date Submitted

2013-07-24

Date Accepted

2013-07-24

Date of First Publication

2013-07-24

Date of Final Publication

2013-07-24

ePrints ID

11299

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