A methodology for the site-specific attachment of fluorophores to the backbone of pyrrolidinyl peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) with an α/β-backbone derived from D-prolyl-(1S,2S)-2-aminocyclopentanecarboxylic acid (acpcPNA) has been developed. The strategy involves a postsynthetic reductive alkylation of the aldehyde-containing labels onto the acpcPNA that was previously modified with (3R,4S)-3-aminopyrrolidine-4-carboxylic acid on the solid support. The reductive alkylation reaction is remarkably efficient and compatible with a range of reactive functional groups including Fmoc-protected amino, azide, and alkynes. This allows further attachment of readily accessible carboxyl-, alkyne-, or azide-containing labels via amide bond formation or Cu-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC, also known as click chemistry). The label attached in this way does not negatively affect the affinity and specificity of the pairing of the acpcPNA to its DNA target. Applications of this methodology in creating self-reporting pyrene- and thiazole orange-labeled acpcPNA probes that can yield a change in fluorescence in response to the presence of the correct DNA target have also been explored. A strong fluorescence enhancement was observed with thiazole orange-labeled acpcPNA in the presence of DNA. The specificity could be further improved by enzymatic digestion with S1 nuclease, providing a 9- to 60-fold fluorescence enhancement with fully complementary DNA and a less than 3.5-fold enhancement with mismatched DNA targets.
Staphylococcus aureus strains carrying enterotoxin A gene (sea) causes food poisoning and cannot be distinguished from non-pathogenic strains by the culture method. Here, we developed a rapid, specific and sensitive visual detection of sea using loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) combined with nanogold probe (AuNP) or styryl dye (STR). LAMP-AuNP and LAMP-STR can detect as low as 9.7 fg (3.2 sea copies) and 7.2 sea copies, respectively, which were lower than PCR (97 fg or 32 sea copies). The excellent performance of these new assays was demonstrated in food samples using crude DNA lysates. While the culture method detected 10 4 CFU/g in ground pork and 10 CFU/mL in milk in 5-7 days, LAMP-AuNP could detect down to 10 CFU/g for both samples in 27 minutes. Analyzing 80 pork and milk samples revealed that the LAMP-AuNP showed 100% sensitivity, 97-100% specificity and 97.5-100% accuracy, which were superior to the culture method, and comparable to PCR but without requirement of a thermal cycler. Furthermore, our LAMP-AuNP detect sea at a range below the food safety control (<100 CFU/g). The LAMP-STR quantitated sea in 10-1,000 CFU (7.2-720 copies). Our crude DNA lysis combined with LAMP-AuNP/STR present effective point-of-care detection and facilitate appropriate control strategies. Staphylococcus aureus strains with the staphylococcal enterotoxin A gene (sea) bacteriophage, are a common cause of foodborne disease and outbreaks worldwide including the United States and countries of the European Union 1-5. In Thailand, one of the largest outbreaks occurred in 2009 reporting 573 illnesses due to consumption of contaminated sticky rice custard 6. S. aureus is commonly found in soil, water, air, as well as human respiratory tract and skin. The sea toxin is relatively heat stable (e.g. up to 100 °C for 30 min) therefore, food contamination generally occurs when cooking is performed without sufficient hygiene. Frequently reported contaminated foods include dairy products (milk, cheese, ice cream, etc.), and meat 7,8. Importantly, contaminated food may not be easily identified by sensory evaluation such as odor or appearance. Clinical symptoms from sea food poisoning include vomiting, abdominal cramps, diarrhea, and dysentery, often within 1-6 h after consumption. Occasional symptoms include sweating, chills, rectal bleeding, and shock 9-11. The severity of illness depends on the concentration of the toxin. Consumption of merely 20-100 ng of sea toxin can cause clinical symptoms and >100 ng may be fatal, therefore a sensitive method of sea detection is important for food safety control. Detection is usually
Styryl dyes clicked to the backbone of pyrrolidinyl PNA probes show significant fluorescence enhancements in response to structural defects in PNA·DNA duplexes.
SummaryDNA or its analogues with an environment-sensitive fluorescent label are potentially useful as a probe for studying the structure and dynamics of nucleic acids. In this work, pyrrolidinyl peptide nucleic acid (acpcPNA) was labeled at its backbone with Nile red, a solvatochromic benzophenoxazine dye, by means of click chemistry. The optical properties of the Nile red-labeled acpcPNA were investigated by UV–vis and fluorescence spectroscopy in the absence and in the presence of DNA. In contrast to the usual quenching observed in Nile red-labeled DNA, the hybridization with DNA resulted in blue shifting and an enhanced fluorescence regardless of the neighboring bases. More pronounced blue shifts and fluorescence enhancements were observed when the DNA target carried a base insertion in close proximity to the Nile red label. The results indicate that the Nile red label is located in a more hydrophobic environment in acpcPNA–DNA duplexes than in the single-stranded acpcPNA. The different fluorescence properties of the acpcPNA hybrids of complementary DNA and DNA carrying a base insertion are suggestive of different interactions between the Nile red label and the duplexes.
Internally pyrene-labeled pyrrolidinyl PNA yields much larger fluorescence increase than terminally labeled PNA upon hybridization with complementary DNA.
Nucleic acid staining dyes are important tools for the analysis and visualizing of DNA/RNA in vitro and in the cells. Nevertheless, the range of commercially accessible dyes is still rather limited, and they are often very costly. As a result, finding nontoxic, easily accessible dyes, with desirable optical characteristics remains important. Styryl dyes have recently gained popularity as potential biological staining agents with many appealing properties, including a straightforward synthesis procedure, excellent photostability, tunable fluorescence, and high fluorescence quantum yield in the presence of nucleic acid targets with low background fluorescence signals. In addition to fluorescence, styryl dyes are strongly colored and exhibit solvatochromic properties which make them useful as colorimetric stains for low-cost and rapid testing of nucleic acids. In this work, novel dicationic styryl dyes bearing quaternary ammonium groups are designed to improve binding strength and optical response with target nucleic acids which contain a negatively charged phosphate backbone. Optical properties of the newly synthesized styryl dyes have been studied in the presence and absence of nucleic acid targets with the aim to find new dyes that can sensitively and specifically change fluorescence and/or color in the presence of nucleic acid targets. The binding interaction and optical response of the dicationic styryl dyes with nucleic acid were superior to the corresponding monocationic styryl dyes. Applications of the developed dyes for colorimetric detection of DNA in vitro and imaging of cellular nucleic acids are also demonstrated.
Peptide nucleic acid (PNA) is a nucleic acid mimic in which the deoxyribose-phosphate was replaced by a peptide-like backbone. The absence of negative charge in the PNA backbone leads to several unique behaviors including a stronger binding and salt independency of the PNA-DNA duplex stability. However, PNA possesses poor aqueous solubility and cannot directly penetrate cell membranes. These are major obstacles that limit in vivo applications of PNA. In previous strategies, the PNA can be conjugated to macromolecular carriers or modified with positively charged side chains such as guanidinium groups to improve the aqueous solubility and cell permeability. In general, a preformed modified PNA monomer was required. In this study, a new approach for post-synthetic modification of PNA backbone with one or more hydrophilic groups was proposed. The PNA used in this study was the conformationally constrained pyrrolidinyl PNA with prolyl-2-aminocyclopentanecarboxylic acid dipeptide backbone (acpcPNA) that shows several advantages over the conventional PNA. The aldehyde modifiers carrying different linkers (alkylene and oligo(ethylene glycol)) and end groups (-OH, -NH, and guanidinium) were synthesized and attached to the backbone of modified acpcPNA by reductive alkylation. The hybrids between the modified acpcPNAs and DNA exhibited comparable or superior thermal stability with base-pairing specificity similar to those of unmodified acpcPNA. Moreover, the modified apcPNAs also showed the improvement of aqueous solubility (10-20 folds compared to unmodified PNA) and readily penetrate cell membranes without requiring any special delivery agents. This study not only demonstrates the practicality of the proposed post-synthetic modification approach for PNA modification, which could be readily applied to other systems, but also opens up opportunities for using pyrrolidinyl PNA in various applications such as intracellular RNA sensing, specific gene detection, and antisense and antigene therapy.
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