Light-Up Probes: Thiazole Orange-Conjugated Peptide Nucleic Acid for Detection of Target Nucleic Acid in Homogeneous Solution
✍ Scribed by Nicke Svanvik; Gunnar Westman; Dongyuan Wang; Mikael Kubista
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 138 KB
- Volume
- 281
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2697
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✦ Synopsis
We have constructed light-up probes for nucleic acid detection. The light-up probe is a peptide nucleic acid (PNA) oligonucleotide to which the asymmetric cyanine dye thiazole orange (TO) is tethered. It combines the excellent hybridization properties of PNA and the large fluorescence enhancement of TO upon binding to DNA. When the PNA hybridizes to target DNA, the dye binds and becomes fluorescent. Free probes have low fluorescence, which may increase almost 50-fold upon hybridization to complementary nucleic acid. This makes the light-up probes particularly suitable for homogeneous hybridization assays, where separation of the bound and free probe is not necessary. We find that the fluorescence enhancement upon hybridization varies among different probes, which is mainly due to variations in free probe fluorescence. For eight probes studied the fluorescence quantum yield at 25°C in the unbound state ranged from 0.0015 to 0.08 and seemed to depend mainly on the PNA sequence. The binding of the light-up probes to target DNA is highly sequence specific and a single mismatch in a 10-mer target sequence was readily identified.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
**The cover picture shows** new PNA probes–FIT Probes–and their use in homogenous DNA detection and was designed by Elke Socher. In FIT Probes, the thiazole orange dye is forced to intercalate at a specific position of a probe–target complex. In their paper on p. 69 ff, O. Seitz et al. describe how