3 research outputs found
Nanoconfinement and Crowding Enhanced Single-Molecule Detection of Small Molecules with Nanopipettes
Glass
nanopipettes have gained widespread use as a versatile single-entity
detector in chemical and biological sensing, analysis, and imaging.
Its advantages include low cost, easy accessibility, simplicity of
use, and high versatility. However, conventional nanopipettes based
on the volume exclusion mechanism have limitations in detecting small
biomolecules due to their small volume and high mobility in aqueous
solution. To overcome this challenge, we have employed a novel approach
by capitalizing on the strong nanoconfinement effect of nanopipettes.
This is achieved by utilizing both the hard confinement provided by
the long taper nanopipette tip at the cis side and
the soft confinement offered by the hydrogel at the trans side. Through this approach, we have effectively slowed down the
exit motion of small molecules, allowing us to enrich and jam them
at the nanopipette tip. Consequently, we have achieved high throughput
detection of small biomolecules with sizes as small as 1 nm, including
nucleoside triphosphates, short peptides, and small proteins with
excellent signal-to-noise ratios. Furthermore, molecular complex formation
through specific intermolecular interactions, such as hydrogen bonding
between closely spaced nucleotides in the jam-packed nanopipette tip,
has been detected based on the unique ionic current changes
Anticancer Drug Doxorubicin Spontaneously Reacts with GTP and dGTP
Here,
we reported a spontaneous reaction between anticancer drug
doxorubicin and GTP or dGTP. Incubation of doxorubicin with GTP or
dGTP at 37 °C or above yields a covalent product: the doxorubicin-GTP
or -dGTP conjugate where a covalent bond is formed between the C14
position of doxorubicin and the 2-amino group of guanine. Density
functional theory calculations show the feasibility of this spontaneous
reaction. Fluorescence imaging studies demonstrate that the doxorubicin-GTP
and -dGTP conjugates cannot enter nuclei although they rapidly accumulate
in human SK-OV-3 and NCI/ADR-RES cells. Consequently, the doxorubicin-GTP
and -dGTP conjugates are less cytotoxic than doxorubicin. We also
demonstrate that doxorubicin binds to ATP, GTP, and other nucleotides
with a dissociation constant (Kd) in the
sub-millimolar range. Since human cells contain millimolar levels
of ATP and GTP, these results suggest that doxorubicin may target
ATP and GTP, energy molecules that support essential processes in
living organisms
Exploring the Conformational and Binding Dynamics of HMGA2·DNA Complexes Using Trapped Ion Mobility Spectrometry–Mass Spectrometry
The mammalian high
mobility group protein AT-hook 2 (HMGA2) is
an intrinsically disordered DNA-binding protein expressed during embryogenesis.
In the present work, the conformational and binding dynamics of HMGA2
and HMGA2 in complex with a 22-nt (DNA22) and a 50-nt (DNA50) AT-rich DNA hairpin were investigated using trapped ion
mobility spectrometry–mass spectrometry (TIMS–MS) under
native starting solvent conditions (e.g., 100 mM aqueous NH4Ac) and collision-induced unfolding/dissociation (CIU/CID) as well
as solution fluorescence anisotropy to assess the role of the DNA
ligand when binding to the HMGA2 protein. CIU-TIMS–CID-MS/MS
experiments showed a significant reduction of the conformational space
and charge-state distribution accompanied by an energy stability increase
of the native HMGA2 upon DNA binding. Fluorescence anisotropy experiments
and CIU-TIMS–CID-MS/MS demonstrated for the first time that
HMGA2 binds with high affinity to the minor groove of AT-rich DNA
oligomers and with lower affinity to the major groove of AT-rich DNA
oligomers (minor groove occupied by a minor groove binder Hoechst
33258). The HMGA2·DNA22 complex (18.2 kDa) 1:1 and 1:2 stoichiometry
suggests that two of the AT-hook sites are accessible for DNA binding,
while the other AT-hook site is probably coordinated by the C-terminal
motif peptide (CTMP). The HMGA2 transition from disordered to ordered
upon DNA binding is driven by the interaction of the three basic AT-hook
residues with the minor and/or major grooves of AT-rich DNA oligomers
