1 research outputs found
A Rhodium-Cyanine Fluorescent Probe: Detection and Signaling of Mismatches in DNA
We report a bifunctional
fluorescent probe that combines a rhodium
metalloinsertor with a cyanine dye as the fluorescent reporter. The
conjugate shows weak luminescence when free in solution or with well
matched DNA but exhibits a significant luminescence increase in the
presence of a 27-mer DNA duplex containing a central CC mismatch.
DNA photocleavage experiments demonstrate that, upon photoactivation,
the conjugate cleaves the DNA backbone specifically near the mismatch
site on a 27-mer fragment, consistent with mismatch targeting. Fluorescence
titrations with the 27-mer duplex containing the CC mismatch reveal
a DNA binding affinity of 3.1 × 10<sup>6</sup> M<sup>–1</sup>, similar to that of other rhodium metalloinsertors. Fluorescence
titrations using genomic DNA extracted from various cell lines demonstrate
a clear discrimination in fluorescence between those cell lines that
are proficient or deficient in mismatch repair. This differential
luminescence reflects the sensitive detection of the mismatchrepair-deficient
phenotype