14 research outputs found

    Fluorogenic labeling of 5-formylpyrimidine nucleotides in DNA and RNA.

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    5-Formylcytosine (5fC) and 5-formyluracil (5fU) are natural nucleobase modifications that are generated by oxidative modification of 5-methylcytosine and thymine (or 5-methyluracil). Herein, we describe chemoselective labeling of 5-formylpyrimidine nucleotides in DNA and RNA by fluorogenic aldol-type condensation reactions with 2,3,3-trimethylindole derivatives. Mild and specific reaction conditions were developed for 5fU and 5fC to produce hemicyanine-like chromophores with distinct photophysical properties. Residue-specific detection was established by fluorescence readout as well as primer-extension assays. The reactions were optimized on DNA oligonucleotides and were equally suitable for the modification of 5fU- and 5fC-modified RNA. This direct labeling approach of 5-formylpyrimidines is expected to help in elucidating the occurrence, enzymatic transformations, and functional roles of these epigenetic/epitranscriptomic nucleobase modifications in DNA and RNA

    Fluorescence assisted capillary electrophoresis of glycans enabled by the negatively charged auxochromes in 1-Aminopyrenes

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    A compact and negatively charged acceptor group, N-(cyanamino)sulfonyl, is introduced for dye design and its influence on the absorption and emission spectra of the “push–pull” chromophores is demonstrated with 1,3,6-tris[(cyanamino)sulfonyl]-8-aminopyrene. The new sulfonamides, including O-phosphorylated (3-hydroxyazetidine)-N-sulfonyl, are negatively charged electron acceptors and auxochromes. 1-Aminopyrenes decorated with the new sulfonamides have three or six negative charges (pH ≥8), low m/z ratios, high mobilities in an electric field, and yellow to orange emission. We labeled maltodextrin oligomers by reductive amination, separated the products by electrophoresis, and demonstrated their high brightness in a commercial DNA analyzer and the distribution of the emission signal among the detection channels

    A mini-twister variant and impact of residues/cations on the phosphodiester cleavage of this ribozyme class.

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    Nucleolytic ribozymes catalyze site-specific cleavage of their phosphodiester backbones. A minimal version of the twister ribozyme is reported that lacks the phylogenetically conserved stem P1 while retaining wild-type activity. Atomic mutagenesis revealed that nitrogen atoms N1 and N3 of the adenine-6 at the cleavage site are indispensable for cleavage. By NMR spectroscopy, a pKa value of 5.1 was determined for a 13C2-labeled adenine at this position in the twister ribozyme, which is significantly shifted compared to the pKa of the same adenine in the substrate alone. This finding pinpoints at a potential role for adenine-6 in the catalytic mechanism besides the previously identified invariant guanine-48 and a Mg2+ ion, both of which are directly coordinated to the non-bridging oxygen atoms of the scissile phosphate; for the latter, additional evidence stems from the observation that Mn2+ or Cd2+ accelerated cleavage of phosphorothioate substrates. The relevance of this metal ion binding site is further emphasized by a new 2.6 Å X-ray structure of a 2′-OCH3-U5 modified twister ribozyme

    Negatively charged red-emitting acridine dyes for facile reductive amination, separation and fluorescent detection of glycans.

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    The capillary gel electrophoresis with laser-induced fluorescence detection (CGE-LIF) has become a key method in high-throughput glycan analysis. At present, CGE-LIF relies on 8-aminopyrene-1,3,6-trisulfonic acid (APTS). However, APTS has moderate reactivity in labeling of glycans, fixed selectivity profile and renders the detection to only green color. Here, we report synthesis of red-emitting and highly reactive fluo-rescent tags for glycan derivatization. The design is based on a 9-aminoacridine scaffold with various acceptor groups at C-2 (CN, SO2R) and a primary amino group at C-7 for conjugation via reductive amination. These reactive dyes exhibit absorption maxima close to 450 nm and emis-sion above 600 nm. They readily undergo conjugation with reducing sugars at the desired 1:1 stoichiometry. The red emission of conjugates with a maximum at 610-630 nm can be observed under excitation with 488 nm light and detected separately from the APTS-labeled oligosaccharides. Phosphorylated 7,9-diaminoacridine-2-SO2R derivatives with variable amounts of negative charges provide high mobilities of glycoconjugates on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), as compared to those of APTS. We further demonstrate their utility by labeling and separating a maltodextrin ladder and sialyllactose isomers. The new dyes are expected to cross-validate and increase the glycan identification precision in CGE-LIF and help to reveal "heavy" glycans, yet undetectable with APTS label

    Synthesis of spin-labeled riboswitch RNAs using convertible nucleosides and DNA-catalyzed RNA ligation.

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    Chemically stable nitroxide radicals that can be monitored by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy can provide information on structural and dynamic properties of functional RNA such as riboswitches. The convertible nucleoside approach is used to install 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidin-1-oxyl (TEMPO) and 2,2,5,5-tetramethylpyrrolidin-1-oxyl (proxyl) labels at the exocyclic N4-amino group of cytidine and 2′-O-methylcytidine nucleotides in RNA. To obtain site-specifically labeled long riboswitch RNAs beyond the limit of solid-phase synthesis, we report the ligation of spin-labeled RNA using an in vitro selected deoxyribozyme as catalyst, and demonstrate the synthesis of TEMPO-labeled 53 nt SAM-III and 118 nt SAM-I riboswitch domains (SAM = S-adenosylmethionine)

    Negatively charged yellow‐emitting 1‐aminopyrene dyes for reductive amination and fluorescence detection of glycans

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    1 - Aminopyrenes with three w-hydroxylated N-alkylsulfonamido or alkylsulfonyl residues in positions 3, 6 and 8 were prepared, O-phosphorylated and applied for reductive amination of oligosaccharides. The dyes (ε ~ 20000 M -1 cm -1 ) with six negative charges (pH ≥ 8) and low m/z ratios enable labeling and fluorescence detection of reducing sugars (glycans) related to the most structurally and functionally diverse class of natural products. Under excitation with a 488 nm laser, the new glycoconjugates emit yellow light of about 560 nm, outperforming (in respect of brightness and electrophoretic mobilities) the corresponding APTS derivatives (benchmark dye with green emission in conjugates)

    Synthesis of fluorescent jasplakinolide analogues for live-cell STEDa microscopy of actin

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    The nanometer thickness of filaments and the dynamic behavior of actin – a protein playing crucial role in cellular function and motility – makes it attractive for observation with superresolution optical microscopy. We developed the solution-phase synthesis of des-bromo-des-methyl-jasplakinolide-lysine, used as the “recognition unit” (ligand) for F-actin in living cells. The first amino acid – Fmoc-O-TIPS-beta-tyrosine – was prepared in 78% yield (2 steps in one pot). The new solution-phase synthesis involves 2-phenylisopropyl protection of the carboxyl group and does not require excesses of commercially unavailable amino acids. The overall yield of the target intermediate obtained in 9 steps is about 8%. 2-Phenylisopropyl group can be cleaved from carboxyl with 2 – 3% (v/v) of TFA in acetonitrile (0-10°C), without affecting TIPS protection of the phenolic hydroxyl in beta-tyrosine and N-Boc protection in lysine. Des-bromo-des-methyl-jasplakinolide-lysine was coupled with red-emitting fluorescent dyes 580CP and 610CP (via 6-aminohexanoate linker). Actin in living cells was labeled with 580CP and 610CP probes, and the optical resolution measured as full width at half maximum of line profiles across actin fibers was found to be 300-400 nm and 100 nm under confocal and STED conditions, respectively. The solution-phase synthesis of des-bromo-des-methyl-jasplakinolide-lysine opens a way to better fluorescent probes perspective for actin imaging

    Efflux pump insensitive rhodamine–jasplakinolide conjugates for G- and F-actin imaging in living cells

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    The actin cytoskeleton is crucial for endocytosis, intracellular trafficking, cell shape maintenance and a wide range of other cellular functions. Recently introduced cell-permeable fluorescent actin probes, such as SiR-actin, suffer from poor membrane permeability and stain some cell populations inhomogeneously due to the active efflux by the plasma membrane pumps. We analyzed a series of new probes composed of jasplakinolide and modified rhodamine fluorophores and found that rhodamine positional isomerism has a profound effect on probe performance. The probes based on the 6'-carboxy-carbopyronine scaffold are considerably less susceptible to efflux and allow efficient staining without efflux pump inhibitors. They can be used for 2D and 3D fluorescence nanoscopy at high nanomolar concentrations without significant cytotoxicity. We show that jasplakinolide-based fluorescent probes bind not only to actin filaments, but also to G-actin, which enables imaging highly dynamic actin structures. We demonstrate an excellent performance of the new probes in multiple organisms and cell types: human cell lines, frog erythrocytes, fruit fly tissues and primary neurons

    Control of membrane gaps by ​synaptotagmin-Ca2+ measured with a novel membrane distance ruler.

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    Fast synchronous neurotransmitter release is triggered by calcium that activates ​synaptotagmin-1 (​syt-1), resulting in fusion of synaptic vesicles with the presynaptic membrane. ​Syt-1 possesses two Ca2+-binding C2 domains that tether membranes via interactions with anionic phospholipids. It is capable of crosslinking membranes and has recently been speculated to trigger fusion by decreasing the gap between them. As quantitative information on membrane gaps is key to understanding general cellular mechanisms, including the role of ​syt-1, we developed a fluorescence-lifetime based inter-membrane distance ruler using membrane-anchored DNAs of various lengths as calibration standards. Wild-type and mutant data provide evidence that full-length ​syt-1 indeed regulates membrane gaps: without Ca2+, ​syt-1 maintains membranes at distances of ~7–8 nm. Activation with 100 μM Ca2+ decreases the distance to ~5 nm by binding the C2 domains to opposing membranes, respectively. These values reveal that activated ​syt-1 adjusts membrane distances to the level that promotes SNARE complex assembly
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