This work delineates an integrative
approach combining spectroscopic
and computational studies to decipher the association-induced fluorescence
properties of a fluorescent molecular rotor, viz., auramine O (AuO), after interacting with 20-mer duplex DNA having
diverse well-matched base pairs. While exploring the scarcely explored
sequence-dependent interaction mechanism of AuO and DNA, we observed
that DNA could act as a conducive scaffold to the formation of AuO
dimer through noncovalent interactions at lower molecular density.
The photophysical properties of AuO depend on the nucleotide compositions
as described from sequence-dependent shifting in the emission and
absorption maxima. Furthermore, we explored such DNA base pair-dependent
fluorescence spectral characteristics of AuO toward discriminating
the thermodynamically most stable single nucleotide mismatch in a
20-mer sequence. Our results are interesting and could be useful in
developing analogues with further enhanced emission properties toward
mismatched DNA sequences