Selective Lighting Up of Epiberberine Alkaloid Fluorescence
by Fluorophore-Switching Aptamer and Stoichiometric Targeting of Human Telomeric DNA G‑Quadruplex
Multimer
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Abstract
Aptamers, that exist naturally in
living cells as functional elements
and can switch nonfluorescent natural targets to fluorophores, are
very useful in developing highly sensitive and selective biosensors
and screening functional agents. This work demonstrates that human
telomeric G-quadruplex (HTG) can serve as a potential fluorophore-switching
aptamer (FSA) to target a natural isoquinoline alkaloid. We found
that, among the G-quadruplexes studied here and the various structurally
similar alkaloids including epiberberine (EPI), berberine (BER), palmatine
(PAL), jatrorrhizine (JAT), coptisine (COP), worenine (WOR), sanguinarine
(SAN), chelerythrine (CHE), and nitidine (NIT), only the HTG DNA,
especially with a 5′-TA-3′ residue at the 5′
end of the G-quadruplex tetrad (5′-TAG<sub>3</sub>(TTAG<sub>3</sub>)<sub>3</sub>-3′, TA[Q]) as the minimal sequence, is
the most efficient FSA to selectively light up the EPI fluorescence.
Compared to the 5′ end flanking sequences, the 3′ end
flanking sequences of the tetrad contribute significantly less to
the recognition of EPI. The binding affinity of EPI to TA[Q] (<i>K</i><sub>d</sub> = 37 nM) is at least 20 times tighter than
those of the other alkaloids. The steady-state absorption, steady-state/time-resolved
fluorescence, and NMR studies demonstrate that EPI most likely interact
with the 5′ end flanking sequence substructure beyond the core
[Q] and the G-quadruplex tetrad in a much more specific manner than
the other alkaloids. The highly selective and tight binding of EPI
with the FSA and significantly enhanced fluorescence suggest the potential
development of a selective EPI sensor (detection limit of 10 nM).
More importantly, EPI, as the brightest FSA emitter among the alkaloids,
can also serve as an efficient conformation probe for HTG DNA and
discriminate the DNA G-quadruplex from the RNA counterpart. Furthermore,
EPI can bind stoichiometrically to each G-quadruplex unit of long
HTG DNA multimer with the most significant fluorescence enhancement,
which has not been achieved by the previously reported probes. Our
work suggests the potential use of EPI as a bioimaging probe and a
therapeutic DNA binder