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1.
The ability to accurately quantify specific nucleic acid molecules in complex biomolecule solutions in real time is important in diagnostic and basic research. Here we describe a DNA-PNA (peptide nucleic acid) hybridization assay that allows sensitive quantification of specific nucleic acids in solution and concomitant detection of select single base mutations in resulting DNA-PNA duplexes. The technique employs so-called FIT (forced intercalation) probes in which one base is replaced by a thiazole orange (TO) dye molecule. If a DNA molecule that is complementary to the FIT-PNA molecule (except at the site of the dye) hybridizes to the probe, the TO dye exhibits intense fluorescence because stacking in the duplexes enforces a coplanar arrangement even in the excited state. However, a base mismatch at either position immediately adjacent to the TO dye dramatically decreases fluorescence, presumably because the TO dye has room to undergo torsional motions that lead to rapid depletion of the excited state. Of note, we found that the use of d-ornithine rather than aminoethylglycine as the PNA backbone increases the intensity of fluorescence emitted by matched probe-target duplexes while specificity of fluorescence signaling under nonstringent conditions is also increased. The usefulness of the ornithine-containing FIT probes was demonstrated in the real-time PCR analysis providing a linear measurement range over at least seven orders of magnitude. The analysis of two important single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the CFTR gene confirmed the ability of FIT probes to facilitate unambiguous SNP calls for genomic DNA by quantitative PCR.  相似文献   

2.
The synthesis and characterization of isotopomer tandem nucleic acid mass tag–peptide nucleic acid (TNT–PNA) conjugates is described along with their use as electrospray ionisation-cleavable (ESI-Cleavable) hybridization probes for the detection and quantification of target DNA sequences by electrospray ionisation tandem mass spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS). ESI-cleavable peptide TNT isotopomers were introduced into PNA oligonucleotide sequences in a total synthesis approach. These conjugates were evaluated as hybridization probes for the detection and quantification of immobilized synthetic target DNAs using ESI-MS/MS. In these experiments, the PNA portion of the conjugate acts as a hybridization probe, whereas the peptide TNT is released in a collision-based process during the ionization of the probe conjugate in the electrospray ion source. The cleaved TNT acts as a uniquely resolvable marker to identify and quantify a unique target DNA sequence. The method should be applicable to a wide variety of assays requiring highly multiplexed, quantitative DNA/RNA analysis, including gene expression monitoring, genetic profiling and the detection of pathogens.  相似文献   

3.
The synthesis and characterization of isotopomer tandem nucleic acid mass tag-peptide nucleic acid (TNT-PNA) conjugates is described along with their use as electrospray ionisation-cleavable (ESI-Cleavable) hybridization probes for the detection and quantification of target DNA sequences by electrospray ionisation tandem mass spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS). ESI-cleavable peptide TNT isotopomers were introduced into PNA oligonucleotide sequences in a total synthesis approach. These conjugates were evaluated as hybridization probes for the detection and quantification of immobilized synthetic target DNAs using ESI-MS/MS. In these experiments, the PNA portion of the conjugate acts as a hybridization probe, whereas the peptide TNT is released in a collision-based process during the ionization of the probe conjugate in the electrospray ion source. The cleaved TNT acts as a uniquely resolvable marker to identify and quantify a unique target DNA sequence. The method should be applicable to a wide variety of assays requiring highly multiplexed, quantitative DNA/RNA analysis, including gene expression monitoring, genetic profiling and the detection of pathogens.  相似文献   

4.
A new method for the detection of PNA/DNA hybrids is presented. In this method, short PNA probes (9-13 mer) are labeled with a fluorescent dye and allowed to hybridize to target DNA molecules. A cationic polyamino acid, such as polylysine, is then added to the reaction mixture, whereupon the DNA molecules bind electrostatically to this polycation. The PNA probes, which are uncharged or may carry only a small charge due to the fluorescent dye, do not bind to polylysine unless hybridized to the negatively charged DNA target. The binding of the labeled PNA/DNA hybrid to the high-molecular-weight polymer leads to a significant change in the rotational correlation time of the fluorophore attached to the PNA. This can be conveniently detected by measuring the fluorescence polarization of the latter. The method is completely homogeneous because no separation of free from bound PNA probe is required. The hybridization and dehybridization reactions can be followed in real time. The method has been applied to the typing of single-nucleotide polymorphisms in PCR products.  相似文献   

5.
We describe snap-to-it probes, a novel probe technology to enhance the hybridization specificity of natural and unnatural nucleic acid oligomers using a simple and readily introduced structural motif. Snap-to-it probes were prepared from peptide nucleic acid (PNA) oligomers by modifying each terminus with a coordinating ligand. The two coordinating ligands constrain the probe into a macrocyclic configuration through formation of an intramolecular chelate with a divalent transition metal ion. On hybridization with a DNA target, the intramolecular chelate in the snap-to-it probe dissociates, resulting in the probe ‘snapping-to’ and binding the target nucleic acid. Thermal transition analysis of snap-to-it probes with complementary and single-mismatch DNA targets revealed that the transition between free and target-bound probe conformations was a reversible equilibrium, and the intramolecular chelate provided a thermodynamic barrier to target binding that resulted in a significant increase in mismatch discrimination. A 4–6°C increase in specificity (ΔTm) was observed from snap-to-it probes bearing either terminal iminodiacetic acid ligands coordinated with Ni2+, or terminal dihistidine and nitrilotriacetic acid ligands coordinated with Cu2+. The difference in specificity of the PNA oligomer relative to DNA was more than doubled in snap-to-it probes. Snap-to-it probes labeled with a fluorophore-quencher pair exhibited target-dependent fluorescence enhancement upon binding with target DNA.  相似文献   

6.
Bispeptide nucleic acids (bis-PNAs; PNA clamps), PNA oligomers, and DNA oligonucleotides were evaluated as affinity purification reagents for subfemtomolar 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) and rRNA targets in soil, sediment, and industrial air filter nucleic acid extracts. Under low-salt hybridization conditions (10 mM NaPO(4), 5 mM disodium EDTA, and 0.025% sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS]) a PNA clamp recovered significantly more target DNA than either PNA or DNA oligomers. The efficacy of PNA clamps and oligomers was generally enhanced in the presence of excess nontarget DNA and in a low-salt extraction-hybridization buffer. Under high-salt conditions (200 mM NaPO(4), 100 mM disodium EDTA, and 0.5% SDS), however, capture efficiencies with the DNA oligomer were significantly greater than with the PNA clamp and PNA oligomer. Recovery and detection efficiencies for target DNA concentrations of > or =100 pg were generally >20% but depended upon the specific probe, solution background, and salt condition. The DNA probe had a lower absolute detection limit of 100 fg of target (830 zM [1 zM = 10(-21) M]) in high-salt buffer. In the absence of exogenous DNA (e.g., soil background), neither the bis-PNA nor the PNA oligomer achieved the same absolute detection limit even under a more favorable low-salt hybridization condition. In the presence of a soil background, however, both PNA probes provided more sensitive absolute purification and detection (830 zM) than the DNA oligomer. In varied environmental samples, the rank order for capture probe performance in high-salt buffer was DNA > PNA > clamp. Recovery of 16S rRNA from environmental samples mirrored quantitative results for DNA target recovery, with the DNA oligomer generating more positive results than either the bis-PNA or PNA oligomer, but PNA probes provided a greater incidence of detection from environmental samples that also contained a higher concentration of nontarget DNA and RNA. Significant interactions between probe type and environmental sample indicate that the most efficacious capture system depends upon the particular sample type (and background nucleic acid concentration), target (DNA or RNA), and detection objective.  相似文献   

7.
Forced intercalation probes (FIT-probes) are nucleic acid probes, in which an intercalator cyanine dye such as thiazole orange (TO) serves as a replacement of a canonical nucleobase. These probes signal hybridization by showing strong increases of fluorescence. TO in FIT-probes responds to adjacent base mismatches by attenuation of fluorescence intensities at conditions where both matched and mismatched target DNA are bound. The interesting features of TO labeled FIT-probes posed the question whether the forced intercalation concept can be extended to other cyanine dyes of the thiazole orange family. Herein, we present the synthesis of three asymmetrical cyanine dyes and their incorporation into PNA-conjugates by means of both divergent and linear solid-phase synthesis. Melting analysis revealed that the DNA affinity of PNA probes remained high irrespective of the replacement of a nucleobase by the cyanines YO (oxazole yellow), MO or JO. Of the three new tested dye-PNA-conjugates, the YO-containing PNA has properties useful for homogeneous SNP detection. YO-PNA is demonstrated to signal the presence of fully complementary DNA by up to 20-fold enhancement of fluorescence. In addition, YO emission discriminates against single base mismatches by attenuation of fluorescence. Oxazole yellow (YO) as a base surrogate in PNA may prove useful in the multiplex detection of single base mutations at non-stringent conditions.  相似文献   

8.
The efficacy of PNA vs DNA oligomers for the recovery of femtomolar concentrations of 16S rDNA targets was determined with solution- and mixed-phase hybridization formats and limiting dilution quantitative PCR. Several results contradict existing perceptions of expected PNA behavior deduced from hybridization studies with oligonucleotide targets at high concentration. For example, DNA probes in the solution hybridization format performed as well as or better than PNA probes under high- or low-salt conditions, regardless of hybridization time or target size. In the mixed-phase hybridization format, however, PNA probes showed certain advantages, with more rapid and efficient binding/recovery of target nucleic acids regardless of target size. Recovery of target DNA with PNA probes was always more efficient in low-salt (20 mM in Na(+)) than high-salt (400 mM in Na(+-)) phosphate buffer. Recovery of target DNA by PNA probes was enhanced in the presence of excess, nontarget DNA, and differences in PNA efficacy under low- or high-salt conditions vanquished. In contrast, DNA probe performance was unaffected by the presence or absence of exogenous DNA in both solution- and mixed-phase hybridization formats. The absolute recovery and detection limit of the affinity purification method with either DNA or PNA probes was approximately 10(2) input target molecules at zeptamolar concentrations.  相似文献   

9.
Traditionally fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) has been performed with labeled DNA oligonucleotide probes. Here we present for the first time a high affinity peptide nucleic acid (PNA) oligonucleotide sequence for detecting thermotolerant Campylobacter spp. using FISH. Thermotolerant Campylobacter spp, including the species Campylobacter coli, Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter lari, are important food and water borne pathogens. The designed PNA probe (CJE195) bound with higher affinity to a previously reported low affinity site on the 16S rRNA than the corresponding DNA probe. PNA also overcame the problem of the lack of affinity due to the location of the binding site and the variation of the target sequence within species. The PNA probe specificity was tested with several bacterial species, including other Campylobacter spp. and their close relatives. All tested C. coli, C. jejuni and C. lari strains were hybridized successfully. Aging of the Campylobacter cultures caused the formation of coccoid forms, which did not hybridize as well as bacteria in the active growth phase, indicating that the probe could be used to assess the physiological status of targeted cells. The PNA FISH methodology detected C. coli by membrane filtration method from C. coli spiked drinking water samples.  相似文献   

10.
Thiazole Orange (TO)-conjugated Peptide Nucleic Acid (PNA) probes have been reported as a valuable strategy for DNA analysis; however, no investigations targeting RNA molecules and no comparisons between different derivatization approaches have been reported so far. In this work, two TO-conjugated PNAs for genogroup II noroviruses (NoV GII) detection were designed and synthesized. Both the probes target the most conserved stretch of nucleotides identified in the open reading frame 1-2 (ORF1-ORF2) junction region and differ for the dye conjugation strategy: one PNA is end-labelled with the TO molecule tethered by a linker; the other probe bears the TO molecule directly linked to the PNA backbone, replacing a conventional nucleobase. The spectroscopic properties of the two PNA probes were studied and their applicability to NoVs detection, using an isothermal assay, was investigated. Both probes showed good specificity and high fluorescence enhancement upon hybridization, especially targeting RNA molecules. Moreover, the two probes were successfully employed for NoVs detection from stool specimens in an isothermal-based amplification assay targeting RNA 'amplicons'. The probes showed to be specific even in the presence of high concentrations of non-target RNA.  相似文献   

11.
《Biochemical education》1998,26(4):277-280
This tutorial briefly describes a new class of synthetic biopolymer, which is referred to as peptide nucleic acid (PNA). In PNA, individual nucleobases are linked to an achiral neutral peptide backbone. PNA exhibits the hybridization characteristic (e.g., Watson—Crick duplex formation) of DNA. The achiral peptide backbone provides similar interbase distances as natural DNA, and adequate flexibility to permit base pair interactions with complementary RNA or DNA strands. Several potential applications of PNA oligomers in biotechnology are suggested. These include the use of PNAs as a probe for specific recognition of a DNA or RNA sequence selective, purification of nucleic acids via designed high affinity binding to PNA, screening for DNA mutations, and as possible therapeutic agents.  相似文献   

12.
肽核酸(peptide nucleic acid,PNA)阵列   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
鲁艳芹  韩金祥 《生命科学》2003,15(4):200-202
肽核酸(PNA)以N—(2—氨基乙基)甘氨酸替代DNA分子中的磷酸戊糖骨架。它能特异性地识别与DNA、RNA所形成的杂交体。PNA—DNA、PNA—RNA的热稳定性要比相应的DNA—DNA、DNA—RNA高,而且PNA识别单碱基的能力强于DNA和RNA,使之在微阵列,尤其是SNP检测领域有着广泛的应用前景。本文简述了PNA阵列从探针设计、阵列合成、杂交和检测的全过程。  相似文献   

13.
A peptide nucleic acid (PNA) probe was developed to detect the toxic dinoflagellate, Takayama pulchella TPXM, using fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) combined with epifluorescent microscopy and flow cytometry. The PNA probe was then used to analyze HAB samples from Xiamen Bay. The results indicated that the fluorescein phosphoramidite (FAM)-labeled probe (PNATP28S01) [Flu]-OO ATG CCA TCT CAA GA, entered the algal cells easily and bound to the target species specifically. High hybridization efficiency (nearly 100%) was observed. Detection by epifluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry gave comparable results. The fluorescence intensity of the PNA probe hybridized to T. pulchella cells was remarkably higher than that of two DNA probes used in this study and than the autofluorescence of the blank and negative control cells. In addition, the hybridization condition of the PNA probe was easier to control than DNA probes, and when applied to field-collected samples, the PNA probe showed higher binding efficiency to the target species than DNA probes. With the observed high specificity, binding efficiency, and detection signal intensity, the PNA probe will be useful for monitoring harmful algal blooms of T. pulchella.  相似文献   

14.
We report here an extension of homogeneous assays based on fluorescence intensity and lifetime measuring on DNA hybridization. A novel decay probe that allows simple one-step nucleic acid detection with subnanomolar sensitivity, and is suitable for closed-tube applications, is introduced. The decay probe uses fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between a europium chelate donor and an organic fluorophore acceptor. The substantial change in the acceptor emission decay time on hybridization with the target sequence allows the direct separation of the hybridized and unhybridized probe populations in a time-resolved measurement. No additional sample manipulation or self-hybridization of the probes is required. The wavelength and decay time of a decay probe can be adjusted according to the selection of probe length and acceptor fluorophore, thereby making the probes applicable to multiplexed assays. Here we demonstrate the decay probe principle and decay probe-based, one-step, dual DNA assay using celiac disease-related target oligonucleotides (single-nucleotide polymorphisms [SNPs]) as model analytes. Decay probes showed specific response for their complementary DNA target and allowed good signal deconvolution based on simultaneous optical and temporal filtering. This technique potentially could be used to further increase the number of simultaneously detected DNA targets in a simple one-step homogeneous assay.  相似文献   

15.
A set of fluorescently-labeled DNA probes that hybridize with the target RNA and produce fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) signals can be utilized for the detection of specific RNA. We have developed probe sets to detect and discriminate single-strand RNA molecules of plant viral genome, and sought a method to improve the FRET signals to handle in vivo applications. Consequently, we found that a double-labeled donor probe labeled with Bodipy dye yielded a remarkable increase in fluorescence intensity compared to a single-labeled donor probe used in an ordinary FRET. This double-labeled donor system can be easily applied to improve various FRET probes since the dependence upon sequence and label position in enhancement is not as strict. Furthermore this method could be applied to other nucleic acid substances, such as oligo RNA and phosphorothioate oligonucleotides (S-oligos) to enhance FRET signal. Although the double-labeled donor probes labeled with a variety of fluorophores had unexpected properties (strange UV-visible absorption spectra, decrease of intensity and decay of donor fluorescence) compared with single-labeled ones, they had no relation to FRET enhancement. This signal amplification mechanism cannot be explained simply based on our current results and knowledge of FRET. Yet it is possible to utilize this double-labeled donor system in various applications of FRET as a simple signal-enhancement method.  相似文献   

16.
Peptide nucleic acid (PNA) is a chimeric oligonucleotide with nucleotide-derived bases and a peptide backbone. Compared with natural nucleotides, PNA has several advantages, including improved stability and high sequence discrimination during duplex formation. Despite its potential for therapeutic application, analysis technologies have not been generalized, mainly due to ambiguous physiochemical properties resembling those of nucleic acids as well as protein. Here we present a PNA detection method: sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) followed by electrotransfer to a Western blotting membrane and then hybridization with a radiolabeled oligonucleotide probe. This method is useful for evaluating the quality of synthetic PNA and determining its intracellular localization.  相似文献   

17.
The aim of this study was to construct a gene chip system based on a surface plasmon resonance technique, where peptide nucleic acid (PNA) oligomers are used as probes. Since the self-assembled monolayer (SAM) technology offers good control at the molecular level, we prepared 2D surface chemistry via SAM for probe attachments. PNA, which was designed according to the bioinformatics, was immobilized on the SAM-modified chip, and subsequently, relevant parameters of the experiment were ensured and optimized. Our results suggest that the ion strength and pH value of the buffer solution do not play significant roles in PNA or its complementary strand hybridization. The PNA probe binds to its complementary nucleic acid strand with a higher sensitivity and specificity compared to those of a traditional DNA probe. The PNA probe combined with surface plasmon resonance (SPR) technology has the benefits of being a label-free and in-real time monitor, as well as having improved hybridization and stability efficiency, which highlight the PNA gene chip detection system as a promising biosensor for clinical applications.  相似文献   

18.
19.
A new fluorescence in situ hybridization method using peptide nucleic acid (PNA) probes for identification of Brettanomyces is described. The test is based on fluorescein-labeled PNA probes targeting a species-specific sequence of the rRNA of Dekkera bruxellensis. The PNA probes were applied to smears of colonies, and results were interpreted by fluorescence microscopy. The results obtained from testing 127 different yeast strains, including 78 Brettanomyces isolates from wine, show that the spoilage organism Brettanomyces belongs to the species D. bruxellensis and that the new method is able to identify Brettanomyces (D. bruxellensis) with 100% sensitivity and 100% specificity.  相似文献   

20.
The use of affinity tagged PNA capture probes offers an efficient means for the purification of nucleic acids by hybridization. Two different approaches are described. A sequence specific method and a generic method. The sequence specific method requires sequence information on the target and synthesis of a dedicated PNA. It can be used to selectively purify the nucleic acid containing the target from non-related nucleic acids and other cellular components. The generic method uses a "universal" triplex forming PNA and requires no sequence information on the target. It can be used in the bulk purification of large nucleic acids.  相似文献   

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