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1.
Naphthyridine dimer is a unique molecule that strongly, and selectively, binds to the guanine-guanine mismatch in duplex DNA. We have synthesized naphthyridine dimers possessing a different length of poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) linker, and immobilized them to CM5 sensor chip to carry out a surface plasmon resonance (SPR) assay of DNA duplexes containing a single base mismatch. The sensitivity of the sensor remarkably increased with increasing numbers of PEO units incorporated into the linker. With the sensor surface immobilized naphthyridine dimer for 1.5 x 10(3) response unit (RU) through three PEO units, the distinct SPR signal was observed at a concentration of 1 nM of the 27-mer G-G mismatch.  相似文献   

2.
We have discovered a new molecule naphthyridine–azaquinolone hybrid (Npt–Azq) that strongly stabilized the guanine-adenine (G-A) mismatch in duplex DNA. In the presence of Npt–Azq, the melting temperature (Tm) of 5′-d(CTA ACG GAA TG)-3′/3′-d(GAT TGA CTT AC)-5′ containing a single G-A mismatch increased by 15.4°C, whereas fully matched duplex increased its Tm only by 2.2°C. Npt–Azq was immobilized on the sensor surface for the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) assay to examine SPR detection of duplexes containing a G-A mismatch. Distinct SPR signals were observed when 27mer DNA containing a G-A mismatch was analyzed by the Npt–Azq immobilized sensor surfaces, whereas the signal of the fully matched duplex was ~6-fold weaker in intensity. The SPR signals for the G-A mismatch were proportional to the concentration of DNA in a range up to 1 µM, confirming that the SPR signal is in fact due to the binding of the G-A mismatch to Npt–Azq immobilized on the surface. Examination of all 16 G-A mismatches regarding the flanking sequence revealed that the sensor surface reported here is applicable to eight flanking sequences, covering 50% of all possible G-A mismatches.  相似文献   

3.
Here we have designed and synthesized ligands that specifically bind with high affinity (K(d) = 53 nM) to the guanine (G)-guanine mismatch, one of four types of single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP). Detection of the G-G mismatch was performed by a surface plasmon resonance (SPR) assay using a sensor chip carrying the G-G specific ligand on its surface. The accuracy of the G-G mismatch detection by the SPR sensor was demonstrated by a marked SPR response obtained only for the DNA containing the G-G mismatch. DNAs containing G-A and G-T mismatches, as well as a fully matched duplex, produced only a weak response. Furthermore, this assay was found applicable for the detection of SNP existing in PCR amplification products of a 652-nucleotide sequence of the HSP70-2 gene.  相似文献   

4.
Mutation detection by electrocatalysis at DNA-modified electrodes   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
Detection of mutations and damaged DNA bases is important for the early diagnosis of genetic disease. Here we describe an electrocatalytic method for the detection of single-base mismatches as well as DNA base lesions in fully hybridized duplexes, based on charge transport through DNA films. Gold electrodes modified with preassembled DNA duplexes are used to monitor the electrocatalytic signal of methylene blue, a redox-active DNA intercalator, coupled to [Fe(CN)6]3-. The presence of mismatched or damaged DNA bases substantially diminishes the electrocatalytic signal. Because this assay is not a measure of differential hybridization, all single-base mismatches, including thermodynamically stable GT and GA mismatches, can be detected without stringent hybridization conditions. Furthermore, many common DNA lesions and "hot spot" mutations in the human p53 genome can be distinguished from perfect duplexes. Finally, we have demonstrated the application of this technology in a chip-based format. This system provides a sensitive method for probing the integrity of DNA sequences and a completely new approach to single-base mismatch detection.  相似文献   

5.
High-throughput DNA sensors capable of detecting single-base mismatches are required for the routine screening of genetic mutations and disease. A new strategy for the electrochemical detection of single-base mismatches in DNA has been developed based upon charge transport through DNA films. Double-helical DNA films on gold surfaces have been prepared and used to detect DNA mismatches electrochemically. The signals obtained from redox-active intercalators bound to DNA-modified gold surfaces display a marked sensitivity to the presence of base mismatches within the immobilized duplexes. Differential mismatch detection was accomplished irrespective of DNA sequence composition and mismatch identity. Single-base changes in sequences hybridized at the electrode surface are also detected accurately. Coupling the redox reactions of intercalated species to electrocatalytic processes in solution considerably increases the sensitivity of this assay. Reporting on the electronic structure of DNA, as opposed to the hybridization energetics of single-stranded oligonucleotides, electrochemical sensors based on charge transport may offer fundamental advantages in both scope and sensitivity.  相似文献   

6.
A spectroscopic assay for detection of extrahelical thymine residues in DNA heteroduplexes under their modification by potassium permanganate has been developed. The assay is based on increase in absorbance at 420 nm due to accumulation of thymidine oxidation intermediates and soluble manganese dioxide. The analysis was carried out using a set of 19-bp DNA duplexes containing unpaired thymidines opposite tetrahydrofuranyl derivatives mimicking a widespread DNA damage (apurinic (AP) sites) and a library of 50-bp DNA duplexes containing all types of base mismatches in different surroundings. The relation between the selectivity of unpaired T oxidation and the thermal stability of DNA double helix was investigated. The method described here was shown to discriminate between DNA duplexes with one or two AP sites and to reveal thymine-containing mismatches and all noncanonical base pairs in AT-surroundings. Comparative results of CCM analysis and the rapid photometric assay for mismatch detection are demonstrated for the first time in the same model system. The chemical reactivity of target thymines was shown to correlate with local disturbance of double helix at the mismatch site. As the spectroscopic assay does not require the DNA cleavage reaction and gel electrophoresis, it can be easily automated and used for primary screening of somatic mutations.  相似文献   

7.
F H Arnold  S Wolk  P Cruz  I Tinoco 《Biochemistry》1987,26(13):4068-4075
The structures and hydrogen exchange properties of the mismatched DNA oligonucleotide duplexes d(CCCAGGG)2 and d(CCCTGGG)2 have been studied by high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance. Both the adenine-adenine and thymine-thymine mismatches are intercalated in the duplexes. The structures of these self-complementary duplexes are symmetric, with the two strands in equivalent positions. The evidence indicates that these mismatches are not stably hydrogen bonded. The mismatched bases in both duplexes are in the anti conformation. The mismatched thymine nucleotide in d(CCCTGGG)2 is intercalated in the duplex with very little distortion of the bases or sugar-phosphate backbone. In contrast, the bases of the adenine-adenine mismatch in d(CCCAGGG)2 must tilt and push apart to reduce the overlap of the amino groups. The thermodynamic data show that the T-T mismatch is less destabilizing than the A-A mismatch when flanked by C-G base pairs in this sequence, in contrast to their approximately equal stabilities when flanked by A-T base pairs in the sequence d(CAAAXAAAG.CTTTYTTTG) where X and Y = A, C, G, and T [Aboul-ela, F., Koh, D., & Tinoco, I., Jr. (1985) Nucleic Acids Res. 13, 4811]. Although the mechanism cannot be determined conclusively from the limited data obtained, exchange of the imino protons with solvent in these destabilized heteroduplexes appears to occur by a cooperative mechanism in which half the helix dissociates.  相似文献   

8.
John DM  Weeks KM 《Biochemistry》2002,41(21):6866-6874
2'-Amine-substituted nucleotides in hybridized duplexes can be chemically tagged in an acylation reaction that is faster for mismatched or flexible nucleotides than for residues constrained by base pairing. Here we explore mismatch and hybridization detection using probe oligodeoxynucleotides containing single 2'-aminocytidine or -uridine nucleotides annealed to DNA or RNA targets under nonstringent conditions, below T(m). Consistent with a mechanism in which 2'-amine acylation is gated by local nucleotide flexibility, we find that efficient acylation is correlated with formation of weaker or fewer hydrogen bonds in base pair mismatches. Using 2'-aminocytidine-containing probes annealed to both DNA and RNA targets, mismatches are reliably detected as rapid selective acylation of the 2'-amine group in two sequence contexts. For probe oligonucleotides containing 2'-aminouridine residues, good discrimination between U-A base pairs and U-G mismatches could be obtained for DNA-DNA but not for DNA-RNA duplexes upon the introduction of a single 2'-O-Me group 5' to the 2'-amino nucleotide. The 2'-O-Me group introduces a structural perturbation, presumably to a more A-form-like structure, that exaggerates local flexibility at mismatches in DNA strands. Thus, 2'-amine acylation can be used to interrogate all possible mismatches in DNA-DNA duplexes and mismatches involving 2'-amine-substituted cytidine nucleotides in DNA-RNA heteroduplexes. Applications of this chemistry include detecting and chemically proofreading single nucleotide polymorphisms in both DNA and RNA targets and quantifying absolute amounts of RNA.  相似文献   

9.
R Wagner  P Debbie    M Radman 《Nucleic acids research》1995,23(19):3944-3948
An accurate and highly sensitive mutation detection assay has been developed. The assay is based on the detection of mispaired and unpaired bases by immobilized mismatch binding protein (Escherichia coli MutS). The assay can detect most mismatches and all single base substitution mutations, as well as small addition or deletion mutations. The assay is simple to use and does not require the use of either radioactivity or gel electrophoresis.  相似文献   

10.
Expansion of the triplet repeat DNA sequence d[CGG]n.d[CCG]n is a characteristic of Fragile X syndrome, a human neurodegenerative disease. Stable intrastrand conformations formed by both d[CGG]n and d[CCG]n, and involving G-G and C-C mismatch pairs, respectively, are believed to be of importance in the development of the disease. We have shown previously that C-C mismatch pairs can be crosslinked covalently by mechlorethamine, a nitrogen mustard alkylating agent, and hence this reaction may be of value as a probe for conformers of d[CCG]n. To characterize the mechlorethamine C-C crosslink reaction further, here we report the kinetics and sequence dependence of formation of the crosslink species, using a series of model duplexes. The rate of reaction depends on the base sequence proximal to the C-C mismatch pair. Hence, in 19mer duplexes containing a central d[M4M3M2M1Cn1n2n3n4].d[N4N3N2N1Cm1m2m3m4] sequence, where M-m and N-n are complementary base pairs, the amount of crosslink increased with increasing G-C content of the eight base pairs neighboring the C-C mismatch and with the proximity of the G-C pairs to the C-C mismatch. Molecular dynamics simulations of the solvated duplexes provided an explanation of these data. Hence, for a C-C pair flanked by G-C base pairs the mismatched cytosine bases remain stacked within the duplex, but for a C-C pair flanked by A-T base pairs, the simulations suggested local opening of the duplex around the C-C pair, making it a less effective target for mechlorethamine.  相似文献   

11.
We previously prepared the oligonucleotides (ODNs) conjugated to an anthraquinone (AQ) group via one carbon linker at the 2'-sugar position. When these modified ODNs bind to cDNA sequences, the AQ moiety can be intercalated into the predetermined base-pair pocket of a duplex DNA. In this paper, 2'-AQ-modified ODNs are shown to be an excellent electrochemical probe to clarify the effect of a mismatch base on the charge transfer (CT) though DNA. Two types of DNA-modified electrodes were constructed by assembly of disulfide-terminated 2'-AQ-ODN duplexes onto gold electrodes. One type of electrodes (system I) contains fully matched base pairs or a single-base mismatch in duplex DNA between the redox center and the electrode. The other (system II) consists of the mismatch but at the outside of the redox center. The modified electrodes were analyzed by cyclic voltammetry to estimate the CT rate through duplex DNA. In system I, the CT rate was found to be approximately 50 s (-1) for the fully matched AQ-ODN duplexes, while the CT rates of the mismatched DNA were considerably slower than that of the fully matched DNA. In system II, the AQ-ODN duplexes showed almost similar CT rates ( approximately 50 s (-1)) for the fully matched DNA and for the mismatched DNAs. The detection of a single-base mismatch was then performed by chronocoulometry (CC). All the DNA duplexes containing a mismatch base in system I gave the reduced electrochemical responses when compared to the fully matched DNA. In particular, the mismatched DNAs including G--A mismatch can be differentiated from fully matched DNA without using any electrochemical catalyst. We further tested the usefulness of single-stranded (ss) AQ-ODN immobilized on a gold electrode in the electrochemical detection of a single-base mismatch through hybridization assay. The ss-AQ-ODN electrodes were immersed in target-containing buffer at room temperature, and the CC measurements were carried out to see the changes in the integrated charge. Within 60 min, the mismatched DNA was clearly distinguishable by the CC differences from the fully matched target. Thus, the electrochemical hybridization assay provides an easy and convenient detection for DNA mutation that does not require any extra reagents, catalyst, target labeling, and washing steps.  相似文献   

12.
The most promising approaches to detection of random point mutations are based on chemical cleavage of mismatches and other noncomplementarities. To demonstrate the specificity of this method, a model system was obtained for the first time as sets of 50-mer imperfect DNA duplexes containg all variants of mismatched and unpaired internal residues located in an invariant context and flanked by either A · T or G · C base pairs. Chemical cleavage of DNA duplexes immobilized on magnetic beads via the biotin-streptavidin interaction was accomplished using potassium permanganate or hydroxylamine, which are sensitive to the secondary DNA structure and react with thymine and cytosine, respectively. The reactivity of different mismatches was connected with the local duplex structure and depended on their type, orientation, and flanking nucleotides. The use of potassium permanganate and hydroxylamine to modify a heteroduplex mixture makes it possible to unambiguously detect a mismatch and, based on the type of reagent and the size of the cleavage products, to suppose the type and position of the mismatch and the flanking nucleotides. The model system can be used to evaluate the sensitivity of a chemical cleavage method and to control false-positive and false-negative results when different protocols are applied to the detection of DNA point mutations.  相似文献   

13.
A highly sensitive method to detect traces of aldehyde-containing apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites in nucleic acids has been developed. Based on this method, a novel approach to detect DNA base mismatches recognized by the mismatch repair glycosylase MutY is demonstrated. Open chain aldehydes generated in nucleic acids due to spontaneous depurination, DNA damage or base excision of mismatched adenine by MutY are covalently trapped by a new linker molecule [fluorescent aldehyde-reactive probe (FARP), a fluorescein-conjugated hydroxylamine derivative]. DNA containing AP sites is FARP-trapped, biotinylated and immobilized onto neutravidin-coated microplates. The number of FARP-trapped aldehydes is then determined via chemiluminescence using a cooled ICCD camera. AP sites induced in plasmid or genomic calf thymus DNA via mild depurination or by simple incubation at physiological conditions (pH 7, 37 degreesC) presented a linear increase in chemiluminescence signal with time. The procedure developed, from a starting DNA material of approximately 100 ng, allows detection of attomole level (10(-18) mol) AP sites, or 1 AP site/2 x 10(7) bases, and extends by 1-2 orders of magnitude the current limit in AP site detection. In order to detect MutY-recognized mismatches, nucleic acids are first treated with 5 mM hydroxylamine to remove traces of spontaneous aldehydes. Following MutY treatment and FARP-labeling, oligonucleotides engineered to have a centrally located A/G mismatch demonstrate a strong chemiluminescence signal. Similarly, single-stranded M13 DNA that forms mismatches via self-complementation (average of 3 mismatches over 7429 bases) and treated with MutY yields a signal approximately 100-fold above background. No signal was detected when DNA without mismatches was used. The current development allows sensitive, non-isotopic, high throughput screening of diverse nucleic acids for AP sites and mismatches in a microplate-based format.  相似文献   

14.
Single- and multi-base (loop) mismatches can arise in DNA by replication errors, during recombination, and by chemical modification of DNA. Single-base and loop mismatches of several nucleotides are efficiently repaired in mammalian cells by a nick-directed, MSH2-dependent mechanism. Larger loop mismatches (> or =12 bases) are repaired by an MSH2-independent mechanism. Prior studies have shown that 12- and 14-base palindromic loops are repaired with bias toward loop retention, and that repair bias is eliminated when five single-base mismatches flank the loop mismatch. Here we show that one single-base mismatch near a 12-base palindromic loop is sufficient to eliminate loop repair bias in wild-type, but not MSH2-defective mammalian cells. We also show that palindromic loop and single-base mismatches separated by 12 bases are repaired independently at least 10% of the time in wild-type cells, and at least 30% of the time in MSH2-defective cells. Palindromic loop and single-base mismatches separated by two bases were never repaired independently. These and other data indicate that loop repair tracts are variable in length. All tracts extend at least 2 bases, some extend <12 bases, and others >12 bases, on one side of the loop. These properties distinguish palindromic loop mismatch repair from the three known excision repair pathways: base excision repair which has one to six base tracts, nucleotide excision repair which has approximately 30 base tracts, and MSH2-dependent mismatch repair, which has tracts that extend for several hundred bases.  相似文献   

15.
Sugimoto N  Nakano M  Nakano S 《Biochemistry》2000,39(37):11270-11281
Thermodynamics of 66 RNA/DNA duplexes containing single mismatches were measured by UV melting methods. Stability enhancements for rG. dT mismatches were the largest of all mismatches examined here, while rU.dG mismatches were not as stable. The methyl group on C5 of thymine enhanced the stability by 0.12 approximately 0.53 kcal mol(-)(1) depending on the identity of adjacent Watson-Crick base pairs, whereas the 2'-hydroxyl group in ribouridine stabilized the duplex by approximately 0.6 kcal mol(-)(1) regardless of the adjacent base pairs. Stabilities induced by the methyl group in thymine, the 2'-hydroxyl group of ribouridine, and an nucleotide exchange at rG.dT and rU.dG mismatches were found to be independent of each other. The order for the mismatch stabilities is rG.dT > rU. dG approximately rG.dG > rA.dG approximately rG.dA approximately rA. dC > rA.dA approximately rU.dT approximately rU.dC > rC.dA approximately rC.dT, although the identity of the adjacent base pairs slightly altered the order. The pH dependence stability and structural changes were suggested for the rA.dG but not for rG.dA mismatches. Comparisons of trinucleotide stabilities for G.T and G.U pairs in RNA, DNA, and RNA/DNA duplexes indicate that stable RNA/DNA mismatches exhibit a stability similar to RNA mismatches while unstable RNA/DNA mismatches show a stability similar to that of DNA mismatches. These results would be useful for the design of antisense oligonucleotides.  相似文献   

16.
The most promising approach for detection of random point mutations relies upon the DNA chemical cleavage near associated mismatching base pairs. In our study, the series of heteroduplexes with all types of mismatches and extrahelical nucleotide residues surrounded by both A x T and G x C pairs were performed via hybridization of 50-mer synthetic oligonucleotides differing in only one nucleotide at the central position. The chemical cleavage of DNA duplexes immobilized on magnetic beads by means of biotin-streptavidin interaction was carried out with chemicals, which able to attack only nucleobases flipped out of the base stack: potassium permanganate and hydroxylamine reacting to T and C respectively. The chemical reactivity of different mismatches was shown to correlate clearly with the target local structure in a particular sequence context. This work makes up for a deficiency in systematic study of DNA cleavage near mismatches in dependence on their type, orientation and flanking nucleotides. The model system elaborated may be applied to estimate the sensitivity of the methodology and to control the possibility of false-positive and false-negative result appearance, when different protocols for detection of DNA mutations are used. The modification of heteroduplex mixtures by potassium permanganate and hydroxylamine allows to reveal any non-canonical base pair and suggest its type and neighboring nucleotides from the nature of chemical as well as its localization from the length of cleavage products.  相似文献   

17.
Design of LNA probes that improve mismatch discrimination   总被引:4,自引:3,他引:1  
Locked nucleic acids (LNA) show remarkable affinity and specificity against native DNA targets. Effects of LNA modifications on mismatch discrimination were studied as a function of sequence context and identity of the mismatch using ultraviolet (UV) melting experiments. A triplet of LNA residues centered on the mismatch was generally found to have the largest discriminatory power. An exception was observed for G–T mismatches, where discrimination decreased when the guanine nucleotide at the mismatch site or even the flanking nucleotides were modified. Fluorescence experiments using 2-aminopurine suggest that LNA modifications enhance base stacking of perfectly matched base pairs and decrease stabilizing stacking interactions of mismatched base pairs. LNAs do not change the amount of counterions (Na+) that are released when duplexes denature. New guidelines are suggested for design of LNA probes, which significantly improve mismatch discrimination in comparison with unmodified DNA probes.  相似文献   

18.
Electrochemical detection of nucleic base mismatches was attempted successfully with ferrocenyl naphthalene diimide (FND) in a model system with 20-meric double-stranded oligonucleotides with or without a mismatch(es). Thus, dA(20) or a 20-meric sequence of the lac Z gene was immobilized on a gold electrode and complementary oligonucleotides with different numbers of mismatches were allowed to hybridize in the presence of FND to give rise to an electrochemical signal. The signal intensity varied depending on the number of unpaired bases on the DNA duplex. From experiments with a quartz crystal microbalance, eight molecules of FND were found to bind to the 20-meric double-stranded oligos and this number decreased as the number of mismatches increased. These findings were further supported by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectroscopy. This novel method will be useful for the analysis of single-nucleotide polymorphisms present on human genes.  相似文献   

19.
Locked nucleic acid (LNA) and 2'-O-methyl nucleotide (OMeN) are the most extensively studied nucleotide analogues. Although both LNA and OMeN are characterized by the C3'-endo sugar pucker conformation, which is dominant in A-form DNA and RNA nucleotides, they demonstrate different binding behaviours. Previous studies have focused attention on their properties of duplex stabilities, hybridization kinetics and resistance against nuclease digestion; however, their ability to discriminate mismatched hybridizations has been explored much less. In this study, LNA- and OMeN-modified oligonucleotide probes have been prepared and their effects on the DNA duplex stability have been examined: LNA modifications can enhance the duplex stability, whereas OMeN modifications reduce the duplex stability. Next, we studied how the LNA:DNA and OMeN:DNA mismatches reduced the duplex stability. Melting temperature measurement showed that different LNA:DNA or OMeN:DNA mismatches indeed influence the duplex stability differently. LNA purines can discriminate LNA:DNA mismatches more effectively than LNA pyrimidines as well as DNA nucleotides. Furthermore, we designed five LNA- and five OMeN-modified oligonucleotide probes to simulate realistic situations where target-probe duplexes contain a complementary LNA:DNA or OMeN:DNA base pairs and a DNA:DNA mismatch simultaneously. The measured collective effect showed that the duplex stability was enhanced by the complementary LNA:DNA base pair but decreased by the DNA:DNA mismatch in a position-dependent manner regardless of the chemical identity and position of the complementary LNA:DNA base pair. On the other hand, the OMeN-modified probes also showed that the duplex stability was reduced by both the OMeN modification and the OMeN:DNA mismatch in a position-dependent manner.  相似文献   

20.
The repair of T:G mismatches in DNA is key for maintaining bacterial restriction/modification systems and gene silencing in higher eukaryotes. T:G mismatch repair can be initiated by a specific mismatch glycosylase (MIG) that is homologous to the helix-hairpin-helix (HhH) DNA repair enzymes. Here, we present a 2.0 A resolution crystal structure and complementary mutagenesis results for this thermophilic HhH MIG enzyme. The results suggest that MIG distorts the target thymine nucleotide by twisting the thymine base approximately 90 degrees away from its normal anti position within DNA. We propose that functionally significant differences exist in DNA repair enzyme extrahelical nucleotide binding and catalysis that are characteristic of whether the target base is damaged or is a normal base within a mispair. These results explain why pure HhH DNA glycosylases and combined glycosylase/AP lyases cannot be interconverted by simply altering their functional group chemistry, and how broad-specificity DNA glycosylase enzymes may weaken the glycosylic linkage to allow a variety of damaged DNA bases to be excised.  相似文献   

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