Single-molecule fluorescence detection of a tricyclic nucleoside analogue

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Abstract

Fluorescent nucleobase surrogates capable of Watson-Crick hydrogen bonding are essential probes of nucleic acid structure and dynamics, but their limited brightness and short absorption and emission wavelengths have rendered them unsuitable for single-molecule detection. Aiming to improve on these properties, we designed a new tricyclic pyrimidine nucleoside analogue with a push-pull conjugated system and synthesized it in seven sequential steps. The resultingC-linked 8-(diethylamino)benzo[b][1,8]naphthyridin-2(1H)-one nucleoside, which we name ABN, exhibitsε442= 20 000 M−1cm−1andΦem,540= 0.39 in water, increasing toΦem= 0.50-0.53 when base paired with adenine in duplex DNA oligonucleotides. Single-molecule fluorescence measurements of ABN using both one-photon and two-photon excitation demonstrate its excellent photostability and indicate that the nucleoside is present to > 95% in a bright state with count rates of at least 15 kHz per molecule. This new fluorescent nucleobase analogue, which, in duplex DNA, is the brightest and most red-shifted known, is the first to offer robust and accessible single-molecule fluorescence detection capabilities.

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Samaan, G. N., Wyllie, M. K., Cizmic, J. M., Needham, L. M., Nobis, D., Ngo, K., … Purse, B. W. (2021). Single-molecule fluorescence detection of a tricyclic nucleoside analogue. Chemical Science, 12(7), 2623–2628. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0sc03903a

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