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Optical determination of the electronic coupling and intercalation geometry of thiazole orange homodimer in DNA

Authors :
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biological Engineering
Bathe, Mark
Bricker, William P
Cunningham, Paul D.
Díaz, Sebastián A.
Medintz, Igor L.
Melinger, Joseph S.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biological Engineering
Bathe, Mark
Bricker, William P
Cunningham, Paul D.
Díaz, Sebastián A.
Medintz, Igor L.
Melinger, Joseph S.
Source :
Prof. Bathe via Howard Silver
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Sequence-selective bis-intercalating dyes exhibit large increases in fluorescence in the presence of specific DNA sequences. This property makes this class of fluorophore of particular importance to biosensing and super-resolution imaging. Here we report ultrafast transient anisotropy measurements of resonance energy transfer (RET) between thiazole orange (TO) molecules in a complex formed between the homodimer TOTO and double-stranded (ds) DNA. Biexponential homo-RET dynamics suggest two subpopulations within the ensemble: 80% intercalated and 20% non-intercalated. Based on the application of the transition density cube method to describe the electronic coupling and Monte Carlo simulations of the TOTO/dsDNA geometry, the dihedral angle between intercalated TO molecules is estimated to be 81° ± 5°, corresponding to a coupling strength of 45 ± 22 cm[superscript −1]. Dye intercalation with this geometry is found to occur independently of the underlying DNA sequence, despite the known preference of TOTO for the nucleobase sequence CTAG. The non-intercalated subpopulation is inferred to have a mean inter-dye separation distance of 19 Å, corresponding to coupling strengths between 0 and 25 cm[superscript −1]. This information is important to enable the rational design of energy transfer systems that utilize TOTO as a relay dye. The approach used here is generally applicable to determining the electronic coupling strength and intercalation configuration of other dimeric bis-intercalators.<br />United States. Army Research Office. Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative (W911NF1210420)<br />United States. Office of Naval Research (DURIP Award N00014-15-1-2830)<br />United States. Office of Naval Research (DURIP Award N00014-13-1-0664)<br />Naval Research Laboratory (U.S.) Nanoscience Institute and the Laboratory University Collaborative Initiative

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Prof. Bathe via Howard Silver
Notes :
application/pdf, en_US
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1085121472
Document Type :
Electronic Resource