Eric Kool

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Organization: Stanford University
Department: Department of Chemistry
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Co-reporter:Anna M. Kietrys, Willem A. Velema, and Eric T. Kool
Journal of the American Chemical Society November 29, 2017 Volume 139(Issue 47) pp:17074-17074
Publication Date(Web):November 7, 2017
DOI:10.1021/jacs.7b07914
Posttranscriptional modifications of RNA bases are not only found in many noncoding RNAs but have also recently been identified in coding (messenger) RNAs as well. They require complex and laborious methods to locate, and many still lack methods for localized detection. Here we test the ability of next-generation sequencing (NGS) to detect and distinguish between ten modified bases in synthetic RNAs. We compare ultradeep sequencing patterns of modified bases, including miscoding, insertions and deletions (indels), and truncations, to unmodified bases in the same contexts. The data show widely varied responses to modification, ranging from no response, to high levels of mutations, insertions, deletions, and truncations. The patterns are distinct for several of the modifications, and suggest the future use of ultradeep sequencing as a fingerprinting strategy for locating and identifying modifications in cellular RNAs.
Co-reporter:Vijay Singh;William Margolin;Eric T. Kool;Daniel Vega Mendoza;Spencer A. Clark
Bioconjugate Chemistry December 21, 2016 Volume 27(Issue 12) pp:2839-2843
Publication Date(Web):November 21, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.bioconjchem.6b00613
We describe a novel molecular strategy for engendering a strong light-up signal in fluorescence tagging of the genetically encoded HaloTag protein domain. We designed a set of haloalkane-derivatized dyes having twisted internal charge transfer (TICT) structures potentially narrow enough to partially fit into the enzyme’s haloalkane-binding channel. Testing a range of short chain lengths revealed a number of active dyes, with seven carbons yielding optimum light-up signal. The dimethylaminostilbazolium chloroheptyl dye (1d) yields a 27-fold fluorescence emission enhancement (λex = 535 nm; Em(max) = 616 nm) upon reaction with the protein. The control compound with standard 12-atom linkage shows less efficient signaling, consistent with our channel-binding hypothesis. For emission further to the red, we also prepared a chloroheptyl naphthalene-based dye; compound 2 emits at 653 nm with strong fluorescence enhancement upon reaction with the HaloTag domain. The two dyes (1d, 2) were successfully tested in wash-free imaging of protein localization in bacteria, using a HaloTag fusion of the filamenting temperature-sensitive mutant Z (FtsZ) protein in Escherichia coli (E. coli). The new dye conjugates are inexpensive and easily synthesized enzyme substrates with low background and large Stokes shifts, offering substantial benefits over known fluorescent substrates for the HaloTag enzyme.
Co-reporter:Dominik K. Kölmel and Eric T. Kool
Chemical Reviews August 9, 2017 Volume 117(Issue 15) pp:10358-10358
Publication Date(Web):June 22, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.chemrev.7b00090
The formation of oximes and hydrazones is employed in numerous scientific fields as a simple and versatile conjugation strategy. This imine-forming reaction is applied in fields as diverse as polymer chemistry, biomaterials and hydrogels, dynamic combinatorial chemistry, organic synthesis, and chemical biology. Here we outline chemical developments in this field, with special focus on the past ∼10 years of developments. Recent strategies for installing reactive carbonyl groups and α-nucleophiles into biomolecules are described. The basic chemical properties of reactants and products in this reaction are then reviewed, with an eye to understanding the reaction’s mechanism and how reactant structure controls rates and equilibria in the process. Recent work that has uncovered structural features and new mechanisms for speeding the reaction, sometimes by orders of magnitude, is discussed. We describe recent studies that have identified especially fast reacting aldehyde/ketone substrates and structural effects that lead to rapid-reacting α-nucleophiles as well. Among the most effective new strategies has been the development of substituents near the reactive aldehyde group that either transfer protons at the transition state or trap the initially formed tetrahedral intermediates. In addition, the recent development of efficient nucleophilic catalysts for the reaction is outlined, improving greatly upon aniline, the classical catalyst for imine formation. A number of uses of such second- and third-generation catalysts in bioconjugation and in cellular applications are highlighted. While formation of hydrazone and oxime has been traditionally regarded as being limited by slow rates, developments in the past 5 years have resulted in completely overturning this limitation; indeed, the reaction is now one of the fastest and most versatile reactions available for conjugations of biomolecules and biomaterials.
Co-reporter:Ke Min Chan;Dr. Dominik K. Kölmel;Dr. Shenliang Wang; Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2017 Volume 56(Issue 23) pp:6497-6501
Publication Date(Web):2017/06/01
DOI:10.1002/anie.201701235
AbstractWe describe a photoswitchable DNA-based dimeric dye that visibly changes fluorescence from green to blue upon UV irradiation. A novel bis-alkyne-dependent [2+2+2] cycloaddition is proposed as a mechanism for the color change in air. The photoinduced structural switching results in spatial separation of stacked pyrene units, thereby causing selective loss of the excimer emission. We demonstrate and suggest several applications for this novel photoswitch.
Co-reporter:Ke Min Chan;Dr. Dominik K. Kölmel;Dr. Shenliang Wang; Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie 2017 Volume 129(Issue 23) pp:6597-6601
Publication Date(Web):2017/06/01
DOI:10.1002/ange.201701235
AbstractWe describe a photoswitchable DNA-based dimeric dye that visibly changes fluorescence from green to blue upon UV irradiation. A novel bis-alkyne-dependent [2+2+2] cycloaddition is proposed as a mechanism for the color change in air. The photoinduced structural switching results in spatial separation of stacked pyrene units, thereby causing selective loss of the excimer emission. We demonstrate and suggest several applications for this novel photoswitch.
Co-reporter:Hyukin Kwon;Ke Min Chan;Eric T. Kool
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2017 vol. 15(Issue 8) pp:1801-1809
Publication Date(Web):2017/02/22
DOI:10.1039/C6OB02830F
Environmental contaminants pose a substantial health risk in many areas of the world. One of these risks is contamination of water with toxic organic species, such as herbicides and insecticides. Here we describe the discovery and properties of a set of fluorescent chemosensors that respond to micromolar concentrations of a broad range of common organic pesticides. The chemosensors are short DNA-like oligomers with fluorophores replacing DNA bases that are assembled via a DNA synthesizer. We screened a library of 1296 tetrameric compounds on polystyrene microbeads, and identified a set of chemosensor sequences that respond strongly to a set of structurally varied pesticide analytes. We show that ten chemosensors on beads can be used to detect and identify 14 different common pesticides at 100 μM, using the pattern of fluorescence intensity and wavelength changes. Limits of detection for two analytes were as low as 2 μM. The chemosensors are shown to function successfully in a practical setting, correctly identifying unknown pesticide contaminants in water from Felt Lake, California. The results establish a simple, low cost strategy for sensing environmental spills of toxic organics.
Co-reporter:Andrew A. Beharry; Sandrine Lacoste; Timothy R. O’Connor;Eric T. Kool
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2016 Volume 138(Issue 11) pp:3647-3650
Publication Date(Web):March 11, 2016
DOI:10.1021/jacs.6b00986
The 2-oxoglutarate-dependent iron enzyme ALKBH3 is an antitumor target and a potential diagnostic marker for several tumor types, including prostate cancer. However, there is at present no simple way to measure this enzyme’s activity. Here we describe a fluorogenic probe design (MAQ) that is directly responsive to ALKBH3 repair activity. It makes use of the fluorescence-quenching properties of 1-methyladenine; removal of the alkyl group results in a >10-fold light-up signal. The probe is specific for ALKBH3 over its related homologue ALKBH2 and can be used to identify and measure the effectiveness of enzyme inhibitors. Measurements of the enzyme substrate parameters show that MAQ displays Km and kcat values essentially the same as those of the native substrate. Finally, we show that the probe functions efficiently in cells, allowing imaging and quantitation of ALKBH3 activity by microscopy and flow cytometry. We expect that MAQ probes will be broadly useful in the study of the basic biology of ALKBH3 and in clinical cancer applications as well.
Co-reporter:Debin Ji; Andrew A. Beharry; James M. Ford;Eric T. Kool
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2016 Volume 138(Issue 29) pp:9005-9008
Publication Date(Web):July 14, 2016
DOI:10.1021/jacs.6b02895
The enzyme MTH1 cleanses the cellular nucleotide pool of oxidatively damaged 8-oxo-dGTP, preventing mutagenesis by this nucleotide. The enzyme is considered a promising therapeutic target; however, methods to measure its activity are indirect and laborious and have low sensitivity. Here we describe a novel ATP-linked chimeric nucleotide (ARGO) that enables luminescence signaling of the enzymatic reaction, greatly simplifying the measurement of MTH1 activity. We show that the reporting system can be used to identify inhibitors of MTH1, and we use it to quantify enzyme activity in eight cell lines and in colorectal tumor tissue. The ARGO reporter is likely to have considerable utility in the study of the biology of MTH1 and potentially in analyzing patient samples during clinical testing.
Co-reporter:Lik Hang Yuen, Nivedita S. Saxena, Hyun Shin Park, Kenneth Weinberg, and Eric T. Kool
ACS Chemical Biology 2016 Volume 11(Issue 8) pp:2312
Publication Date(Web):June 21, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acschembio.6b00269
Aldehydes are key intermediates in many cellular processes, from endogenous metabolic pathways like glycolysis to undesired exogenously induced processes such as lipid peroxidation and DNA interstrand cross-linking. Alkyl aldehydes are well documented to be cytotoxic, affecting the functions of DNA and protein, and their levels are tightly regulated by the oxidative enzyme ALDH2. Mutations in this enzyme are associated with cardiac damage, diseases such as Fanconi anemia (FA), and cancer. Many attempts have been made to identify and quantify the overall level of these alkyl aldehydes inside cells, yet there are few practical methods available to detect and monitor these volatile aldehydes in real time. Here, we describe a multicolor fluorogenic hydrazone transfer (“DarkZone”) system to label alkyl aldehydes, yielding up to 30-fold light-up response in vitro. A cell-permeant DarkZone dye design was applied to detect small-molecule aldehydes in the cellular environment. The new dye design also enabled the monitoring of cellular acetaldehyde production from ethanol over time by flow cytometry, demonstrating the utility of the DarkZone dyes for measuring and imaging the aldehydic load related to human disease.
Co-reporter:Dominik K. Kölmel, Luzi J. Barandun and Eric T. Kool  
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2016 vol. 14(Issue 27) pp:6407-6412
Publication Date(Web):10 Jun 2016
DOI:10.1039/C6OB01199C
A facile and general procedure for the preparation of alkynyl C-nucleosides with varied fluorophores is presented. Sonogashira coupling was used as a key reaction to conjugate the dyes to an easily accessible ethynyl functionalized deoxyribose derivative. The new C-nucleosides were used for the preparation of DNA-based polyfluorophores.
Co-reporter:Dr. Debin Ji;Michael G. Mohsen;Dr. Emily M. Harcourt ;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2016 Volume 55( Issue 6) pp:2087-2091
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201509131

Abstract

A new strategy is reported for the production of luminescence signals from DNA synthesis through the use of chimeric nucleoside tetraphosphate dimers in which ATP, rather than pyrophosphate, is the leaving group. ATP-releasing nucleotides (ARNs) were synthesized as derivatives of the four canonical nucleotides. All four derivatives are good substrates for DNA polymerase, with Km values averaging 13-fold higher than those of natural dNTPs, and kcat values within 1.5-fold of those of native nucleotides. Importantly, ARNs were found to yield very little background signal with luciferase. DNA synthesis experiments show that the ATP byproduct can be harnessed to elicit a chemiluminescence signal in the presence of luciferase. When using a polymerase together with the chimeric nucleotides, target DNAs/RNAs trigger the release of stoichiometrically large quantities of ATP, thereby allowing sensitive isothermal luminescence detection of nucleic acids as diverse as phage DNAs and short miRNAs.

Co-reporter:Dr. Debin Ji;Michael G. Mohsen;Dr. Emily M. Harcourt ;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie 2016 Volume 128( Issue 6) pp:2127-2131
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201509131

Abstract

A new strategy is reported for the production of luminescence signals from DNA synthesis through the use of chimeric nucleoside tetraphosphate dimers in which ATP, rather than pyrophosphate, is the leaving group. ATP-releasing nucleotides (ARNs) were synthesized as derivatives of the four canonical nucleotides. All four derivatives are good substrates for DNA polymerase, with Km values averaging 13-fold higher than those of natural dNTPs, and kcat values within 1.5-fold of those of native nucleotides. Importantly, ARNs were found to yield very little background signal with luciferase. DNA synthesis experiments show that the ATP byproduct can be harnessed to elicit a chemiluminescence signal in the presence of luciferase. When using a polymerase together with the chimeric nucleotides, target DNAs/RNAs trigger the release of stoichiometrically large quantities of ATP, thereby allowing sensitive isothermal luminescence detection of nucleic acids as diverse as phage DNAs and short miRNAs.

Co-reporter:Caroline Roost; Stephen R. Lynch; Pedro J. Batista; Kun Qu; Howard Y. Chang;Eric T. Kool
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2015 Volume 137(Issue 5) pp:2107-2115
Publication Date(Web):January 22, 2015
DOI:10.1021/ja513080v
N6-Methyladenosine (m6A) modification is hypothesized to control processes such as RNA degradation, localization, and splicing. However, the molecular mechanisms by which this occurs are unclear. Here, we measured structures of an RNA duplex containing m6A in the GGACU consensus, along with an unmodified RNA control, by 2D NMR. The data show that m6A–U pairing in the double-stranded context is accompanied by the methylamino group rotating from its energetically preferred syn geometry on the Watson–Crick face to the higher-energy anti conformation, positioning the methyl group in the major groove. Thermodynamic measurements of m6A in duplexes reveal that it is destabilizing by 0.5–1.7 kcal/mol. In contrast, we show that m6A in unpaired positions base stacks considerably more strongly than the unmodified base, adding substantial stabilization in single-stranded locations. Transcriptome-wide nuclease mapping of methylated RNA secondary structure from human cells reveals a structural transition at methylated adenosines, with a tendency to single-stranded structure adjacent to the modified base.
Co-reporter:Hyukin Kwon, Wei Jiang and Eric T. Kool  
Chemical Science 2015 vol. 6(Issue 4) pp:2575-2583
Publication Date(Web):18 Feb 2015
DOI:10.1039/C4SC03992K
Many existing irrigation, industrial and chemical storage sites are currently introducing hazardous anions into groundwater, making the monitoring of such sites a high priority. Detecting and quantifying anions in water samples typically requires complex instrumentation, adding cost and delaying analysis. Here we address these challenges by development of an optical molecular method to detect and discriminate a broad range of anionic contaminants with DNA-based fluorescent sensors. A library of 1296 tetrameric-length oligodeoxyfluorosides (ODFs) composed of metal ligand and fluorescence modulating monomers was constructed with a DNA synthesizer on PEG-polystyrene microbeads. These oligomers on beads were incubated with YIII or ZnII ions to provide affinity and responsiveness to anions. Seventeen anions were screened with the library under an epifluorescence microscope, ultimately yielding eight chemosensors that could discriminate 250 μM solutions of all 17 anions in buffered water using their patterns of response. This sensor set was able to identify two unknown anion samples from ten closely-responding anions and could also function quantitatively, determining unknown concentrations of anions such as cyanide (as low as 1 mM) and selenate (as low as 50 μM). Further studies with calibration curves established detection limits of selected anions including thiocyanate (detection limit ∼300 μM) and arsenate (∼800 μM). The results demonstrate DNA-like fluorescent chemosensors as versatile tools for optically analyzing environmentally hazardous anions in aqueous environments.
Co-reporter:Hyukin Kwon, Wei Jiang and Eric T. Kool  
Chemical Science 2015 vol. 6(Issue 8) pp:5086-5086
Publication Date(Web):24 Jun 2015
DOI:10.1039/C5SC90036K
Correction for ‘Pattern-based detection of anion pollutants in water with DNA polyfluorophores’ by Hyukin Kwon et al., Chem. Sci., 2015, 6, 2575–2583.
Co-reporter:Dennis Larsen, Michael Pittelkow, Saswata Karmakar, and Eric T. Kool
Organic Letters 2015 Volume 17(Issue 2) pp:274-277
Publication Date(Web):December 29, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ol503372j
The discovery of two new classes of catalysts for hydrazone and oxime formation in water at neutral pH, namely 2-aminophenols and 2-(aminomethyl)benzimidazoles, is reported. Kinetics studies in aqueous solutions at pH 7.4 revealed rate enhancements up to 7-fold greater than with classic aniline catalysis. 2-(Aminomethyl)benzimidazoles were found to be effective catalysts with otherwise challenging aryl ketone substrates.
Co-reporter:Sarah K. Edwards;Dr. Toshikazu Ono;Dr. Shenliang Wang;Dr. Wei Jiang;Dr. Raphael M. Franzini;Dr. Jong Wha Jung;Ke Min Chan; Eric T. Kool
ChemBioChem 2015 Volume 16( Issue 11) pp:1637-1646
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201500184

Abstract

The repair of oxidative damage to DNA is essential to avoid mutations that lead to cancer. Oxidized DNA bases, such as 8-oxoguanine, are a main source of these mutations, and the enzyme 8-oxoguanine glycosylase 1 (OGG1) is the chief human enzyme that excises 8-oxoguanine from DNA. The activity of OGG1 has been linked to human inflammation responses and to cancer, and researchers are beginning to search for inhibitors of the enzyme. However, measuring the activity of the enzyme typically requires laborious gel-based measurements of radiolabeled DNAs. Here we report the design and properties of fluorogenic probes that directly report on the activity of OGG1 (and its bacterial homologue Fpg) in real time as the oxidized base is excised. The probes are short, modified DNA oligomers containing fluorescent DNA bases and are designed to utilize 8-oxoguanine itself as a fluorescence quencher. Screening of combinations of fluorophores and 8-oxoguanine revealed two fluorophores, pyrene and tCo, that are strongly quenched by the damaged base. We tested 42 potential probes containing these fluorophores: the optimum probe, OGR1, yields a 60-fold light-up signal in vitro with OGG1 and Fpg. It can report on oxidative repair activity in mammalian cell lysate and with bacterial cells overexpressing a repair enzyme. Such probes might prove useful in quantifying enzyme activity and performing competitive inhibition assays.

Co-reporter:Lik Hang Yuen ; Raphael M. Franzini ; Samuel S. Tan ;Eric T. Kool
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2014 Volume 136(Issue 41) pp:14576-14582
Publication Date(Web):September 25, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ja507932a
An important advantage of pattern-based chemosensor sets is their potential to detect and differentiate a large number of analytes with only few sensors. Here we test this principle at a conceptual limit by analyzing a large set of metal ion analytes covering essentially the entire periodic table, employing fluorescent DNA-like chemosensors on solid support. A tetrameric “oligodeoxyfluoroside” (ODF) library of 6561 members containing metal-binding monomers was screened for strong responders to 57 metal ions in solution. Our results show that a set of 9 chemosensors could successfully discriminate the 57 species, including alkali, alkaline earth, post-transition, transition, and lanthanide metals. As few as 6 ODF chemosensors could detect and differentiate 50 metals at 100 μM; sensitivity for some metals was achieved at midnanomolar ranges. A blind test with 50 metals further confirmed the discriminating power of the ODFs.
Co-reporter:Eric T. Kool, Pete Crisalli, and Ke Min Chan
Organic Letters 2014 Volume 16(Issue 5) pp:1454-1457
Publication Date(Web):February 21, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ol500262y
Hydrazones and oximes are widely useful structures for conjugate formation in chemistry and biology, but their formation can be slow at neutral pH. Kinetics studies were performed for a range of structurally varied hydrazines, and a surprisingly large variation in reaction rate was observed. Structures that undergo especially rapid reactions were identified, enabling reaction rates that rival orthogonal cycloaddition-based conjugation chemistries.
Co-reporter:Lik Hang Yuen;Dr. Raphael M. Franzini;Dr. Shenliang Wang;Dr. Pete Crisalli;Dr. Vijay Singh;Dr. Wei Jiang ;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2014 Volume 53( Issue 21) pp:5361-5365
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201403235

Abstract

Heavy metal contamination of water can be toxic to humans and wildlife; thus the development of methods to detect this contamination is of high importance. Here we describe the design and application of DNA-based fluorescent chemosensors on microbeads to differentiate eight toxic metal ions in water. We developed and synthesized four fluorescent 2′-deoxyribosides of metal-binding ligands. A tetramer-length oligodeoxy-fluoroside (ODF) library of 6561 members was constructed and screened for sequences responsive to metal ions, of which seven sequences were selected. Statistical analysis of the response patterns showed successful differentiation of the analytes at concentrations as low as 100 nM. Sensors were able to classify water samples from 13 varied sites and quantify metal contamination in unknown specimens. The results demonstrate the practical potential of bead-based ODF chemosensors to analyze heavy metal contamination in water samples by a simple and inexpensive optical method.

Co-reporter:Lik Hang Yuen;Dr. Raphael M. Franzini;Dr. Shenliang Wang;Dr. Pete Crisalli;Dr. Vijay Singh;Dr. Wei Jiang ;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie 2014 Volume 126( Issue 21) pp:5465-5469
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201403235

Abstract

Heavy metal contamination of water can be toxic to humans and wildlife; thus the development of methods to detect this contamination is of high importance. Here we describe the design and application of DNA-based fluorescent chemosensors on microbeads to differentiate eight toxic metal ions in water. We developed and synthesized four fluorescent 2′-deoxyribosides of metal-binding ligands. A tetramer-length oligodeoxy-fluoroside (ODF) library of 6561 members was constructed and screened for sequences responsive to metal ions, of which seven sequences were selected. Statistical analysis of the response patterns showed successful differentiation of the analytes at concentrations as low as 100 nM. Sensors were able to classify water samples from 13 varied sites and quantify metal contamination in unknown specimens. The results demonstrate the practical potential of bead-based ODF chemosensors to analyze heavy metal contamination in water samples by a simple and inexpensive optical method.

Co-reporter:Emily M. Harcourt ; Thomas Ehrenschwender ; Pedro J. Batista ; Howard Y. Chang ;Eric T. Kool
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2013 Volume 135(Issue 51) pp:19079-19082
Publication Date(Web):December 11, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ja4105792
N6-methyladenosine (m6A) is the most abundant mRNA modification and has important links to human health. While recent studies have successfully identified thousands of mammalian RNA transcripts containing the modification, it is extremely difficult to identify the exact location of any specific m6A. Here we have identified a polymerase with reverse transcriptase activity (from Thermus thermophilus) that is selective by up to 18-fold for incorporation of thymidine opposite unmodified A over m6A. We show that the enzyme can be used to locate and quantify m6A in synthetic RNAs by analysis of pausing bands, and have used the enzyme in tandem with a nonselective polymerase to locate the presence and position of m6A in high-abundance cellular RNAs. By this approach we demonstrate that the long-undetermined position of m6A in mammalian 28S rRNA is nucleotide 4190.
Co-reporter:Vijay Singh ; Shenliang Wang ;Eric T. Kool
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2013 Volume 135(Issue 16) pp:6184-6191
Publication Date(Web):April 5, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ja4004393
Genetically encoded methods for protein conjugation are of high importance as biological tools. Here we describe the development of a new class of dyes for genetically encoded tagging that add new capabilities for protein reporting and detection via HaloTag methodology. Oligodeoxyfluorosides (ODFs) are short DNA-like oligomers in which the natural nucleic acid bases are replaced by interacting fluorescent chromophores, yielding a broad range of emission colors using a single excitation wavelength. We describe the development of an alkyl halide dehalogenase-compatible chloroalkane linker phosphoramidite derivative that enables the rapid automated synthesis of many possible dyes for protein conjugation. Experiments to test the enzymatic self-conjugation of nine different DNA-like dyes to proteins with HaloTag domains in vitro were performed, and the data confirmed the rapid and efficient covalent labeling of the proteins. Notably, a number of the ODF dyes were found to increase in brightness or change color upon protein conjugation. Tests in mammalian cellular settings revealed that the dyes are functional in multiple cellular contexts, both on the cell surface and within the cytoplasm, allowing protein localization to be imaged in live cells by epifluorescence and laser confocal microscopy.
Co-reporter:Wei Jiang, Shenliang Wang, Lik Hang Yuen, Hyukin Kwon, Toshikazu Ono and Eric T. Kool  
Chemical Science 2013 vol. 4(Issue 8) pp:3184-3190
Publication Date(Web):22 May 2013
DOI:10.1039/C3SC50985K
Contamination of soil and groundwater by petroleum-based products is an extremely widespread and important environmental problem. Here we have tested a simple optical approach for detecting and identifying such industrial contaminants in soil samples, using a set of fluorescent DNA-based chemosensors in pattern-based sensing. We used a set of diverse industrial volatile chemicals to screen and identify a set of five short oligomeric DNA fluorophores on PEG–polystyrene microbeads that could differentiate the entire set after exposure to their vapors in air. We then tested this set of five fluorescent chemosensor compounds for their ability to respond with fluorescence changes when exposed to headgas over soil samples contaminated with one of ten different samples of crude oil, petroleum distillates, fuels, lubricants and additives. Statistical analysis of the quantitative fluorescence change data (as Δ(R,G,B) emission intensities) revealed that these five chemosensors on beads could differentiate all ten product mixtures at 1000 ppm in soil within 30 minutes. Tests of sensitivity with three of the contaminant mixtures showed that they could be detected and differentiated in amounts at least as low as one part per million in soil. The results establish that DNA-polyfluorophores may have practical utility in monitoring the extent and identity of environmental spills and leaks, while they occur and during their remediation.
Co-reporter:Pete Crisalli and Eric T. Kool
Organic Letters 2013 Volume 15(Issue 7) pp:1646-1649
Publication Date(Web):March 11, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ol400427x
Anthranilic acids were recently reported as superior catalysts for hydrazone and oxime formation compared to aniline, the classic catalyst for these reactions. Here, alternative proton donors were examined with varied pKa in an effort to enhance activity at biological pH. The experiments show that 2-aminobenzenephosphonic acids are superior to anthranilic acids in catalyzing hydrazone formation with common aldehyde substrates.
Co-reporter:Pete Crisalli and Eric T. Kool
The Journal of Organic Chemistry 2013 Volume 78(Issue 3) pp:1184-1189
Publication Date(Web):January 4, 2013
DOI:10.1021/jo302746p
The formation of oximes and hydrazones is widely used in chemistry and biology as a molecular conjugation strategy for achieving ligation, attachment, and bioconjugation. However, the relatively slow rate of reaction has hindered its utility. Here, we report that simple, commercially available anthranilic acids and aminobenzoic acids act as superior catalysts for hydrazone and oxime formation, speeding the reaction considerably over the traditional aniline-catalyzed reaction at neutral pH. This efficient nucleophilic catalysis, involving catalyst–imine intermediates, allows rapid hydrazone/oxime formation even with relatively low concentrations of the two reactants. The most efficient catalysts are found to be 5-methoxyanthranilic acid and 3,5-diaminobenzoic acid; we find that they can enhance rates by factors of as much as 1–2 orders of magnitude over the aniline-catalyzed reaction. Evidence based on a range of differently substituted arylamines suggests that the ortho-carboxylate group in the anthranilate catalysts serves to aid in intramolecular proton transfer during imine and hydrazone formation.
Co-reporter:Dr. Jong-Wha Jung;Sarah K. Edwards;Dr. Eric T. Kool
ChemBioChem 2013 Volume 14( Issue 4) pp:440-444
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201300001
Co-reporter:Dr. Malte Winnacker ;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2013 Volume 52( Issue 48) pp:12498-12508
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201305267

Abstract

We describe in this Minireview the synthesis, properties, and applications of artificial genetic sets built from base pairs that are larger than the natural Watson–Crick architecture. Such designed systems are being explored by several research groups to investigate basic chemical questions regarding the functions of the genetic information storage systems and thus of the origin and evolution of life. For example, is the terrestrial DNA structure the only viable one, or can other architectures function as well? Working outside the constraints of purine–pyrimidine geometry provides more chemical flexibility in design, and the added size confers useful properties such as high binding affinity and helix stability as well as fluorescence. These features are useful for the investigation of fundamental biochemical questions as well as in the development of new biotechnological, biomedical, and nanostructural tools and methods.

Co-reporter:Dr. Malte Winnacker ;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie 2013 Volume 125( Issue 48) pp:12728-12739
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201305267

Abstract

Wir beschreiben in diesem Kurzaufsatz die Synthese, Eigenschaften und Anwendungen von künstlichen genetischen Systemen, die aus Basenpaaren bestehen, die länger sind als die Basen der natürlichen Watson-Crick-Architektur. Derartige Systeme werden von mehreren Arbeitsgruppen untersucht, um fundamentale chemische Fragen bezüglich der Funktion der genetischen Speichersysteme und somit des Ursprungs und der Entwicklung des Lebens zu erforschen. Beispielsweise, ist die irdische DNA-Struktur die einzig mögliche oder können andere Architekturen genauso funktionieren? Das Arbeiten jenseits der Beschränkungen der Purin-Pyrimidin-Geometrie ermöglicht mehr chemische Flexibilität im Design, und die zusätzliche Größe ergänzt das System um nützliche Eigenschaften wie hohe Bindungsaffinität, Helix-Stabilität sowie Fluoreszenz. Diese Eigenschaften sind nützlich für die Untersuchung von fundamentalen biochemischen Fragestellungen sowie für die Entwicklung neuer biotechnologischer, biomedizinischer und nanostruktureller Werkzeuge und Methoden.

Co-reporter:Yin Nah Teo and Eric T. Kool
Chemical Reviews 2012 Volume 112(Issue 7) pp:4221
Publication Date(Web):March 16, 2012
DOI:10.1021/cr100351g
Co-reporter:Omid Khakshoor ; Steven E. Wheeler ; K. N. Houk ;Eric T. Kool
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2012 Volume 134(Issue 6) pp:3154-3163
Publication Date(Web):February 2, 2012
DOI:10.1021/ja210475a
We address the recent debate surrounding the ability of 2,4-difluorotoluene (F), a low-polarity mimic of thymine (T), to form a hydrogen-bonded complex with adenine in DNA. The hydrogen bonding ability of F has been characterized as small to zero in various experimental studies, and moderate to small in computational studies. However, recent X-ray crystallographic studies of difluorotoluene in DNA/RNA have indicated, based on interatomic distances, possible hydrogen bonding interactions between F and natural bases in nucleic acid duplexes and in a DNA polymerase active site. Since F is widely used to measure electrostatic contributions to pairing and replication, it is important to quantify the impact of this isostere on DNA stability. Here, we studied the pairing stability and selectivity of this compound and a closely related variant, dichlorotoluene deoxyriboside (L), in DNA, using both experimental and computational approaches. We measured the thermodynamics of duplex formation in three sequence contexts and with all possible pairing partners by thermal melting studies using the van’t Hoff approach, and for selected cases by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). Experimental results showed that internal F-A pairing in DNA is destabilizing by 3.8 kcal/mol (van’t Hoff, 37 °C) as compared with T-A pairing. At the end of a duplex, base–base interactions are considerably smaller; however, the net F-A interaction remains repulsive while T-A pairing is attractive. As for selectivity, F is found to be slightly selective for adenine over C, G, T by 0.5 kcal mol, as compared with thymine’s selectivity of 2.4 kcal/mol. Interestingly, dichlorotoluene in DNA is slightly less destabilizing and slightly more selective than F, despite the lack of strongly electronegative fluorine atoms. Experimental data were complemented by computational results, evaluated at the M06-2X/6-31+G(d) and MP2/cc-pVTZ levels of theory. These computations suggest that the pairing energy of F to A is ∼28% of that of T-A, and most of this interaction does not arise from the F···HN interaction, but rather from the CH···N interaction. The nucleobase analogue shows no inherent selectivity for adenine over other bases, and L-A pairing energies are slightly weaker than for F-A. Overall, the results are consistent with a small favorable noncovalent interaction of F with A offset by a large desolvation cost for the polar partner. We discuss the findings in light of recent structural studies and of DNA replication experiments involving these analogues.
Co-reporter:Matthew W. Kellinger ; Sébastien Ulrich ; Jenny Chong ; Eric T. Kool ;Dong Wang
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2012 Volume 134(Issue 19) pp:8231-8240
Publication Date(Web):April 17, 2012
DOI:10.1021/ja302077d
Maintaining high transcriptional fidelity is essential to life. For all eukaryotic organisms, RNA polymerase II (Pol II) is responsible for messenger RNA synthesis from the DNA template. Three key checkpoint steps are important in controlling Pol II transcriptional fidelity: nucleotide selection and incorporation, RNA transcript extension, and proofreading. Some types of DNA damage significantly reduce transcriptional fidelity. However, the chemical interactions governing each individual checkpoint step of Pol II transcriptional fidelity and the molecular basis of how subtle DNA base damage leads to significant losses of transcriptional fidelity are not fully understood. Here we use a series of “hydrogen bond deficient” nucleoside analogues to dissect chemical interactions governing Pol II transcriptional fidelity. We find that whereas hydrogen bonds between a Watson–Crick base pair of template DNA and incoming NTP are critical for efficient incorporation, they are not required for efficient transcript extension from this matched 3′-RNA end. In sharp contrast, the fidelity of extension is strongly dependent on the discrimination of an incorrect pattern of hydrogen bonds. We show that U:T wobble base interactions are critical to prevent extension of this mismatch by Pol II. Additionally, both hydrogen bonding and base stacking play important roles in controlling Pol II proofreading activity. Strong base stacking at the 3′-RNA terminus can compensate for loss of hydrogen bonds. Finally, we show that Pol II can distinguish very subtle size differences in template bases. The current work provides the first systematic evaluation of electrostatic and steric effects in controlling Pol II transcriptional fidelity.
Co-reporter:Hyukin Kwon, Florent Samain and Eric T. Kool  
Chemical Science 2012 vol. 3(Issue 8) pp:2542-2549
Publication Date(Web):17 May 2012
DOI:10.1039/C2SC20461D
The monitoring of food spoilage is important to human health. Here we tested the ability of DNA-based oligodeoxyfluoroside (ODF) dyes to sense volatiles as they arise from spoilage, and employed a new platform for fluorescence sensing by inkjet printing of varied dyes on cellulose paper. ODFs are a class of short DNA-like oligomers with fluorophores replacing DNA bases. Six tetrameric ODFs of distinct sequences were printed on cotton paper using a commercial inkjet printer; printing methods and additives were evaluated for optimal fluorescence and response. ODFs were exposed via headspace volatiles in a closed container to a variety of foods as they spoiled over a period of days. We observed fluorescence intensity and/or color changes during exposure to meats (ground beef and shrimp), dairy (milk and cheese), fruit (orange juice), grain (bread), and vegetable (lettuce) sources. The printed sensors were imaged under an epifluorescence microscope and the signals were quantified using digital values from red (R), blue (B), green (G), and luma (L) channels, creating “fingerprints” for each headspace volatile mixture. This set of ODF sensors yielded a general fluorescence increase for protein-rich foods (ground beef, shrimp, and milk), while each food could be distinguished by the relative difference among RGB channels. Incubation temperature affected volatiles produced from spoiling ground beef, as storage at 4 °C yielded weaker signals. Spoilage of foods with low water activity (bread and cheese) also produced responses distinct from high-moisture foods, but similar to one another. Ripening of fruits (banana, tomato, and peach) was also tested. Monitoring the spoilage of ground beef (room temperature and 4 °C) and milk (room temperature) revealed that the composition of volatiles changes dynamically during the fifteen-day period, suggestive of shifts in bacterial populations.
Co-reporter:Seoung Ho Lee, Shenliang Wang and Eric T. Kool  
Chemical Communications 2012 vol. 48(Issue 65) pp:8069-8071
Publication Date(Web):28 Jun 2012
DOI:10.1039/C2CC34060G
We report the fluorogenic detection of the product of base excision repair (an abasic site) in a specific sequence of duplex DNA. This is achieved by DNA-templated chemistry, employing triple helix-forming probes that contain unnatural nucleobases designed to selectively recognize the site of a missing base. Light-up signals of up to 36-fold were documented, and probes could be used to monitor enzymatic removal of a damaged base.
Co-reporter:Armando R. Hernández, Larryn W. Peterson, and Eric T. Kool
ACS Chemical Biology 2012 Volume 7(Issue 8) pp:1454
Publication Date(Web):May 30, 2012
DOI:10.1021/cb300174c
Understanding the interactions between small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) and the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC), the key protein complex of RNA interference (RNAi), is of great importance to the development of siRNAs with improved biological and potentially therapeutic function. Although various chemically modified siRNAs have been reported, relatively few studies with modified nucleobases exist. Here we describe the synthesis and hybridization properties of siRNAs bearing size-expanded RNA (xRNA) nucleobases and their use as a novel and systematic set of steric probes in RNAi. xRNA nucleobases are expanded by 2.4 Å using benzo-homologation and retain canonical Watson–Crick base-pairing groups. Our data show that the modified siRNA duplexes display small changes in melting temperature (+1.4 to −5.0 °C); substitutions near the center are somewhat destabilizing to the RNA duplex, while substitutions near the ends are stabilizing. RNAi studies in a dual-reporter luciferase assay in HeLa cells revealed that xRNA nucleobases in the antisense strand reduce activity at some central positions near the seed region but are generally well tolerated near the ends. Most importantly, we observed that xRNA substitutions near the 3′-end increased activity over that of wild-type siRNAs. The data are analyzed in terms of site-dependent steric effects in RISC. Circular dichroism experiments show that single xRNA substitutions do not significantly distort the native A-form helical structure of the siRNA duplex, and serum stability studies demonstrated that xRNA substitutions protect siRNAs against nuclease degradation.
Co-reporter:Pete Crisalli, Armando R. Hernández, and Eric T. Kool
Bioconjugate Chemistry 2012 Volume 23(Issue 9) pp:1969
Publication Date(Web):August 23, 2012
DOI:10.1021/bc300344b
We describe the synthesis and properties of new fluorescence quenchers containing aldehyde, hydrazine, and aminooxy groups, allowing convenient bioconjugation as oximes or hydrazones. Conjugation to oligonucleotides proceeded in high yield with aniline as catalyst. Kinetics studies of conjugation show that, under optimal conditions, a hydrazine or aminooxy quencher can react with aldehyde-modified DNA to form a stable hydrazone or oxime adduct in as little as five minutes. The resulting quencher-containing DNAs were assessed for their ability to quench the emission of fluorescein in labeled complements and compared to the commercially available dabcyl and Black Hole Quencher 2 (BHQ2), which were conjugated as phosphoramidites. Results show that the new quenchers possess slightly different absorbance properties compared to dabcyl and are as efficient as the commercial quenchers in quenching fluorescein emission. Hydrazone-based quenchers were further successfully incorporated into molecular beacons and shown to give high signal to background ratios in single nucleotide polymorphism detection in vitro. Finally, aminooxy and hydrazine quenchers were applied to quenching of an aldehyde-containing fluorophore associated with living cells, demonstrating cellular quenching within one hour.
Co-reporter:Dr. Toshikazu Ono;Dr. Shenliang Wang;Dr. Chi-Kin Koo;Lisa Engstrom;Dr. Sheila S. David;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2012 Volume 51( Issue 7) pp:1689-1692
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201108135
Co-reporter:Dr. Shenliang Wang;Dr. Jia Guo;Dr. Toshikazu Ono ;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2012 Volume 51( Issue 29) pp:7176-7180
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201201928
Co-reporter:Dr. Toshikazu Ono;Dr. Shenliang Wang;Dr. Chi-Kin Koo;Lisa Engstrom;Dr. Sheila S. David;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie 2012 Volume 124( Issue 7) pp:1721-1724
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201108135
Co-reporter:Dr. Shenliang Wang;Dr. Jia Guo;Dr. Toshikazu Ono ;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie 2012 Volume 124( Issue 29) pp:7288-7292
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201201928
Co-reporter:Nan Dai and Eric T. Kool  
Chemical Society Reviews 2011 vol. 40(Issue 12) pp:5756-5770
Publication Date(Web):02 Feb 2011
DOI:10.1039/C0CS00162G
Fluorescent sensors that make use of DNA structures have become widely useful in monitoring enzymatic activities. Early studies focused primarily on enzymes that naturally use DNA or RNA as the substrate. However, recent advances in molecular design have enabled the development of nucleic acid sensors for a wider range of functions, including enzymes that do not normally bind DNA or RNA. Nucleic acid sensors present some potential advantages over classical small-molecule sensors, including water solubility and ease of synthesis. An overview of the multiple strategies under recent development is presented in this critical review, and expected future developments in microarrays, single molecule analysis, and in vivo sensing are discussed (160 references).
Co-reporter:Samuel S. Tan ; Su Jeong Kim ;Eric T. Kool
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2011 Volume 133(Issue 8) pp:2664-2671
Publication Date(Web):February 4, 2011
DOI:10.1021/ja109561e
A common problem in detecting metal ions with fluorescentchemosensors is the emission-suppressing effects of fluorescence-quenching metal ions. This quenching tendency makes it difficult to design sensors with turn-on signal, and differentiate between several metal ions that may yield a strong quenching response. To address these challenges, we investigate a new sensor design strategy, incorporating fluorophores and metal ligands as DNA base replacements in DNA-like oligomers, for generating a broader range of responses for quenching metal ions. The modular molecular design enabled rapid synthesis and discovery of sensors from libraries on PEG-polystyrene beads. Using this approach, water-soluble sensors 1−5 were identified as strong responders to a set of eight typically quenching metal ions (Co2+, Ni2+, Cu2+, Hg2+, Pb2+, Ag+, Cr3+, and Fe3+). They were synthesized and characterized for sensing responses in solution. Cross-screening with the full set of metal ions showed that they have a wide variety of responses, including emission enhancements and red- and blue-shifts. The diversity of sensor responses allows as few as two sensors (1 and 2) to be used together to successfully differentiate these eight metals. As a test, a set of unknown metal ion solutions in blind studies were also successfully identified based on the response pattern of the sensors. The modular nature of the sensor design strategy suggests a broadly applicable approach to finding sensors for differentiating many different cations by pattern-based recognition, simply by varying the sequence and composition of ligands and fluorophores on a DNA synthesizer.
Co-reporter:Paige L. McKibbin, Akio Kobori, Yosuke Taniguchi, Eric T. Kool, and Sheila S. David
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2011 Volume 134(Issue 3) pp:1653-1661
Publication Date(Web):December 14, 2011
DOI:10.1021/ja208510m
Repair glycosylases locate and excise damaged bases from DNA, playing central roles in preservation of the genome and prevention of disease. Two key glycosylases, Fpg and hOGG1, function to remove the mutagenic oxidized base 8-oxoG (OG) from DNA. To investigate the relative contributions of conformational preferences, leaving group ability, enzyme-base hydrogen bonding, and nucleobase shape on damage recognition by these glycosylases, a series of four substituted indole nucleosides, based on the parent OG nonpolar isostere 2Cl-4F-indole, were tested as possible direct substrates of these enzymes in the context of 30 base pair duplexes paired with C. Surprisingly, single-turnover experiments revealed that Fpg-catalyzed base removal activity of two of the nonpolar analogs was superior to the native OG substrate. The hOGG1 glycosylase was also found to catalyze removal of three of the nonpolar analogs, albeit considerably less efficiently than removal of OG. Of note, the analog that was completely resistant to hOGG1-catalyzed excision has a chloro-substituent at the position of NH7 of OG, implicating the importance of recognition of this position in catalysis. Both hOGG1 and Fpg retained high affinity for the duplexes containing the nonpolar isosteres. These studies show that hydrogen bonds between base and enzyme are not needed for efficient damage recognition and repair by Fpg and underscore the importance of facile extrusion from the helix in its damaged base selection. In contrast, damage removal by hOGG1 is sensitive to both hydrogen bonding groups and nucleobase shape. The relative rates of excision of the analogs with the two glycosylases highlight key differences in their mechanisms of damaged base recognition and removal.
Co-reporter:Andrew T. Krueger ; Larryn W. Peterson ; Jijumon Chelliserry ; Daniel J. Kleinbaum ;Eric T. Kool
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2011 Volume 133(Issue 45) pp:18447-18451
Publication Date(Web):October 8, 2011
DOI:10.1021/ja208025e
An unnatural base-pair architecture with base pairs 2.4 Å larger than the natural DNA-based genetic system (xDNA) is evaluated for its ability to function like DNA, encoding amino acids in the context of living cells. xDNA bases are structurally analogous to natural bases but homologated by the width of a benzene ring, increasing their sizes and resulting in a duplex that is wider than native B-DNA. Plasmids encoding green fluorescent protein were constructed to contain single and multiple xDNA bases (as many as eight) in both strands and were transformed into Escherichia coli. Although they yielded fewer colonies than the natural control plasmid, in all cases in which a modified plasmid (containing one, two, three, or four consecutive size-expanded base pairs) was used, the correct codon bases were substituted, yielding green colonies. All four xDNA bases (xA, xC, xG, and xT) were found to encode the correct partners in the replicated plasmid DNA, both alone and in longer segments of xDNA. Controls with mutant cell lines having repair functions deleted were found to express the gene correctly, ruling out repair of xDNA and confirming polymerase reading of the unnatural bases. Preliminary experiments with polymerase deletion mutants suggested combined roles of replicative and lesion-bypass polymerases in inserting correct bases opposite xDNA bases and in bypassing the xDNA segments. These experiments demonstrate a biologically functioning synthetic genetic set with larger-than-natural architecture.
Co-reporter:Chi-Kin Koo, Florent Samain, Nan Dai and Eric T. Kool  
Chemical Science 2011 vol. 2(Issue 10) pp:1910-1917
Publication Date(Web):14 Jul 2011
DOI:10.1039/C1SC00301A
We describe a new molecular design for sensing toxic gases in air that employs DNA-polyfluorophores as reporters. In these polyfluorophores (ODFs), the DNA backbone is used as a scaffold to arrange several fluorescent aromatic hydrocarbons/heterocycles as DNA base replacements in a photophysically interacting stack. A library of 256 different tetramer ODFs was constructed on PEG-polystyrene beads and tested for optical responses to a set of toxic gases, SO2, H2S, MeSH, NH3, NHMe2, HCl, Cl2, and BF3. A set of 15 responding sequences was resynthesized, characterized, and cross-screened under a microscope against all eight gases at 1000 ppm. Responses were measured by changes in fluorescence wavelength and intensity, which were quantified as Δ(R, G, B, L) data from bead images. The data show a large range of responses, including lighting up, quenching, and color changes; remarkably, some single sensors showed all three types of responses to the varied analytes. Statistical methods were used to identify small sets of only three chemosensors that could be used to distinguish all eight analytes. The results establish that ODFs on surfaces can bind and report on small, simple gas molecules with highly varied responses. The DNA-like structure of the sensor molecules confers a number of potential advantages including simple synthesis, high diversity, and rapid sensor discovery.
Co-reporter:Chi-Kin Koo, Shenliang Wang, Rajiv L. Gaur, Florent Samain, Niaz Banaei and Eric T. Kool  
Chemical Communications 2011 vol. 47(Issue 41) pp:11435-11437
Publication Date(Web):21 Sep 2011
DOI:10.1039/C1CC14871K
Polyfluorophores built on a DNA scaffold (ODFs) were synthesized and tested for fluorescence responses to the volatiles from M. tuberculosis, E. coli and P. putida in closed Petri dishes. Two sensors in a pattern-based response could distinguish the bacterial strains accurately, suggesting the use of ODFs in rapid identification of infectious agents.
Co-reporter:Omid Khakshoor and Eric T. Kool  
Chemical Communications 2011 vol. 47(Issue 25) pp:7018-7024
Publication Date(Web):11 Apr 2011
DOI:10.1039/C1CC11021G
Research in nucleic acids has made major advances in the past decade in multiple fields of science and technology. Here we discuss some of the most important findings in DNA and RNA research in the fields of biology, chemistry, biotechnology, synthetic biology, nanostructures and optical materials, with emphasis on how chemistry has impacted, and is impacted by, these developments. Major challenges ahead include the development of new chemical strategies that allow synthetically modified nucleic acids to enter into, and function in, living systems.
Co-reporter:Armando R. Hernández and Eric T. Kool
Organic Letters 2011 Volume 13(Issue 4) pp:676-679
Publication Date(Web):January 7, 2011
DOI:10.1021/ol102915f
The synthesis and properties of a full set of four benzo-expanded ribonucleosides (xRNA), analogous to A, G, C, and U RNA monomers, are described. The nucleosides are efficient fluorophores with emission maxima of 369−411 nm. The compounds are expected to be useful as RNA pathway probes and as components of an unnatural ribopolymer.
Co-reporter:Raphael M. Franzini and Eric T. Kool
Bioconjugate Chemistry 2011 Volume 22(Issue 9) pp:1869
Publication Date(Web):August 26, 2011
DOI:10.1021/bc2003567
Templated fluorescence activation has recently emerged as a promising molecular approach to detect and differentiate nucleic acid sequences in vitro and in cells. Here, we describe the application of a reductive quencher release strategy to the taxonomic analysis of Gram-negative bacteria by targeting a single nucleotide difference in their 16S rRNA in a two-color assay. For this purpose, it was necessary to develop a release linker containing a quencher suitable for red and near-infrared fluorophores, and to improve methods for the delivery of probes into cells. A cyanine-dye labeled oligonucleotide probe containing the new quencher-release linker showed unprecedentedly low background signal and high fluorescence turn-on ratios. The combination of a fluorescein-containing and a near-IR emitting probe discriminated E. coli from S. enterica despite nearly identical ribosomal target sequences. Two-color analysis by microscopy and the first successful discrimination of bacteria by two-color flow cytometry with templated reactive probes are described.
Co-reporter:Pete Crisalli and Eric T. Kool
Bioconjugate Chemistry 2011 Volume 22(Issue 11) pp:2345
Publication Date(Web):October 28, 2011
DOI:10.1021/bc200424r
Fluorescence quenching groups are widely employed in biological detection, sensing, and imaging. To date, a relatively small number of such groups are in common use. Perhaps the most commonly used quencher, dabcyl, has limited efficiency with a broad range of fluorophores. Here, we describe a molecular approach to improve the efficiency of quenchers by increasing their electronic complexity. Multi-Path Quenchers (MPQ) are designed to have multiple donor or acceptor groups in their structure, allowing for a multiplicity of conjugation pathways of varied length. This has the effect of broadening the absorption spectrum, which in turn can increase quenching efficiency and versatility. Six such MPQ derivatives are synthesized and tested for quenching efficiency in a DNA hybridization context. Duplexes placing quenchers and fluorophores within contact distance or beyond this distance are used to measure quenching via contact or FRET mechanisms. Results show that several of the quenchers are considerably more efficient than dabcyl at quenching a wider range of common fluorophores, and two quench fluorescein and TAMRA as well as or better than a Black Hole Quencher.
Co-reporter:Sébastien Ulrich and Eric T. Kool
Biochemistry 2011 Volume 50(Issue 47) pp:
Publication Date(Web):November 1, 2011
DOI:10.1021/bi2011465
DNA-dependent RNA polymerases such as T7 RNA polymerase (T7 RNAP) perform the transcription of DNA into mRNA with high efficiency and high fidelity. Although structural studies have provided a detailed account of the molecular basis of transcription, the relative importance of factors like hydrogen bonds and steric effects remains poorly understood. We report herein the first study aimed at systematically probing the importance of steric and electrostatic effects on the efficiency and fidelity of DNA transcription by T7 RNAP. We used synthetic nonpolar analogues of thymine with sizes varying in subangstrom increments to probe the steric requirements of T7 RNAP during the elongation mode of transcription. Enzymatic assays with internal radiolabeling were performed to compare the efficiency of transcription of modified DNA templates with a natural template containing thymine as a reference. Furthermore, we analyzed effects on the fidelity by measuring the composition of RNA transcripts by enzymatic digestion followed by two-dimensional thin layer chromatography separation. Our results demonstrate that hydrogen bonds play an important role in the efficiency of transcription but, interestingly, do not appear to be required for faithful transcription. Steric effects (size and shape variations) are found to be significant both in insertion of a new RNA base and in extension beyond it.
Co-reporter:Nan Dai;Jia Guo;Yin Nah Teo ;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2011 Volume 50( Issue 22) pp:5105-5109
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201007805
Co-reporter:Dr. Florent Samain;Dr. Nan Dai ;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Chemistry - A European Journal 2011 Volume 17( Issue 1) pp:174-183
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/chem.201002836

Abstract

Oligodeoxyfluorosides (ODFs) are short DNA-like oligomers in which DNA bases are replaced with fluorophores. A preliminary study reported that some sequences of ODFs were able to respond to a few organic small molecules in the vapor phase, giving a change in fluorescence. Here, we follow up on this finding by investigating a larger range of volatile organic analytes, and a considerably larger set of sensors. A library of tetramer ODFs of 2401 different sequences was prepared by using combinatorial methods, and was screened in air for fluorescence responses to a set of ten different volatile organics, including multiple aromatic and aliphatic compounds, acids and bases, varied functional groups, and closely related structures. Nineteen responding sensors were selected and characterized. These sensors were cross-screened against all ten analytes, and responses were measured qualitatively (by changes in color and intensity) and quantitatively (by measuring ΔR, ΔG, and ΔB values averaged over five to six sensor beads; R=red, G=green, B=blue). The results show that sensor responses were diverse, with a single sensor responding differently to as many as eight of the ten analytes; multiple classes of responses were seen, including quenching, lighting-up, and varied shifts in wavelength. Responses were strong, with raw ΔR, ΔG, and ΔB values of as high as >200 on a 256-unit scale and unamplified changes in many cases apparent to the naked eye. Sensors were identified that could distinguish clearly between even very closely related compounds such as acrolein and acrylonitrile. Statistical methods were applied to select a small set of four sensors that, as a pattern response, could distinguish between all ten analytes with high confidence. Sequence analysis of the full set of sensors suggested that sequence/order of the monomer components, and not merely composition, was highly important in the responses.

Co-reporter:Dr. Raphael M. Franzini ;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Chemistry - A European Journal 2011 Volume 17( Issue 7) pp:2168-2175
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/chem.201002426

Abstract

We report a new strategy for template-mediated fluorogenic chemistry that results in enhanced performance for the fluorescence detection of nucleic acids. In this approach, two successive templated reactions are required to induce a fluorescence signal, rather than only one. These novel fluorescein-labeled oligonucleotide probes, termed 2-STAR (STAR=Staudinger-triggered α-azidoether release) probes, contain two quencher groups tethered by separate reductively cleavable linkers. When a 2-STAR quenched probe successively binds adjacent to two mono-triphenylphosphine-(TPP)-DNAs or one dual-TPP-DNA, the two quenchers are released, resulting in a fluorescence signal. Because of the requirement for two consecutive reactions, 2-STAR probes display an unprecedented level of sequence specificity for template-mediated probe designs. At the same time, background emission generated by off-template reactions or incomplete quenching is among the lowest of any fluorogenic reactive probes for the detection of DNA or RNA.

Co-reporter:Nan Dai;Jia Guo;Yin Nah Teo ;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie 2011 Volume 123( Issue 22) pp:5211-5215
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201007805
Co-reporter:Nan Dai, Yin Nah Teo and Eric T. Kool  
Chemical Communications 2010 vol. 46(Issue 8) pp:1221-1223
Publication Date(Web):22 Jan 2010
DOI:10.1039/B926338A
DNA-scaffolded oligodeoxyriboside fluorophores (ODFs) were used as the reporters in turn-on sensing of enzymatic bond-cleaving activity. A tetramer ODF of pyrene deoxynucleosides displayed high quenching efficiency when conjugated via ester linkages with a dabcyl quencher, and yielded large signal increases with several enzymes in vitro and in intact human cells.
Co-reporter:Daniel J. Kleinbaum and Eric T. Kool  
Chemical Communications 2010 vol. 46(Issue 43) pp:8154-8156
Publication Date(Web):07 Oct 2010
DOI:10.1039/C0CC01968B
Fluorescence-quenched nucleic acid probes with reactive moieties at both the 5′ and 3′ ends are synthesized and tested for reaction with two adjacent nucleophile-containing DNAs. These probes improve signal to background over singly reactive probes and can discriminate single nucleotide polymorphisms in the target DNA or RNA.
Co-reporter:Samuel S. Tan, Yin Nah Teo, and Eric T. Kool
Organic Letters 2010 Volume 12(Issue 21) pp:4820-4823
Publication Date(Web):September 30, 2010
DOI:10.1021/ol1019794
To explore a new modular metal ion sensor design strategy, fluorophores and ligands were incorporated into short DNA-like oligomers. Compound 1 was found to function as a selective sensor for Ag+ in aqueous buffer, where low micromolar concentrations of Ag+ induce a red-shifted, turn-on fluorescence signal. Experiments with HeLa cells show that 1 can penetrate cells and yield a signal for intracellular Ag+. This suggests a broadly applicable approach to developing sensors for a wide variety of cations.
Co-reporter:Daniel J. Kleinbaum, Gregory P. Miller and Eric T. Kool
Bioconjugate Chemistry 2010 Volume 21(Issue 6) pp:1115
Publication Date(Web):May 28, 2010
DOI:10.1021/bc100165h
Quenched autoligation probes have been employed previously in a target-templated nonenzymatic ligation strategy for detecting nucleic acids in cells by fluorescence. A common source of background signal in such probes is the undesired reaction with water and other cellular nucleophiles. Here, we describe a new class of self-ligating probes, double displacement (DD) probes, that rely on two displacement reactions to fully unquench a nearby fluorophore. Three potential double displacement architectures, all possessing two fluorescence quencher/leaving groups (dabsylate groups), were synthesized and evaluated for templated reaction with nucleophile (phosphorothioate) probes both in vitro and in intact bacterial cells. All three DD probe designs provided substantially better initial quenching than a single-Dabsyl control. In isothermal templated reactions in vitro, double displacement probes yielded considerably lower background signal than previous single displacement probes; investigation into the mechanism revealed that one dabsylate acts as a sacrificial leaving group, reacting nonspecifically with water, but yielding little signal because another quencher group remains. Templated reaction with the specific nucleophile probe is required to activate a signal. The double displacement probes provided a ca. 80-fold turn-on signal and yielded a 2−4-fold improvement in signal/background over single Dabsyl probes. The best-performing probe architecture was demonstrated in a two-color, FRET-based two-allele discrimination system in vitro and was shown to be capable of discriminating between two closely related species of bacteria differing by a single nucleotide at an rRNA target site.
Co-reporter:Haige Lu, Andrew T. Krueger, Jianmin Gao, Haibo Liu and Eric T. Kool  
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2010 vol. 8(Issue 12) pp:2704-2710
Publication Date(Web):21 Apr 2010
DOI:10.1039/C002766A
The development of alternative architectures for genetic information-encoding systems offers the possibility of new biotechnological tools as well as basic insights into the function of the natural system. In order to examine the potential of benzo-expanded DNA (xDNA) to encode and transfer biochemical information, we carried out a study of the processing of single xDNA pairs by DNA Polymerase I Klenow fragment (Kf, an A-family sterically rigid enzyme) and by the Sulfolobus solfataricus polymerase Dpo4 (a flexible Y-family polymerase). Steady-state kinetics were measured and compared for enzymatic synthesis of the four correct xDNA pairs and twelve mismatched pairs, by incorporation of dNTPs opposite single xDNA bases. Results showed that, like Kf, Dpo4 in most cases selected the correctly paired partner for each xDNA base, but with efficiency lowered by the enlarged pair size. We also evaluated kinetics for extension by these polymerases beyond xDNA pairs and mismatches, and for exonuclease editing by the Klenow exo+ polymerase. Interestingly, the two enzymes were markedly different: Dpo4 extended pairs with relatively high efficiencies (within 18–200-fold of natural DNA), whereas Kf essentially failed at extension. The favorable extension by Dpo4 was tested further by stepwise synthesis of up to four successive xDNA pairs on an xDNA template.
Co-reporter:Dr. Florent Samain;Dr. Samantak Ghosh;Yin Nah Teo ;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie 2010 Volume 122( Issue 39) pp:7179-7183
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.201002701
Co-reporter:Hao Li;Raphael M. Franzini;Christopher Bruner ; Dr. Eric T. Kool
ChemBioChem 2010 Volume 11( Issue 15) pp:2132-2137
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201000329

Abstract

We describe the development of templated fluorogenic chemistry for detection of specific sequences of duplex DNA in solution. In this approach, two modified homopyrimidine oligodeoxynucleotide probes are designed to bind by triple-helix formation at adjacent positions on a specific purine-rich target sequence of duplex DNA. One fluorescein-labeled probe contains an α-azidoether linker to a fluorescence quencher; the second (trigger) probe carries a triarylphosphine group that is designed to reduce the azide and cleave the linker. The data showed that at pH 5.6 these probes yielded a strong fluorescence signal within minutes on addition to a complementary homopurine duplex DNA target. The signal increased by a factor of about 60, and was completely dependent on the presence of the target DNA. Replacement of cytosine in the probes with pseudoisocytosine allowed the templated chemistry to proceed readily at pH 7. Single nucleotide mismatches in the target oligonucleotide slowed the templated reaction considerably; this demonstrated high sequence selectivity. The use of templated fluorogenic chemistry for detection of duplex DNAs has not been previously reported and could allow detection of double-stranded DNA, at least for homopurine–homopyrimidine target sites, under native and nondenaturing conditions.

Co-reporter:Dr. Florent Samain;Dr. Samantak Ghosh;Yin Nah Teo ;Dr. Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2010 Volume 49( Issue 39) pp:7025-7029
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.201002701
Co-reporter:Raphael M. Franzini ;Eric T. Kool
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2009 Volume 131(Issue 44) pp:16021-16023
Publication Date(Web):July 14, 2009
DOI:10.1021/ja904138v
RNA-templated fluorescence activation is a nucleic acid detection strategy that offers the possibility of direct visual detection of genetic information in living cells. Here we describe a new reaction strategy for fluorescence activation in which a phosphine on one DNA probe reduces an azide group in a linker on a second probe, resulting in linker cleavage and release of a fluorescence quenching group. These “Q-STAR” probes are shown to yield a strong fluorescence turn-on signal in ∼20 min, with very low background and substantial amplification by turnover on the template. A green/red pair of such probes allowed the discrimination of two bacterial species by a single nucleotide difference in their 16S rRNA. The beneficial properties of the reductive quencher release design make these probes promising candidates for widespread application in the detection of nucleic acids in vitro and in cells.
Co-reporter:Andrew T. Krueger, Eric T. Kool
Chemistry & Biology 2009 Volume 16(Issue 3) pp:242-248
Publication Date(Web):27 March 2009
DOI:10.1016/j.chembiol.2008.12.004
Recognition of the nucleic acid bases within the DNA scaffold comprises the basis for transmission of genetic information, dictating protein and cell assembly, organismal development, and evolution. Driven in part by the need to test our current understanding of this information transfer, chemists have begun to design and synthesize nonnatural bases and base pair structures to mimic the function of DNA without relying on Nature's purine-pyrimidine base pair scaffold. Multiple examples have been recently described that self-assemble stably and sequence specifically in vitro, and some isolated unnatural base pairs can be replicated in vitro as well. Moreover, recent experiments with unnatural bases in bacterial cells have demonstrated surprisingly efficient reading of the chemical information. This suggests the future possibility of redesigning and replacing the chemical information of an evolving cell while retaining biological function.
Co-reporter:Yin Nah Teo and Eric T. Kool
Bioconjugate Chemistry 2009 Volume 20(Issue 12) pp:2371
Publication Date(Web):November 16, 2009
DOI:10.1021/bc9003926
We describe studies aimed at testing whether oligomeric exciplex and excimer fluorophores conjugated to DNA have the potential to act as donors for energy transfer by the Förster mechanism. Oligodeoxyfluorosides (ODFs) are composed of stacked, electronically interacting fluorophores replacing the bases on a DNA scaffold. The monomer chromophores in the twenty tetramer-length ODFs studied here include pyrene (Y), benzopyrene (B), perylene (E), dimethylaminostilbene (D), and a nonfluorescent spacer (S); these are conjugated in varied combinations at the 3′ end of a 14mer DNA probe sequence. In the absence of an acceptor chromophore, many of the ODF-DNAs show broad, unstructured long-wavelength emission peaks characteristic of excimer and exciplex excited states, similar to what has been observed for unconjugated ODFs. Although such delocalized excited states have been widely studied, we know of no prior report of their use in FRET. We tested the ability of the twenty ODFs to donate energy to Cy5 and TAMRA dyes conjugated to a complementary strand of DNA, with these acceptors oriented either at the near or far end of the ODF-conjugated probes. Results showed that a number of the ODF fluorophores exhibited relatively efficient energy transfer characteristic of the Förster mechanism, as judged by drops in donor emission quantum yield and fluorescence lifetime, accompanied by increases in intensity of acceptor emission bands. Excimer/exciplex bands in the donors were selectively quenched while shorter-wavelength monomer emission stayed relatively constant, consistent with the notion that the delocalized excited states, rather than individual fluorophores, are the donors. Interestingly, only specific sequences of ODFs were able to act as donors, while others did not, even though their emission wavelengths were similar. The new FRET donors possess large Stokes shifts, which can be beneficial for multiple applications. In addition, all ODFs can be excited at a single wavelength; thus, ODFs may be candidates as “universal FRET donors”, thus allowing multicolor FRET of multiple species to be carried out with one excitation.
Co-reporter:JamesC. Delaney Dr.;Jianmin Gao Dr.;Haibo Liu Dr.;Nidhi Shrivastav;JohnM. Essigmann Dr.;EricT. Kool Dr.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2009 Volume 48( Issue 25) pp:4524-4527
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.200805683
Co-reporter:YinNah Teo;JamesN. Wilson  Dr.;EricT. Kool Dr.
Chemistry - A European Journal 2009 Volume 15( Issue 43) pp:11551-11558
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/chem.200901607

Abstract

We describe studies carried out in the DNA context to test how a common fluorescence quencher, dabcyl, interacts with oligodeoxynucleoside fluorophores (ODFs)—a system of stacked, electronically interacting fluorophores built on a DNA scaffold. We tested twenty different tetrameric ODF sequences containing varied combinations and orderings of pyrene (Y), benzopyrene (B), perylene (E), dimethylaminostilbene (D), and spacer (S) monomers conjugated to the 3′ end of a DNA oligomer. Hybridization of this probe sequence to a dabcyl-labeled complementary strand resulted in strong quenching of fluorescence in 85 % of the twenty ODF sequences. The high efficiency of quenching was also established by their large Stern–Volmer constants (KSV) of between 2.1×104 and 4.3×105M−1, measured with a free dabcyl quencher. Interestingly, quenching of ODFs displayed strong sequence dependence. This was particularly evident in anagrams of ODF sequences; for example, the sequence BYDS had a KSV that was approximately two orders of magnitude greater than that of BSDY, which has the same dye composition. Other anagrams, for example EDSY and ESYD, also displayed different responses upon quenching by dabcyl. Analysis of spectra showed that apparent excimer and exciplex emission bands were quenched with much greater efficiency compared to monomer emission bands by at least an order of magnitude. This suggests an important role played by delocalized excited states of the π stack of fluorophores in the amplified quenching of fluorescence.

Co-reporter:Haige Lu Dr.;Stephen R. Lynch Dr.;Alex H. F. Lee Dr. ;Eric T. Kool Dr.
ChemBioChem 2009 Volume 10( Issue 15) pp:2530-2538
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.200900434

Abstract

In a functioning genetic system, the information-encoding molecule must form a regular self-complementary complex (for example, the base-paired double helix of DNA) and it must be able to encode information and pass it on to new generations. Here we study a benzo-widened DNA-like molecule (yDNA) as a candidate for an alternative genetic set, and we explicitly test these two structural and functional requirements. The solution structure of a 10 bp yDNA duplex is measured by using 2D-NMR methods for a simple sequence composed of T–yA/yA–T pairs. The data confirm an antiparallel, right-handed, hydrogen-bonded helix resembling B-DNA but with a wider diameter and enlarged base-pair size. In addition to this, the abilities of two different polymerase enzymes (Klenow fragment of DNA pol I (Kf) and the repair enzyme Dpo4) to synthesize and extend the yDNA pairs T–yA, A–yT, and G–yC are measured by steady-state kinetics studies. Not surprisingly, insertion of complementary bases opposite yDNA bases is inefficient due to the larger base-pair size. We find that correct pairing occurs in several cases by both enzymes, but that common and relatively efficient mispairing involving T–yT and T–yC pairs interferes with fully correct formation and extension of pairs by these polymerases. Interestingly, the data show that extension of the large pairs is considerably more efficient with the flexible repair enzyme (Dpo4) than with the more rigid Kf enzyme. The results shed light on the properties of yDNA as a candidate for an alternative genetic information-encoding molecule and as a tool for application in basic science and biomedicine.

Co-reporter:Adam P. Silverman, Scott J. Garforth, Vinayaka R. Prasad and Eric T. Kool
Biochemistry 2008 Volume 47(Issue 16) pp:
Publication Date(Web):March 27, 2008
DOI:10.1021/bi702427y
The steric flexibility or rigidity of polymerase active sites may play an important role in their fidelity of nucleic acid synthesis. In this regard, reverse transcriptases offer an unusual opportunity to compare two enzymatic activities that proceed in the same active site. For HIV-1 reverse transcriptase, reverse transcription (RNA-templated synthesis) is known to proceed with lower fidelity than DNA-templated synthesis. Here, we describe the use of a set of variably sized nonpolar thymidine and uracil mimics as molecular rulers to probe the active site steric constraints of HIV-1 RT, and for the first time, we directly compare the functional flexibility of these two activities. Steady-state kinetics of incorporation for natural dNTPs opposite unnatural template bases as well as for unnatural dNTPs opposite natural template bases are reported for the DNA-templated DNA synthesis, and comparison is made with recent data for the RNA-templated activity. Kinetics for extension beyond a base pair containing the analogue template bases are also reported both for RNA and DNA templates. Our results show that the DNA-dependent polymerization by HIV-RT is highly sensitive to size, strongly biasing against both too-small and too-large base pairs, while, by contrast, the RNA-dependent polymerization is only biased against analogues that are too small, and is much more accepting of larger base pairs. In addition, base pair extension with HIV-RT is found to be relatively insensitive to varied base pair size, consistent with its high mutagenicity. Overall, the data show greater rigidity with a DNA template as compared with an RNA template, which correlates directly with the higher fidelity of the DNA-templated synthesis. Possible structural explanations for these differences are discussed. We also report kinetics data for two HIV-1 RT mutants reported to have altered fidelity (F61A and K65R) using DNA templates containing nonpolar base analogues, and find that one of these (F61A) is a high-fidelity enzyme that appears to be sensitive to a loss of hydrogen-bonding groups.
Co-reporter:Andrea K. Pomerantz, W. E. Moerner and Eric T. Kool
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 2008 Volume 112(Issue 42) pp:13184-13187
Publication Date(Web):September 26, 2008
DOI:10.1021/jp806696u
Study of long single-stranded telomeric DNA is important for a variety of basic science and biotechnological applications, yet few methods exist for synthesis and visualization of single copies of this DNA in solution at biologically relevant length scales necessary for assessment of heterogeneity in its structure and behavior. We have synthesized kilobase-long single-stranded human telomere mimics in situ by rolling circle replication (RCR) on a microscope coverslip surface and visualized individual strands by staining with SYBR Gold. Under buffer flow, differential extensibility and varying morphology of these long telomere-mimicking DNA sequences were observed at the single-molecule level in real time. Using this procedure, we detected striking differences in the extensibility of individual RCR products based on the human G-rich telomeric sequence in the presence and absence of short, complementary single-stranded oligonucleotides. We also apply this new mode of single-stranded DNA characterization to probe the interaction of kilobase-length telomere mimics with the small-molecule G-quadruplex-binding agent TMPyP4.
Co-reporter:Alvaro Somoza Dr.;AdamP. Silverman Dr.;RM. Miller;Jijumon Chelliserrykattil Dr. ;EricT. Kool Dr.
Chemistry - A European Journal 2008 Volume 14( Issue 26) pp:7978-7987
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/chem.200800837

Abstract

Nonpolar nucleosides with varying size and shape have been used to study the hydrogen-bonding stabilization and steric effects on RNA interference. The uracil and adenine residues of siRNA guide strands have been replaced by nonpolar isosteres of uracil and adenine and by steric variants. RNAi experiments targeting Renilla luciferase mRNA have shown close correlation between siRNA thermal stability and gene suppression. Interestingly, siRNA modified at position 7 on the guide strand does not follow this correlation, having substantial RNAi activity despite low thermal stability. Sequence-selectivity studies were carried out at this position with mutated target mRNAs and nucleobase analogues with varied size (2,4-difluoro- and 2,4-dichlorobenzene) and different shape (2,3-dichlorobenzene, 4-methylbenzimidazole). The results point out the importance of nucleobase shape and steric effects in RNA interference.

Co-reporter:James N. Wilson Dr.;Younjin Cho Dr.;Samuel Tan;Andrea Cuppoletti Dr. ;Eric T. Kool Dr.
ChemBioChem 2008 Volume 9( Issue 2) pp:279-285
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.200700381

Abstract

Fluorescent nucleosides are widely used as probes of biomolecular structure and mechanism in the context of DNA, but they often exhibit low quantum yields because of quenching by neighboring DNA bases. Here we characterize the quenching by DNA of fluorescent nucleosides that have pyrene (Y), perylene (E), benzopyrene (B), or 2-aminopurine (2AP) as nucleobase replacements, and we investigate the effect of inserting varied nucleosides as potential “insulators” between the fluorescent nucleosides and other nearby DNA bases as a strategy for increasing quantum yields. The data show that the hydrocarbons are quenched by adjacent pyrimidines, with thymine being the strongest quencher. The quantum yield of pyrene is quenched 120-fold by a single adjacent T, that of benzopyrene tenfold, and that of perylene by a factor of 2.5. Quenching of excimer and exciplex dinucleoside labels (Y–Y, Y–E, E–E, etc.) was considerably lessened, but was strongest with neighboring thymine. 2-Aminopurine (2AP) is most strongly quenched (15-fold) by neighboring G. We tested four different insulator candidates for reducing this quenching by measuring the fluorescence of short oligonucleotides containing insulators placed between a fluorescent base and a quenching base. The insulators tested were a C3 abasic spacer (S), dihydrothymidine nucleoside (DHT), terphenyl nucleoside (TP), and adenine deoxynucleoside (dA). Results showed that the abasic spacer had little effect on quenching, while the other three had substantial effects. DHT and terphenyl enhanced fluorescence of the fluorophores by factors of 5 to 70. Adenine base reduced the quenching of pyrene 40-fold. The results underscore the importance of the nearest neighbors in DNA-quenching mechanisms, and establish simple strategies for enhancing fluorescence in labeled DNAs.

Co-reporter:Jijumon Chelliserrykattil Dr.;Haige Lu Dr.;Alex H. F. Lee Dr. ;Eric T. Kool Dr.
ChemBioChem 2008 Volume 9( Issue 18) pp:2976-2980
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.200800339

Abstract

A widened DNA base-pair architecture is studied in an effort to explore the possibility of whether new genetic system designs might possess some of the functions of natural DNA. In the “yDNA” system, pairs are homologated by addition of a benzene ring, which yields (in the present study) benzopyrimidines that are correctly paired with purines. Here we report initial tests of ability of the benzopyrimidines yT and yC to store and transfer biochemical and biological information in vitro and in bacterial cells. In vitro primer extension studies with two polymerases showed that the enzymes could insert the correct nucleotides opposite these yDNA bases, but with low selectivity. PCR amplifications with a thermostable polymerase resulted in correct pairings in 15–20 % of the cases, and more successfully when yT or yC were situated within the primers. Segments of DNA containing one or two yDNA bases were then ligated into a plasmid and tested for their ability to successfully lead the expression of an active protein in vivo. Although active at only a fraction of the activity of fully natural DNA, the unnatural bases encoded the correct codon bases in the majority of cases when singly substituted, and yielded functioning green fluorescent protein. Although the activities with native polymerases are modest with these large base pairs, this is the first example of encoding protein in vivo by an unnatural DNA base pair architecture.

Co-reporter:Raphael M. Franzini ;Eric T. Kool
ChemBioChem 2008 Volume 9( Issue 18) pp:2981-2988
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.200800507

Abstract

Templated nucleic acid detection is an emerging bioanalytical method that makes use of the target DNA or RNA strand to initiate a fluorogenic reaction. The Staudinger reduction holds particular promise for templated sensing of nucleic acids because the involved functional groups are highly chemoselective. Here, the azidomethoxy group, which can be removed under Staudinger conditions, is used to cage 7-hydroxycoumarin fluorophores. Reduction by phosphines and subsequent loss of the azidomethoxy substituent induce a significant bathochromic shift of the major absorbance band in the near UV region. When excited at the appropriate wavelength, this change in the absorbance spectrum translates into a substantial fluorescence turn-on signal. The described profluorophores are readily conjugated to amino-modified DNAs and are rapidly uncaged by a triphenylphosphine–DNA probe under the control of a DNA template. In addition, turnover of the probes on the target strand occurs and yields substantial signal amplification.

Co-reporter:Eric T. Kool and Herman O. Sintim  
Chemical Communications 2006 (Issue 35) pp:3665-3675
Publication Date(Web):07 Jul 2006
DOI:10.1039/B605414E
2,4-Difluorotoluene is unusual among hydrofluorocarbons because it is shaped like the DNA base thymine. It was first synthesised as a nucleotide analogue and incorporated into DNA a decade ago. Although it is a nonpolar molecule, it was found to be replicated by DNA polymerase enzymes as if it were thymine. We concluded that replication of DNA base pairs can occur without Watson–Crick hydrogen bonds, and hypothesised that steric effects, rather than these hydrogen bonds, were the main arbiters of DNA replication fidelity. A debate was initiated then, with claims by some that the molecule is polar and forms hydrogen bonds with adenine, thus supporting the hydrogen bonding theory of DNA replication. Here we discuss the evolution of this debate, and reflect on the relevant data that have since come from hundreds of papers and dozens of laboratories. Although discussion on this topic continues, the steric hypothesis for DNA replication is now widely accepted among biochemists, and the changing paradigm has been reflected in textbooks.
Co-reporter:James N. Wilson and Eric T. Kool  
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2006 vol. 4(Issue 23) pp:4265-4274
Publication Date(Web):23 Oct 2006
DOI:10.1039/B612284C
We describe the design, synthesis, and properties of nucleoside monomers in which the DNA base is replaced by fluorescent hydrocarbons and heterocycles, and the assembly of these monomers into DNA-like molecules in which the all bases are fluorescent. As monomers, such molecules have useful applications as reporters in the DNA context. The use of fluorescent DNA bases, rather than more traditional fluorophores tethered to the DNA strand, gives a more predictable location and orientation, and yields a more direct response to changes that occur within the helix. In addition to uses as monomers, such compounds can be assembled into polychromophoric oligomers (“oligodeoxyfluorosides” or ODFs). ODFs are water soluble, discrete molecules and are easily arranged into specific sequences by use of a DNA synthesizer. They have displayed a number of properties not readily available in commercial fluorophores, including large Stokes shifts, tunable excitation and emission wavelengths, and sensing responses to physical changes or molecular species in solution. We describe an approach to assembling and screening large sets of oligofluorosides for rapid identification of molecules with desirable properties. Such compounds show promise for applications in biochemistry, biology, environmental and materials applications.
Co-reporter:Eric T. Kool;Hiroshi Abe
PNAS 2006 Volume 103 (Issue 2 ) pp:263-268
Publication Date(Web):2006-01-10
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0509938103
We describe the use of modified fluorescent-labeled oligonucleotide probes in the sequence-specific detection of messenger RNAs in live human cells. To make this detection possible, we developed a previously undescribed probe design that combines earlier quenched autoligation chemistry with a previously undescribed fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) strategy to lower background signals. The probe pairs consisted of a nucleophilic 3′-phosphorothioate probe carrying a Cy5 FRET acceptor, and an electrophilic probe containing the combination of a 5′ end electrophile/quencher and a fluorescein FRET donor. Probes were introduced to HL-60 cells by use of the streptolysin O pore-forming peptide. Signals from three different messenger RNAs, as well as 28S ribosomal RNA, could be detected and quantitated by flow cytometry. Probes targeted to ribosomal sequences and β-actin mRNA also could be detected over background by confocal fluorescence microscopy. Varying the target site and probe backbone chemistry were found to have large effects on signal. The data suggest that quenched autoligating probes may be of general utility as biological tools in following localization, transcription, and processing of eukaryotic cellular messages and may have applications in diagnostic or prognostic analysis of disease-related RNAs in human tissues.
Co-reporter:Herman O. Sintim Dr.;Eric T. Kool Dr.
Angewandte Chemie 2006 Volume 118(Issue 12) pp:
Publication Date(Web):28 FEB 2006
DOI:10.1002/ange.200504296

Auf der Suche nach der Form: DNA-Polymerase I unterscheidet leicht und hoch empfindlich zwischen Nucleobasen mit der gleichen Größe, aber unterschiedlicher Form. Die Form, die durch Änderungen der Position des/der Halogensubstituent(en) beeinflusst wird, ist für die Effizienz der Basenpaarung und die Selektivität von größerer Bedeutung als andere Faktoren.

Co-reporter:Alvaro Somoza Dr.;Jijumon Chelliserrykattil Dr.;Eric T. Kool Dr.
Angewandte Chemie 2006 Volume 118(Issue 30) pp:
Publication Date(Web):27 JUN 2006
DOI:10.1002/ange.200601311

Besser als normal: RNA-Interferenz-Studien mit fehlgepaarter Ziel-RNA haben offengelegt, dass an vielen verschiedenen Positionen des RNA-Strangs Sequenzselektivität (auf der Einzelnucleotidebene) auftritt. Die Verwendung von rF statt rU an Position 7 scheint die Sequenzselektivität über die der natürlichen Base hinaus zu erhöhen.

Co-reporter:Younjin Cho;Eric T. Kool Dr.
ChemBioChem 2006 Volume 7(Issue 4) pp:
Publication Date(Web):27 FEB 2006
DOI:10.1002/cbic.200500515

A number of research laboratories have investigated the properties of multichromophore molecules and their applications in materials science and in biotechnology. Previous approaches for preparing such molecules have involved traditional organic synthesis. Here we describe the one-step enzymatic synthesis of such a multichromophore species by using a DNA-polymerizing enzyme (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT)). We find that a nucleotide-like molecule with pyrene replacing the DNA base (dPTP) can be accepted as a substrate for this enzyme to produce discrete chromophores that have 3 or 4 pyrenes consecutively, depending on which anomer (α or β) is used. Products were characterized by gel electrophoresis, mass spectrometry, and fluorescence. The reaction was found to change the fluorescence emission of the chromophore from a maximum at 375 nm (the monomer nucleotide) to 490 nm in the oligomeric product. This new green–white emission is consistent with the formation of a pyrene excimer between adjacent pyrene glycosides, which exhibit a large Stokes shift of 130 nm. The enzymatic synthesis of the pyrene excimer might have applications in homogeneous biological assays for DNA fragments, such as those that arise during apoptosis.

Co-reporter:Adam P. Silverman;Ellen J. Baron;Eric T. Kool
ChemBioChem 2006 Volume 7(Issue 12) pp:
Publication Date(Web):10 OCT 2006
DOI:10.1002/cbic.200600278

RNA-templated chemistry to discriminate pathogenic bacteria. A new variant of FRET quenched autoligation (QUAL) probes is described; in the new design, electrophilic QUAL probes contain both a quencher and fluorescein or a fluorescein-tetramethylrhodamine FRET pair; RNA-templated ligation with nucleophilic phosphorothioate probes yields a green or red signal with a single excitation. We test the probes in discrimination of pathogenic strains of bacteria.

Co-reporter:Herman O. Sintim,Eric T. Kool
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2006 45(12) pp:1974-1979
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.200504296
Co-reporter:Alvaro Somoza Dr.;Jijumon Chelliserrykattil Dr.;Eric T. Kool Dr.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2006 Volume 45(Issue 30) pp:
Publication Date(Web):27 JUN 2006
DOI:10.1002/anie.200601311

Better than normal: RNA-interference studies with mismatched target RNA have demonstrated sequence selectivity (at the single-nucleotide level) at many different positions of the RNA strand. The use of rF in place of rU at position 7 appears to enhance sequence selectivity beyond that of the natural base.

Co-reporter:Jacob S. Lai;Eric T. Kool Dr.
Chemistry - A European Journal 2005 Volume 11(Issue 10) pp:
Publication Date(Web):2 MAR 2005
DOI:10.1002/chem.200401151

We describe selective “fluorous” effects in the active site of a DNA polymerase, by using nucleotide analogues whose pairing edges are perfluorinated. The 5′-triphosphate deoxynucleotide derivatives of DNA base analogues 2,3,4,5-tetrafluorobenzene (FB) and 4,5,6,7-tetrafluoroindole (FI), as well as hydrocarbon controls benzene (B) and indole (I), were synthesized and studied as substrates for the DNA Polymerase I Klenow fragment (KF exo−). Modified nucleotides were present in the DNA template or were supplied as nucleoside triphosphates in studies of the steady-state kinetics of single nucleotide insertion. When supplied opposite the non-natural bases in the template strand, the hydrophobic nucleoside triphosphates were incorporated by up to two orders of magnitude more efficiently than the natural deoxynucleoside triphosphates. The purine-like fluorinated indole nucleotide (FI) was the most efficiently inserted of the four hydrophobic analogues, with the most effective incorporation occurring opposite the pyrimidine-like tetrafluorobenzene (FB). In all cases, the polyfluorinated base pairs were more efficiently processed than the analogous hydrocarbon pairs. A preliminary test of polymerase extension beyond these pairs showed that only the FB base is appreciably extended; the inefficient extension is consistent with recently published data regarding other nonpolar base pairs. These results suggest the importance of hydrophobicity, stacking, and steric interactions in the polymerase-mediated replication of DNA base pairs that lack hydrogen bonds. These findings further suggest that the enhanced hydrophobicity of polyfluoroaromatic bases could be employed in the design of new, selective base pairs that are orthogonal to the natural Watson–Crick pairs used in replication.

Co-reporter:Tae Woo Kim;James C. Delaney;John M. Essigmann;Eric T. Kool;
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2005 102(44) pp:15803-15808
Publication Date(Web):October 25, 2005
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0505113102
We describe the use of a series of gradually expanded thymine nucleobase analogs in probing steric effects in DNA polymerase efficiency and fidelity. In these nonpolar compounds, the base size was increased incrementally over a 1.0-Å range by use of variably sized atoms (H, F, Cl, Br, and I) to replace the oxygen molecules of thymine. Kinetics studies with DNA Pol I (Klenow fragment, exonuclease-deficient) in vitro showed that replication efficiency opposite adenine increased through the series, reaching a peak at the chlorinated compound. Efficiency then dropped markedly as a steric tightness limit was apparently reached. Importantly, fidelity also followed this trend, with the fidelity maximum at dichlorotoluene, the largest compound that fits without apparent repulsion. The fidelity at this point approached that of wild-type thymine. Surprisingly, the maximum fidelity and efficiency was found at a base pair size significantly larger than the natural size. Parallel bypass and mutagenesis experiments were then carried out in vivo with a bacterial assay for replication. The cellular results were virtually the same as those seen in solution. The results provide direct evidence for the importance of a tight steric fit on DNA replication fidelity. In addition, the results suggest that even high-fidelity replicative enzymes have more steric room than necessary, possibly to allow for an evolutionarily advantageous mutation rate.
Co-reporter:Haibo Liu;Jianmin Gao;Stephen R. Lynch;Y. David Saito;Lystranne Maynard;Eric T. Kool
Science 2003 Vol 302(5646) pp:868-871
Publication Date(Web):31 Oct 2003
DOI:10.1126/science.1088334

Abstract

We describe a new molecular class of genetic-pairing system that has a native DNA backbone but has all four base pairs replaced by new, larger pairs. The base pairs include size-expanded analogs of thymine and of adenine, both extended by the width of a benzene ring (2.4 Å). The expanded-diameter double helices are more thermodynamically stable than the Watson-Crick helix, likely because of enhanced base stacking. Structural data confirm a right-handed, double-stranded, and base-paired helical form. Because of the larger base size, all the pairs of this helical system are fluorescent, which suggests practical applications in detection of natural DNA and RNA. Our findings establish that there is no apparent structural or thermodynamic prohibition against genetic systems having sizes different from the natural one.

Co-reporter:James C. Delaney;Paul T. Henderson;Sandra A. Helquist;Juan C. Morales;John M. Essigmann;Eric T. Kool
PNAS 2003 100 (8 ) pp:4469-4473
Publication Date(Web):2003-04-15
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0837277100
We report studies testing the importance of Watson–Crick hydrogen bonding, base-pair geometry, and steric effects during DNA replication in living bacterial cells. Nonpolar DNA base shape mimics of thymine and adenine (abbreviated F and Q, respectively) were introduced into Escherichia coli by insertion into a phage genome followed by transfection of the vector into bacteria. Genetic assays showed that these two base mimics were bypassed with moderate to high efficiency in the cells and with very high efficiency under damage-response (SOS induction) conditions. Under both sets of conditions, the T-shape mimic (F) encoded genetic information in the bacteria as if it were thymine, directing incorporation of adenine opposite it with high fidelity. Similarly, the A mimic (Q) directed incorporation of thymine opposite itself with high fidelity. The data establish that Watson–Crick hydrogen bonding is not necessary for high-fidelity replication of a base pair in vivo. The results suggest that recognition of DNA base shape alone serves as the most powerful determinant of fidelity during transfer of genetic information in a living organism.
Co-reporter:Ravi A. Chandrasekaran;Ulf M. Lindström;Lucian Orbai;Sandra A. Helquist;Gregory P. Miller;Emin Oroudjev;Helen G. Hansma;Eric T. Kool
PNAS 2002 Volume 99 (Issue 25 ) pp:15953-15958
Publication Date(Web):2002-12-10
DOI:10.1073/pnas.252396199
Human telomerase is a reverse-transcriptase enzyme that synthesizes the multikilobase repeating hexamer telomere sequence (TTAGGG)n at the ends of chromosomes. Here we describe a designed approach to mimicry of telomerase, in which synthetic DNA nanocircles act as essentially infinite catalytic templates for efficient synthesis of long telomeres by DNA polymerase enzymes. Results show that the combination of a nanocircle and a DNA polymerase gives a positive telomere-repeat amplification protocol assay result for telomerase activity, and similar to the natural enzyme, it is inhibited by a known telomerase inhibitor. We show that artificial telomeres can be engineered on human chromosomes by this approach. This strategy allows for the preparation of synthetic telomeres for biological and structural study of telomeres and proteins that interact with them, and it raises the possibility of telomere engineering in cells without expression of telomerase itself. Finally, the results provide direct physical support for a recently proposed rolling-circle mechanism for telomerase-independent telomere elongation.
Co-reporter:Tatsuo Ohmichi;Angèle Maki;Eric T. Kool
PNAS 2002 Volume 99 (Issue 1 ) pp:54-59
Publication Date(Web):2002-01-08
DOI:10.1073/pnas.012589099
We describe experiments aimed at establishing whether circular single-stranded DNAs can form promoters for bacterial transcription from small folded motifs. In vitro selection experiments were carried out on circular 103-nt DNA libraries encoding 40-nt randomized sequences as well as self-processing hammerhead ribozymes. Rounds of rolling circle transcription, reverse transcription–PCR, and recyclization were carried out to optimize transcription efficiency. Sequences were identified that are 80-fold more actively transcribed than the initial library by E. coli RNA polymerase (RNAP). The selected motifs were found to be more active than canonical E. coli promoters in the same context. Experiments also demonstrated that a single-stranded pseudopromoter identified by this selection can be transplanted to other circular DNA contexts and retain transcriptional activity. Results suggest that the promoter is localized in a short (≈40 nt) hairpin, which is smaller than canonical E. coli promoters. To test whether this pseudopromoter was active in bacterial cells, a synthetic DNA nanocircle vector encoding a ribozyme targeted to a site in the marA drug resistance gene was constructed to contain an optimized single-stranded promoter. It is shown that this DNA circle can act as a “Trojan horse” in E. coli, being actively transcribed by the cellular RNAP and producing ribozymes that cleave a sequence in the marA drug resistance gene. The use of optimized single-stranded promoters in combination with synthetic nanocircle DNA vectors represents a potentially useful way to engender the synthesis of biologically active RNAs in living cells.
Co-reporter:Liang Xu, Linati Da, Steven W. Plouffe, Jenny Chong, Eric Kool, Dong Wang
DNA Repair (July 2014) Volume 19() pp:71-83
Publication Date(Web):1 July 2014
DOI:10.1016/j.dnarep.2014.03.024
Maintaining high transcriptional fidelity is essential for life. Some DNA lesions lead to significant changes in transcriptional fidelity. In this review, we will summarize recent progress towards understanding the molecular basis of RNA polymerase II (Pol II) transcriptional fidelity and DNA lesion-induced transcriptional mutagenesis. In particular, we will focus on the three key checkpoint steps of controlling Pol II transcriptional fidelity: insertion (specific nucleotide selection and incorporation), extension (differentiation of RNA transcript extension of a matched over mismatched 3′-RNA terminus), and proofreading (preferential removal of misincorporated nucleotides from the 3′-RNA end). We will also discuss some novel insights into the molecular basis and chemical perspectives of controlling Pol II transcriptional fidelity through structural, computational, and chemical biology approaches.
Co-reporter:Eric T. Kool ; Do-Hyoung Park ;Pete Crisalli
Journal of the American Chemical Society () pp:
Publication Date(Web):November 12, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ja407407h
Kinetics studies with structurally varied aldehydes and ketones in aqueous buffer at pH 7.4 reveal that carbonyl compounds with neighboring acid/base groups form hydrazones at accelerated rates. Similarly, tests of a hydrazine with a neighboring carboxylic acid group show that it also reacts at an accelerated rate. Rate constants for the fastest carbonyl/hydrazine combinations are 2–20 M–1 s–1, which is faster than recent strain-promoted cycloaddition reactions.
Co-reporter:Dominik K. Kölmel, Luzi J. Barandun and Eric T. Kool
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2016 - vol. 14(Issue 27) pp:NaN6412-6412
Publication Date(Web):2016/06/10
DOI:10.1039/C6OB01199C
A facile and general procedure for the preparation of alkynyl C-nucleosides with varied fluorophores is presented. Sonogashira coupling was used as a key reaction to conjugate the dyes to an easily accessible ethynyl functionalized deoxyribose derivative. The new C-nucleosides were used for the preparation of DNA-based polyfluorophores.
Co-reporter:Hyukin Kwon, Ke Min Chan and Eric T. Kool
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2017 - vol. 15(Issue 8) pp:NaN1809-1809
Publication Date(Web):2017/01/24
DOI:10.1039/C6OB02830F
Environmental contaminants pose a substantial health risk in many areas of the world. One of these risks is contamination of water with toxic organic species, such as herbicides and insecticides. Here we describe the discovery and properties of a set of fluorescent chemosensors that respond to micromolar concentrations of a broad range of common organic pesticides. The chemosensors are short DNA-like oligomers with fluorophores replacing DNA bases that are assembled via a DNA synthesizer. We screened a library of 1296 tetrameric compounds on polystyrene microbeads, and identified a set of chemosensor sequences that respond strongly to a set of structurally varied pesticide analytes. We show that ten chemosensors on beads can be used to detect and identify 14 different common pesticides at 100 μM, using the pattern of fluorescence intensity and wavelength changes. Limits of detection for two analytes were as low as 2 μM. The chemosensors are shown to function successfully in a practical setting, correctly identifying unknown pesticide contaminants in water from Felt Lake, California. The results establish a simple, low cost strategy for sensing environmental spills of toxic organics.
Co-reporter:Nan Dai and Eric T. Kool
Chemical Society Reviews 2011 - vol. 40(Issue 12) pp:NaN5770-5770
Publication Date(Web):2011/02/02
DOI:10.1039/C0CS00162G
Fluorescent sensors that make use of DNA structures have become widely useful in monitoring enzymatic activities. Early studies focused primarily on enzymes that naturally use DNA or RNA as the substrate. However, recent advances in molecular design have enabled the development of nucleic acid sensors for a wider range of functions, including enzymes that do not normally bind DNA or RNA. Nucleic acid sensors present some potential advantages over classical small-molecule sensors, including water solubility and ease of synthesis. An overview of the multiple strategies under recent development is presented in this critical review, and expected future developments in microarrays, single molecule analysis, and in vivo sensing are discussed (160 references).
Co-reporter:Seoung Ho Lee, Shenliang Wang and Eric T. Kool
Chemical Communications 2012 - vol. 48(Issue 65) pp:NaN8071-8071
Publication Date(Web):2012/06/28
DOI:10.1039/C2CC34060G
We report the fluorogenic detection of the product of base excision repair (an abasic site) in a specific sequence of duplex DNA. This is achieved by DNA-templated chemistry, employing triple helix-forming probes that contain unnatural nucleobases designed to selectively recognize the site of a missing base. Light-up signals of up to 36-fold were documented, and probes could be used to monitor enzymatic removal of a damaged base.
Co-reporter:Hyukin Kwon, Wei Jiang and Eric T. Kool
Chemical Science (2010-Present) 2015 - vol. 6(Issue 8) pp:NaN5086-5086
Publication Date(Web):2015/06/24
DOI:10.1039/C5SC90036K
Correction for ‘Pattern-based detection of anion pollutants in water with DNA polyfluorophores’ by Hyukin Kwon et al., Chem. Sci., 2015, 6, 2575–2583.
Co-reporter:Haige Lu, Andrew T. Krueger, Jianmin Gao, Haibo Liu and Eric T. Kool
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2010 - vol. 8(Issue 12) pp:NaN2710-2710
Publication Date(Web):2010/04/21
DOI:10.1039/C002766A
The development of alternative architectures for genetic information-encoding systems offers the possibility of new biotechnological tools as well as basic insights into the function of the natural system. In order to examine the potential of benzo-expanded DNA (xDNA) to encode and transfer biochemical information, we carried out a study of the processing of single xDNA pairs by DNA Polymerase I Klenow fragment (Kf, an A-family sterically rigid enzyme) and by the Sulfolobus solfataricus polymerase Dpo4 (a flexible Y-family polymerase). Steady-state kinetics were measured and compared for enzymatic synthesis of the four correct xDNA pairs and twelve mismatched pairs, by incorporation of dNTPs opposite single xDNA bases. Results showed that, like Kf, Dpo4 in most cases selected the correctly paired partner for each xDNA base, but with efficiency lowered by the enlarged pair size. We also evaluated kinetics for extension by these polymerases beyond xDNA pairs and mismatches, and for exonuclease editing by the Klenow exo+ polymerase. Interestingly, the two enzymes were markedly different: Dpo4 extended pairs with relatively high efficiencies (within 18–200-fold of natural DNA), whereas Kf essentially failed at extension. The favorable extension by Dpo4 was tested further by stepwise synthesis of up to four successive xDNA pairs on an xDNA template.
Co-reporter:Daniel J. Kleinbaum and Eric T. Kool
Chemical Communications 2010 - vol. 46(Issue 43) pp:NaN8156-8156
Publication Date(Web):2010/10/07
DOI:10.1039/C0CC01968B
Fluorescence-quenched nucleic acid probes with reactive moieties at both the 5′ and 3′ ends are synthesized and tested for reaction with two adjacent nucleophile-containing DNAs. These probes improve signal to background over singly reactive probes and can discriminate single nucleotide polymorphisms in the target DNA or RNA.
Co-reporter:Hyukin Kwon, Florent Samain and Eric T. Kool
Chemical Science (2010-Present) 2012 - vol. 3(Issue 8) pp:NaN2549-2549
Publication Date(Web):2012/05/17
DOI:10.1039/C2SC20461D
The monitoring of food spoilage is important to human health. Here we tested the ability of DNA-based oligodeoxyfluoroside (ODF) dyes to sense volatiles as they arise from spoilage, and employed a new platform for fluorescence sensing by inkjet printing of varied dyes on cellulose paper. ODFs are a class of short DNA-like oligomers with fluorophores replacing DNA bases. Six tetrameric ODFs of distinct sequences were printed on cotton paper using a commercial inkjet printer; printing methods and additives were evaluated for optimal fluorescence and response. ODFs were exposed via headspace volatiles in a closed container to a variety of foods as they spoiled over a period of days. We observed fluorescence intensity and/or color changes during exposure to meats (ground beef and shrimp), dairy (milk and cheese), fruit (orange juice), grain (bread), and vegetable (lettuce) sources. The printed sensors were imaged under an epifluorescence microscope and the signals were quantified using digital values from red (R), blue (B), green (G), and luma (L) channels, creating “fingerprints” for each headspace volatile mixture. This set of ODF sensors yielded a general fluorescence increase for protein-rich foods (ground beef, shrimp, and milk), while each food could be distinguished by the relative difference among RGB channels. Incubation temperature affected volatiles produced from spoiling ground beef, as storage at 4 °C yielded weaker signals. Spoilage of foods with low water activity (bread and cheese) also produced responses distinct from high-moisture foods, but similar to one another. Ripening of fruits (banana, tomato, and peach) was also tested. Monitoring the spoilage of ground beef (room temperature and 4 °C) and milk (room temperature) revealed that the composition of volatiles changes dynamically during the fifteen-day period, suggestive of shifts in bacterial populations.
Co-reporter:Wei Jiang, Shenliang Wang, Lik Hang Yuen, Hyukin Kwon, Toshikazu Ono and Eric T. Kool
Chemical Science (2010-Present) 2013 - vol. 4(Issue 8) pp:NaN3190-3190
Publication Date(Web):2013/05/22
DOI:10.1039/C3SC50985K
Contamination of soil and groundwater by petroleum-based products is an extremely widespread and important environmental problem. Here we have tested a simple optical approach for detecting and identifying such industrial contaminants in soil samples, using a set of fluorescent DNA-based chemosensors in pattern-based sensing. We used a set of diverse industrial volatile chemicals to screen and identify a set of five short oligomeric DNA fluorophores on PEG–polystyrene microbeads that could differentiate the entire set after exposure to their vapors in air. We then tested this set of five fluorescent chemosensor compounds for their ability to respond with fluorescence changes when exposed to headgas over soil samples contaminated with one of ten different samples of crude oil, petroleum distillates, fuels, lubricants and additives. Statistical analysis of the quantitative fluorescence change data (as Δ(R,G,B) emission intensities) revealed that these five chemosensors on beads could differentiate all ten product mixtures at 1000 ppm in soil within 30 minutes. Tests of sensitivity with three of the contaminant mixtures showed that they could be detected and differentiated in amounts at least as low as one part per million in soil. The results establish that DNA-polyfluorophores may have practical utility in monitoring the extent and identity of environmental spills and leaks, while they occur and during their remediation.
Co-reporter:Chi-Kin Koo, Florent Samain, Nan Dai and Eric T. Kool
Chemical Science (2010-Present) 2011 - vol. 2(Issue 10) pp:NaN1917-1917
Publication Date(Web):2011/07/14
DOI:10.1039/C1SC00301A
We describe a new molecular design for sensing toxic gases in air that employs DNA-polyfluorophores as reporters. In these polyfluorophores (ODFs), the DNA backbone is used as a scaffold to arrange several fluorescent aromatic hydrocarbons/heterocycles as DNA base replacements in a photophysically interacting stack. A library of 256 different tetramer ODFs was constructed on PEG-polystyrene beads and tested for optical responses to a set of toxic gases, SO2, H2S, MeSH, NH3, NHMe2, HCl, Cl2, and BF3. A set of 15 responding sequences was resynthesized, characterized, and cross-screened under a microscope against all eight gases at 1000 ppm. Responses were measured by changes in fluorescence wavelength and intensity, which were quantified as Δ(R, G, B, L) data from bead images. The data show a large range of responses, including lighting up, quenching, and color changes; remarkably, some single sensors showed all three types of responses to the varied analytes. Statistical methods were used to identify small sets of only three chemosensors that could be used to distinguish all eight analytes. The results establish that ODFs on surfaces can bind and report on small, simple gas molecules with highly varied responses. The DNA-like structure of the sensor molecules confers a number of potential advantages including simple synthesis, high diversity, and rapid sensor discovery.
Co-reporter:Chi-Kin Koo, Shenliang Wang, Rajiv L. Gaur, Florent Samain, Niaz Banaei and Eric T. Kool
Chemical Communications 2011 - vol. 47(Issue 41) pp:NaN11437-11437
Publication Date(Web):2011/09/21
DOI:10.1039/C1CC14871K
Polyfluorophores built on a DNA scaffold (ODFs) were synthesized and tested for fluorescence responses to the volatiles from M. tuberculosis, E. coli and P. putida in closed Petri dishes. Two sensors in a pattern-based response could distinguish the bacterial strains accurately, suggesting the use of ODFs in rapid identification of infectious agents.
Co-reporter:Hyukin Kwon, Wei Jiang and Eric T. Kool
Chemical Science (2010-Present) 2015 - vol. 6(Issue 4) pp:NaN2583-2583
Publication Date(Web):2015/02/18
DOI:10.1039/C4SC03992K
Many existing irrigation, industrial and chemical storage sites are currently introducing hazardous anions into groundwater, making the monitoring of such sites a high priority. Detecting and quantifying anions in water samples typically requires complex instrumentation, adding cost and delaying analysis. Here we address these challenges by development of an optical molecular method to detect and discriminate a broad range of anionic contaminants with DNA-based fluorescent sensors. A library of 1296 tetrameric-length oligodeoxyfluorosides (ODFs) composed of metal ligand and fluorescence modulating monomers was constructed with a DNA synthesizer on PEG-polystyrene microbeads. These oligomers on beads were incubated with YIII or ZnII ions to provide affinity and responsiveness to anions. Seventeen anions were screened with the library under an epifluorescence microscope, ultimately yielding eight chemosensors that could discriminate 250 μM solutions of all 17 anions in buffered water using their patterns of response. This sensor set was able to identify two unknown anion samples from ten closely-responding anions and could also function quantitatively, determining unknown concentrations of anions such as cyanide (as low as 1 mM) and selenate (as low as 50 μM). Further studies with calibration curves established detection limits of selected anions including thiocyanate (detection limit ∼300 μM) and arsenate (∼800 μM). The results demonstrate DNA-like fluorescent chemosensors as versatile tools for optically analyzing environmentally hazardous anions in aqueous environments.
Co-reporter:Omid Khakshoor and Eric T. Kool
Chemical Communications 2011 - vol. 47(Issue 25) pp:NaN7024-7024
Publication Date(Web):2011/04/11
DOI:10.1039/C1CC11021G
Research in nucleic acids has made major advances in the past decade in multiple fields of science and technology. Here we discuss some of the most important findings in DNA and RNA research in the fields of biology, chemistry, biotechnology, synthetic biology, nanostructures and optical materials, with emphasis on how chemistry has impacted, and is impacted by, these developments. Major challenges ahead include the development of new chemical strategies that allow synthetically modified nucleic acids to enter into, and function in, living systems.
Co-reporter:Nan Dai, Yin Nah Teo and Eric T. Kool
Chemical Communications 2010 - vol. 46(Issue 8) pp:NaN1223-1223
Publication Date(Web):2010/01/22
DOI:10.1039/B926338A
DNA-scaffolded oligodeoxyriboside fluorophores (ODFs) were used as the reporters in turn-on sensing of enzymatic bond-cleaving activity. A tetramer ODF of pyrene deoxynucleosides displayed high quenching efficiency when conjugated via ester linkages with a dabcyl quencher, and yielded large signal increases with several enzymes in vitro and in intact human cells.
HUHS015
2-?Pyridinamine, 3-?[(1S)?-?1-?(2,?6-?dichloro-?3-?fluorophenyl)?ethoxy]?-?5-?[1-?(4-?piperidinyl)?-?1H-?pyrazol-?4-?yl]?-
2,6-difluoro-4-nitrobenzaldehyde
6-bromo-2-(chloromethyl)quinoline
3-(METHYLSULFONYL)-1H-1,2,4-TRIAZOL-5-AMINE
1H-Benzimidazole,2-(2-pyrrolidinyl)-(9CI)