Q54437932 Dotaz Zobrazit nápovědu
Modern trends in electrochemical sensing deoxyribonucleic acids (DNA), particularly the use of electrochemical sensors for detection of DNA damage or hybridization, are discussed. Applications of electrochemical methods such as AC voltammetry, square-wave voltammetry and constant current chronopotentiometry as well as use of mercury and carbon electrodes are presented. Special attention is paid to application of Hg amalgams and carbon (pyrolytic graphite, C paste or glassy C) electrodes for monitoring reduction and oxidation processes (label-free detection). Techniques and procedures used for DNA labeling with electroactive tags such as transition-metal (Os, Ru, Cu) complexes or redox mediators are described. DNA interactions with heavy metal ions, drugs, and proteins are also mentioned. The review does not intend to give a complete overview of the topics considered but, rather, to present some historic consequences and modern electrochemical methods used in DNA research.
A complex OsO(4), 2,2'-bipyridine (Os,bipy), has been used for electroactive labeling of biopolymers as well as for probing of nucleic acids and protein structure and interactions. In DNA, Os,bipy forms electrochemically active adducts with pyrimidine nucleobases, exhibiting highly selective modification of thymine residues in single-stranded DNA. Here, we show that modification of rare thymine residues (one thymine among several tens of unreactive purine bases) can easily be detected by means of a simple ex situ voltammetric analysis using carbon electrodes. Based on this remarkable sensitivity of detection, Os,bipy has been used as an electroactive probe for unpaired and/or mismatched thymine residues within DNA heteroduplexes. Site-specific chemical modification of the DNA with the Os,bipy has allowed a clear distinction between perfectly base-paired DNA homoduplexes and mismatched heteroduplexes, as well as discrimination among heteroduplexes containing one or two mispaired thymines, a single thymine insertion, or combination of a mispair and an insertion.
A simple approach to DNA tail-labelling using terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase and modified deoxynucleoside triphosphates is presented. Amino- and nitrophenyl-modified dNTPs were found to be good substrates for this enzyme giving 3'-end stretches of different lengths depending on the nucleotide and concentration. 3-Nitrophenyl-7-deazaG was selected as the most useful label because its dNTP was efficiently incorporated by the transferase to form long tail-labels at any oligonucleotide. Accumulation of many nitrophenyl tags per oligonucleotide resulted in a considerable enhancement of voltammetric signals due to the nitro group reduction, thus improving the sensitivity of electrochemical detection of the tail-labelled probes. We demonstrate a perfect discrimination between complementary and non-complementary target DNAs sequences by tail-labelled hybridization probes as well as the ability of tumour suppressor p53 protein to recognize a specific binding site within tail-labelled DNA substrates, making the methodology useful in electrochemical DNA hybridization and DNA-protein interaction assays.
- MeSH
- DNA sondy analýza chemie MeSH
- DNA vazebné proteiny chemie MeSH
- DNA-nukleotidylexotransferasa chemie MeSH
- elektrochemické techniky metody MeSH
- hybridizace nukleových kyselin metody MeSH
- molekulární struktura MeSH
- purinové nukleotidy chemie MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
In this report, voltammetry with linear scan and chronopotentiometric stripping (CPS) with constant current were used for the analysis of doxorubicin (DOX) at a hanging mercury drop electrode (HMDE). CPS was used for the study of DOX in situ electrochemical reduction in adsorbed state and for ex situ (adsorptive transfer) analysis of the drug. For the first time, CPS was used to study the reversible reduction of the DOX quinine moiety at –0.45 V (vs Ag|AgCl|3 M KCl) as well as electrode processes giving rise to an irreversible signal around –1.45 V at the HMDE in 0.2 M acetate or Britton–Robinson buffers at different pH values. The dependence of the latter signal on pH revealed involvement of protonation equilibria; however, neither CV nor CPS data confirmed the catalytic character of the electrode reaction previously suggested by other authors. The CPS method was also applied to monitor the DOX interaction with double- (ds) and single-stranded (ss) DNA. In the presence of dsDNA, more pronounced changes in DOX signal intensity were observed, in agreement with a strong intercalation of the DOX redox centre into the DNA double helix.
Modified 2'-deoxynucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs) bearing [Ru(bpy)(3)](2+) and [Os(bpy)(3)](2+) complexes attached via an acetylene linker to the 5-position of pyrimidines (C and U) or to the 7-position of 7-deazapurines (7-deaza-A and 7-deaza-G) have been prepared in one step by aqueous cross-couplings of halogenated dNTPs with the corresponding terminal acetylenes. Polymerase incorporation by primer extension using Vent (exo-) or Pwo polymerases gave DNA labeled in specific positions with Ru(2+) or Os(2+) complexes. Square-wave voltammetry could be efficiently used to detect these labeled nucleic acids by reversible oxidations of Ru(2+/3+) or Os(2+/3+). The redox potentials of the Ru(2+) complexes (1.1-1.25 V) are very close to that of G oxidation (1.1 V), while the potentials of Os(2+) complexes (0.75 V) are sufficiently different to enable their independent detection. On the other hand, Ru(2+)-labeled DNA can be independently analyzed by luminescence. In combination with previously reported dNTPs bearing ferrocene, aminophenyl, and nitrophenyl tags, the Os-labeled dATP has been successfully used for "multicolor" redox labeling of DNA and for DNA minisequencing.
- MeSH
- barva MeSH
- barvení a značení metody MeSH
- DNA-dependentní DNA-polymerasy chemie MeSH
- DNA chemie MeSH
- elektrochemie MeSH
- luminiscence MeSH
- oligonukleotidy chemie MeSH
- osmium chemie MeSH
- oxidace-redukce MeSH
- reagencia zkříženě vázaná chemie MeSH
- ruthenium chemie MeSH
- Publikační typ
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
- MeSH
- adenosintrifosfát analogy a deriváty analýza chemie MeSH
- cytidintrifosfát analogy a deriváty analýza chemie MeSH
- DNA-dependentní DNA-polymerasy chemie MeSH
- elektrochemie MeSH
- financování organizované MeSH
- kyseliny boronové chemie MeSH
- molekulární struktura MeSH
- oligonukleotidy chemická syntéza chemie MeSH
- uridintrifosfát analogy a deriváty analýza chemie MeSH
Reduction potentials of several M(2+/3+) (M = Ru, Os) octahedral complexes, namely, [M(H2O)6](2+/3+), [MCl6](4-/3-), [M(NH3)6](2+/3+), [M(en)3](2+/3+) [M(bipy)3](2+/3+), and [M(CN)6](4-/3-), were calculated using the CASSCF/CASPT2/CASSI and MRCI methods including spin-orbit coupling (SOC) by means of first-order quasi-degenerate perturbation theory. It was shown that the effect of SOC accounts for a systematic shift of approximately -70 mV in the reduction potentials of the studied ruthenium (II/III) complexes and an approximately -300 mV shift for the osmium(II/III) complexes. SOC splits the sixfold-degenerate (2)T(2g) ground electronic state (in ideal octahedral symmetry) of the M(3+) ions into the E((5/2)g) Kramers doublet and G((3/2)g) quartet, which were calculated to split by 1354-1573 cm(-1) in the Ru(3+) complexes and 4155-5061 cm(-1) in the Os(3+) complexes. It was demonstrated that this splitting represents the main contribution to the stabilization of the M(3+) ground state with respect to the closed-shell (1)A(1g) ground state in M(2+) systems. Moreover, it was shown that the accuracy of the calculated reduction potentials depends on the calculated solvation energies of both the oxidized and reduced forms. For smaller ligands, it involves explicit inclusion of the second solvation sphere into the calculations, whereas implicit solvation models yield results of sufficient accuracy for complexes with larger ligands. In such cases (e.g., [M(bipy)3](2+/3+) and its derivatives), very good agreement between the calculated (SOC-corrected) values of the reduction potentials and the available experimental values was obtained. These results led us to the conclusion that especially for Os(2+/3+) complexes, inclusion of SOC is necessary to avoid systematic errors of approximately 300 mV in the calculated reduction potentials.