4.8 Article

Dimeric G-Quadruplex: An Effective Nucleic Acid Scaffold for Lighting Up Thioflavin T

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 93, Issue 3, Pages 1333-1341

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.0c02637

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21775099, 21974082]

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The study identified the G4 dimer as a unique structure with enhanced fluorescence intensity of ThT, showing potential applications in label-free DNA detection. The findings also demonstrated the utility of G4 dimer/ThT as a fluorescence indicator in biosensing strategies.
As a recently identified higher-order quadruplex (G4) structure, the G4 dimer possesses unique structure and biological functions. In this work, we found accidentally that two tandem PW17 (one known G4-forming DNA) sequences can fold into a stable G4 dimer, and the G4 dimer can enhance dramatically the fluorescence intensity of thioflavin T (ThT). The G4 dimer/ThT fluorescence intensity is about ninefold that of the corresponding G4 monomer/ThT. Meanwhile, compared with the common G4/ThT system, G4 dimer/ThT exhibited more stable fluorescence emission in the media with various concentrations of Na+ and K+. On the basis of these findings, G4 dimer/ThT was used as a fluorescence indicator to construct one arched DNA probe for label-free detection of DNA. By incorporating a G4 dimer sequence in amplified products, we further designed one rolling circle amplification-based biosensing strategy to show the utility of this G4 dimer/ThT fluorescence indicator. This study demonstrates that dimeric G4 is an effective nucleic acid scaffold for lighting up ThT, showing promising applications in a label-free bioassay.

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