TY - JOUR
T1 - 7-Methylguanine With a Cyclopentane Backbone
T2 - A Bright Combination for a FIT-PNA RNA Sensor
AU - Maree, Salam
AU - Chanda, Pinaki
AU - Mannully, Sheethal Thomas
AU - Zheng, Hongchao
AU - Appella, Daniel H.
AU - Yavin, Eylon
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2025 Maree, Chanda, Mannully, Zheng, Appella and Yavin.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - FIT-PNAs (forced intercalation-Peptide Nucleic Acids) are promising RNA sensors due to the enhanced fluorescence gained by such molecules upon RNA hybridization. In this report we describe a chemical approach that leads to unprecedented brightness for a FIT-PNA where the neighbouring Guanine base (G) to the fluorophore (a.k.a. surrogate base) is chemically modified with a cyclopentane (cp) backbone and is N-methylated, leading to a positively charged (G+) base. A series of G modified bases (G+, cpG, and cpG+) were introduced as the neighbouring base to BisQ (surrogate base) in 15-mer FIT-PNAs designed to sense the oncogenic long-noncoding RNA, colon cancer associated transcript 1 (lncRNA CCTA-1). Using synthetic RNA, the combination denoted as cpG+ led to a two-fold increase in brightness (BR = 16.9) compared to the unmodified G base (BR = 8.4). Introducing a G mismatch in RNA sequence that is opposite to the G base (G, G+, cpG, or cpG+) in the FIT-PNA, led to an increase in fluorescence that was not observed for synthetic DNA. Molecular simulations confirmed these observations and further correlated fluorescence data for FIT-PNAs with synthetic DNA and RNA with/out mismatches. Importantly, in ovarian cancer cells overexpressing CCAT1, only the cpG+ modified FIT-PNA produced a bright fluorescent signal, confirmed by FACS and confocal microscopy. Our results demonstrate that strategic chemical modifications of the neighboring G base in FIT-PNA significantly enhance their brightness and specificity for RNA detection in biological systems.
AB - FIT-PNAs (forced intercalation-Peptide Nucleic Acids) are promising RNA sensors due to the enhanced fluorescence gained by such molecules upon RNA hybridization. In this report we describe a chemical approach that leads to unprecedented brightness for a FIT-PNA where the neighbouring Guanine base (G) to the fluorophore (a.k.a. surrogate base) is chemically modified with a cyclopentane (cp) backbone and is N-methylated, leading to a positively charged (G+) base. A series of G modified bases (G+, cpG, and cpG+) were introduced as the neighbouring base to BisQ (surrogate base) in 15-mer FIT-PNAs designed to sense the oncogenic long-noncoding RNA, colon cancer associated transcript 1 (lncRNA CCTA-1). Using synthetic RNA, the combination denoted as cpG+ led to a two-fold increase in brightness (BR = 16.9) compared to the unmodified G base (BR = 8.4). Introducing a G mismatch in RNA sequence that is opposite to the G base (G, G+, cpG, or cpG+) in the FIT-PNA, led to an increase in fluorescence that was not observed for synthetic DNA. Molecular simulations confirmed these observations and further correlated fluorescence data for FIT-PNAs with synthetic DNA and RNA with/out mismatches. Importantly, in ovarian cancer cells overexpressing CCAT1, only the cpG+ modified FIT-PNA produced a bright fluorescent signal, confirmed by FACS and confocal microscopy. Our results demonstrate that strategic chemical modifications of the neighboring G base in FIT-PNA significantly enhance their brightness and specificity for RNA detection in biological systems.
KW - BisQ
KW - FIT-PNA
KW - RNA biosensors
KW - cpG
KW - molecular simulations
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105024001213
U2 - 10.3389/bjbs.2025.15526
DO - 10.3389/bjbs.2025.15526
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C2 - 41356095
AN - SCOPUS:105024001213
SN - 0967-4845
VL - 82
JO - British Journal of Biomedical Science
JF - British Journal of Biomedical Science
M1 - 15526
ER -