Molecules (Nov 2013)

Selective G-Quadruplex DNA Recognition by a New Class of Designed Cyanines

  • Markus W. Germann,
  • W. David Wilson,
  • Maged M. Henary,
  • Hang T. Huynh,
  • Ekaterina M. Stroeva,
  • Tyler L. Dost,
  • Rupesh Nanjunda,
  • Leah Mickelson,
  • Eric A. Owens

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules181113588
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 11
pp. 13588 – 13607

Abstract

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A variety of cyanines provide versatile and sensitive agents acting as DNA stains and sensors and have been structurally modified to bind in the DNA minor groove in a sequence dependent manner. Similarly, we are developing a new set of cyanines that have been designed to achieve highly selective binding to DNA G-quadruplexes with much weaker binding to DNA duplexes. A systematic set of structurally analogous trimethine cyanines has been synthesized and evaluated for quadruplex targeting. The results reveal that elevated quadruplex binding and specificity are highly sensitive to the polymethine chain length, heterocyclic structure and intrinsic charge of the compound. Biophysical experiments show that the compounds display significant selectivity for quadruplex binding with a higher preference for parallel stranded quadruplexes, such as cMYC. NMR studies revealed the primary binding through an end-stacking mode and SPR studies showed the strongest compounds have primary KD values below 100 nM that are nearly 100-fold weaker for duplexes. The high selectivity of these newly designed trimethine cyanines for quadruplexes as well as their ability to discriminate between different quadruplexes are extremely promising features to develop them as novel probes for targeting quadruplexes in vivo.

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