CONTROLLED LINKER LENGTH MODULATION OF DNA SCAFFOLDED DYE AGGREGATES
20250263555 ยท 2025-08-21
Inventors
- Adam A. Meares (Washignton, DC, US)
- Sara R. Ansteatt (Fairfax, VA, US)
- Joseph S. Melinger (Washington, DC, US)
- Igor L. Medintz (Washington, DC, US)
- Sebastian A. Diaz (Washington, DC, US)
- Young C. Kim (Washington, DC, US)
- Paul C. Cunningham (Washington, DC, US)
- Smriti Thomas (Washington, DC, US)
- Victoria Segal (Washington, DC, US)
- Angelica Rose Galvan (Washington, DC, US)
Cpc classification
C09K2211/1466
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
Abstract
Described herein is the preparation of a series of Cy5 phosphoramidites whereby the linker was shortened (n=2) or lengthened (n=4) to afford aggregates of dramatically different properties despite utilizing an identical DNA Holliday Junction or DNA duplex as the scaffold. Through the use of numerous spectroscopic methods (absorption, emission, circular dichroism, transient absorption, fluorescence lifetime) and molecular dynamics simulation, it was found that when n=2, J-like aggregation is unexpectedly preferential and when n=4, H-like aggregation is preferential. The shortened linker is of particular interest as the majority of previous aggregates formed by molecular scaffolding are H-like, or mixtures of H-like and J-like components, where these constructs can exhibit nearly pure J-like behavior. Conversely, the strength of the H-like behavior can be increased with incorporation of the longer, n=4, linker.
Claims
1. A compound comprising a variable linker phosphoramidite comprising a structure as shown: ##STR00001##
2. The compound of claim 1, wherein n=2 or 4.
3. A method of preparing a phosphoramidite comprises a synthetic scheme as depicted in
4. The method of claim 3, wherein n=2 or 4.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0016] The patent or application file may contain at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE SUBJECT DISCLOSURE
[0035] The present subject disclosure addresses the shortcomings of conventional DNA scaffolding, as discussed above.
Definitions
[0036] Before describing the present subject disclosure in detail, it is to be understood that the terminology used in the specification is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments, and is not necessarily intended to be limiting. Although many methods, structures and materials similar, modified, or equivalent to those described herein can be used in the practice of the present subject disclosure without undue experimentation, the preferred methods, structures and materials are described herein. In describing and claiming the present subject disclosure, the following terminology will be used in accordance with the definitions set out below.
[0037] As used herein, the singular forms a, an, and the do not preclude plural referents, unless the content clearly dictates otherwise.
[0038] As used herein, the term and/or includes any and all combinations of one or more of the associated listed items.
[0039] As used herein, the term about when used in conjunction with a stated numerical value or range denotes somewhat more or somewhat less than the stated value or range, to within a range of +10% of that stated.
Overview
[0040] In recent years, DNA scaffolds have been utilized to control the positioning of two or more dye molecules, in the attempt to dictate the exciton delocalization properties and harness them for photonics applications. While the spatial separation of dyes can be controlled with sub-nanometer accuracy, controlling the relative orientation of the dyes in an aggregate has proven challenging. As part of an effort to develop next-generation molecular materials suitable for light harvesting, biosensing, and quantum information science, we investigate varying the length of the two-point linker between indodicarbocyanine (Cy5) dyes and the DNA template as a method to better control the resulting dimer geometry. To systematically test this approach, we can, for example, chemically synthesize Cy5 with either 2-carbon (2C) or 4-carbon (4C) two-point linkers and compare their behavior to commercially available Cy5 with 3-carbon (3C) two-point linkers. Using steady-state and ultrafast spectroscopy, and molecular dynamics simulations, we demonstrate that shortening the linker from 3C to 2C limits the TT-TT interactions between dyes, thereby promoting the formation of J-like Cy5 dimers. Conversely, increasing the linker length provides the dye more freedom of motion, allowing greater IT-TT interactions, and yielding dimers with greater H-like character. Furthermore, we show that the short two-carbon linker greatly reduces the orientational heterogeneity that often occurs in DNA-templated cyanine dye dimers. These results emphasize the importance of the dye linker chemistry in determining the optical and photophysical properties of DNA-scaffolded dye aggregates. They also suggest that tuning the length of the dye linker is an effective strategy to overcome two challenges that currently limit DNA-scaffolded dye aggregates in photonics applications: gaining control of dye aggregate geometry and producing homogeneous ensembles of dye aggregates.
1. Introduction
[0041] Programmable DNA nanotechnology.sup.1 utilizes DNA scaffolds to assemble structures of arbitrary complexity that can purposefully position dyes and dye aggregates with nanoscale precision to engineer photophysical responses and control energy flow..sup.2, 3 However, to date, control of dye orientation has remained a significant challenge for DNA-organized dye systems..sup.4 Due to the extended TT-conjugation of most organic dyes, H-like aggregates with co-facial packing arrangements often self-assemble, but purposefully promoting J-like aggregate formation with an end-to-end configuration, important for promoting emissive aggregates, or oblique-like aggregate formation with a 90 orientation between dyes, important for measuring electronic quantum beats, is more difficult. A second challenge is that dye aggregates on DNA often show significant heterogeneity, where ensembles are composed of a mixture of H-like and J-like species with very different photophysical properties and are typically plagued by fluorescence quenching. These hurdles have slowed progress towards applications such as synthetic light harvesting.sup.5, biosensing.sup.6, and classical.sup.7, 8 and quantum information processing based on molecular excitonic circuits..sup.9, 10 Addressing these two challenges is the primary focus of this work.
[0042] Controlling the orientation of a dye aggregate covalently attached to DNA requires balancing the interactions between the individual dye molecules and between the dyes and the DNA scaffold. Relevant to this goal, there have been several studies aimed at improving the orientational control of dyes covalently attached to DNA. Kato et al. showed that small planar aromatic dyes covalently attached to the DNA backbone can intercalate and align with the twist of the base stack, resulting in a fixed twist angle between dyes that depends on their separation along the DNA..sup.11 Mathur et al..sup.4 and Hbner et al..sup.12 explored the extent to which a large DNA origami scaffold can constrain the orientation of individual dye molecules. These initial works found that the degree of constraint depends on both the local environment surrounding the dye attachment site and the type of the dye linker. Building on this work, several groups have shown that the orientation of cyanine dyes can be controlled by modulating the local strain of the DNA in the vicinity of the dye..sup.13-16 In a different approach, Diaz et al. used chemical substituents added to the 5- and 5-positions of Cy5 in order to exploit hydrophobicity and steric effects to influence the orientation of Cy5 dimers when templated on DNA Holliday junction (DNA-HJ) scaffolds..sup.17 However, in many cases, significant orientational heterogeneity remained as well as highly quenched fluorescence..sup.17, 18
[0043] In ideal H-aggregates, the lowest energy level of the excited state is optically forbidden, leading to slow subradiant fluorescence that is often outcompeted by non-radiative processes that diminish the quantum yield. Conversely, J-aggregates are characterized by increased oscillator strength in the lowest excited state, leading to increased absorption and fast superradiant emission that can outcompete loss channels. While H-like aggregates have unique niches of application,.sup.6, 19 photonic systems that require ultrafast energy transfer benefit from J-like aggregates..sup.20 As such, an approach that would direct dyes attached to DNA closer to an end-to-end alignment of transition dipole moments (TDMs) is highly sought. We surmised that modulating the properties of the chemical linker that attaches the dye to DNA may be an effective approach, though such an approach has not yet been tested in the context of controlling dye aggregate orientation. We hypothesized that short dye-to-DNA linkers that limit a dye's degrees of freedom will inhibit the tendency of Cy5 pairs to form H-like packing from TT-stacking interactions, and instead promote the formation of J-like packing with a geometry that is closer to an end-to-end configuration. Conversely, longer dye linkers that allow the dye pairs greater freedom to maximize TT-orbital overlap will favor H-like packing. To test this hypothesis, we synthesize Cy5 derivatives suitable for two-point phosphodiester linkage to DNA in order to systematically vary the linker length by changing the number (n=2, 3, 4) of carbon atoms between the Cy5 and the phosphodiester (
[0044] In this work, we demonstrate that the length of the chemical linker can be used to purposefully control indodicarbocyanine (Cy5) dye dimer orientation on DNA scaffolds. In particular, our experiments show that a short linker can promote the formation of J-like dimers on DNA. Furthermore, we show that a short linker suppresses the orientational heterogeneity that typically results in a mixture of J-like, oblique, and H-like dimer geometries on DNA scaffolds (
2. Molecular Design and Structure Assembly
[0045] Our focus here is the modification of standard Cy5 dye phosphoramidite chemistry.sup.22-24 to elicit new photophysical properties when covalently attached to DNA scaffolds. The commercial Cy5 phosphoramidites feature bare (nonfunctionalized) indoles and the DNA attachment sites are via two, three-carbon long N-alkyl moieties. Cyanine dyes that are incorporated into DNA with the standard 3-carbon linker (Cy5-3) tend to produce primarily H-like or oblique dimers within HJs, as opposed to distributions of conformers with monomer-like properties..sup.15, 17, 21, 25-28 This suggests that these linkers are short enough to limit conformational variability, due to both moderate length and the nature of the two-point insertion motif, yet are long enough to permit significant TT-stacking interactions that dictate the mutual orientation of these cyanine dyes..sup.29, 30 Therefore, we seek to determine how either decreasing or increasing the linker length affects the final dye-dye interactions, and, particularly, if we can achieve more J-like dimer behavior. To that end, we prepared two new dye-phosphoramidites with linkers of 2-carbon (Cy5-2) and 4-carbon (Cy5-4) lengths, respectively.
[0046]
[0047] Immediately upon their preparation, phosphoramidites Cy5-2 and Cy5-4 were utilized in the synthesis of five unique DNA oligonucleotide sequences: strand A and its complement Acomp (or Ac) generate the dsDNA template, while four component strands (sequences A-D) comprise the DNA-HJ when hybridized together. In each of these strands, the Cy5 is centrally located. The full sequence of each 26-mer oligonucleotide is provided in Table 2. The complete details regarding DNA synthesis, purification of Cy5-labeled oligonucleotides and their yields are described in the SI. Details of the DNA assembly and the solvent conditions are given in the Methods section below. In previous works, we have found that the formation efficiency of Cy5 dimers on dsDNA and DNA-HJs to be greater than 90% and 85%, respectively .sup.17, 31, 32
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE2 DNAsequencesutilizedinthisstudy. Designation Oligonucleotidesequence(5-3) A ATATAATCGCTCG-X-CATATTATGACTG B CAGTCATAATATG-X-TGGAATGTGAGTG C CACTCACATTCCA-X-CTCAACACCACAA D TTGTGGTGTTGAG-X-CGAGCGATTATAT Acomp CAGTCATAATATG-X-CGAGCGATTATAT
All oligonucleotides used in this study are 26-mers with respect to number of nucleotides. X denotes the site of Cy5 incorporation, unlabeled sequences are identical to corresponding labeled sequences, with the omission of X.
[0048] The various dsDNA and DNA-HJs prepared in this study are represented in
[0049] Excitonically coupled dimers are often categorized by their geometry as follows: J-like, H-like or oblique (
[0050] For simplicity, we will use the following descriptions of dimer geometry to facilitate our discussion. We use the term J-like dimers to refer to J favoring dimers that have relatively large angles, .sub.m,n>90 degrees, between TDMs for dyes m and n, respectively, and where the strongest absorption transition is at a lower energy than the 0-0 monomer transition. We use the term H-like dimers to mean H favoring dimers that have relatively small angles, .sub.m,n><90 degrees, between TDMs, and where the strongest absorption transition is at a higher energy than the 0-0 monomer transition. This implies that the broad case of oblique dimers will be considered as J-like for a.sub.m,n>90 degrees, or H-like for .sub.m,n<90 degrees.
3. Results and Discussion
[0051] Steady State Optical Spectroscopy of Cy5 monomer species. The linker length did not influence the photophysical properties of the Cy5 parent dyes. The absorption (.sub.max=642 nm) and fluorescence (.sub.max=663 nm) spectra of the Cy5-2 and Cy5-4 parent dyes in methanol were found to be superimposable and fluorescence quantum yields (.sub.F) (0.29 and 0.30, respectively) were effectively identical. Similarly, the optical properties of the Cy5-n (n=2, 3, 4) labeled onto single stranded (ss) DNA are quite uniform throughout all sequence/dye permutations, as expected. Absorption spectra show a sum of the DNA and dye absorption features, with no significant coupling between Cy5 and nucleobases. There is a minor redshift of the maximum absorption wavelength (.sub.max) relative to the parent, which results from solvatochromism, the incorporation of the dye into DNA, or both, and is consistent with previous reports of dye-labeled ssDNA..sup.38 Fluorescence maxima are similarly shifted and there is a small enhancement to .sub.F, which results from the increased rigidity of Cy5 when on DNA The ranges of these values are reported in Table 3, and more detailed values can be found in the SI. Taken collectively, these observations affirm that the length of the linker does not influence the photophysical properties of Cy5.
[0052] We also evaluated the optical properties of single dye labeled Cy5 monomers (i.e., a single dye present) on dsDNA and DNA-HJs. The average absorption and fluorescence maxima, as well as the OF, are compared to those of Cy5 on ssDNA in Table 3; individual spectra and tables with all experimentally determined values can be found in Section 1 of the SI. Generally, the absorption spectra across all assemblies are similar to that of ssDNA. The dsDNA monomers did not exhibit sequence dependent properties; both ds-A-n and ds-Ac-n manifest identical absorption and fluorescence maxima, as well as .sub.F. Also, the linker length did not impart significantly different properties; the absorption and fluorescence peak position (.sub.max) for all dsDNA monomers match within +1 nm, with a small (15%) decrease to .sub.F as linker length increases from n=2 to n=4. In contrast, HJ monomers exhibited a 2-7 nm redshift of the peak absorption and fluorescence relative to the parent ssDNA. The only exception to this is HJ-D-2, which retains identical .sub.max of 647 nm to ss-D-2. This suggests that the local environment (neighboring nucleobases) may influence the optical properties of the DNA HJs, reinforcing the need to examine all permutations of adjacent and transverse dimers. Consistent with our earlier studies, the assembly of dye-labeled DNA into a larger scaffold maintains or slightly enhances the .sub.F of the Cy5, though there is noticeable variability depending on the sequence of dye insertion..sup.17, 39 For Cy5-2 on dsDNA and DNA-HJs, a possible explanation for their slightly higher Or's is suppression of torsional motion about the Cy5 methine bridge by the shorter linker.
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Average photophysical properties of parent ssDNA, dsDNA, and DNA-HJ monomers. Average Average Fluorescence ssDNA or Absorption.sub.max .sub.max (range) monomer (range) [nm] [nm] .sub.F ss-X-2 647 (645-650) 668 (667-669) 0.35 0.04 ss-X-3 648 (647-650) 666 (664-668) 0.37 0.05 ss-X-4 649 (648-650) 668 (665-671) 0.32 0.04 HJ-X-2 651 (647-654) 670 (664-673) 0.44 0.01 HJ-X-3 653 (651-655) 669 (668-670) 0.37 0.10 HJ-X-4 652 (650-655) 669 (668-669) 0.38 0.08 ds-X-2 646.sup. 665.sup. 0.36.sup. ds-X-3 646.sup. 665.sup. 0.33.sup. ds-X-4 647.sup. 667.sup. 0.31.sup.
Note that X indicates full range of applicable labeled sequences (ssDNA: A-D and Ac, HJ: A-D, dsDNA: A and Ac) are included. .sub.F reported as the average OF of all assemblies for given series, error indicates the full range observed. Note: indicates no range observed for dataset.
[0053] Since the optical properties of the labeled ssDNA, dsDNA and HJ monomers were well behaved, Cy5-n dimers on dsDNA and DNA-HJs were constructed from the constituent strands. Their photophysical properties, including absorption and fluorescence peak positions, OF, and the average fluorescence lifetime (T) are summarized in Table 4.
TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 Photophysical properties for all Cy5-ndimer assemblies. Absorption Peaks Fluorescence Dimer .sub.max (nm) .sub.max (nm) .sub.F (ns) ds-AAc-2 657, , 607 669 0.13 0.36 ds-AAc-3 665, 637, 598 668 0.05 ds-AAc-4 661, 644, 594 668 0.04 HJ-AB-2 660, , 605 671 0.10 0.50 HJ-BC-2 659,, 608 671 0.17 0.39 HJ-CD-2 662, , 609 672 0.10 0.51 HJ-AD-2 658, , 608 671 0.14 0.51 HJ-AC-2 664, 638, 604, 672 0.06 HJ-BD-2 660, 636, 600 670 0.06 HJ-AB-3 659, 643, 603 670 0.06 HJ-BC-3 660, 643, 604 670 0.06 HJ-CD-3 660, 643, 604 669 0.12 HJ-AD-3 658, 642, 603 669 0.07 HJ-AC-3 , 640, 604 668 0.04 HJ-BD-3 , 638, 603 668 0.03 HJ-AB-4 661, 644, 603 673 0.03 HJ-BC-4 660, 643, 605 672 0.03 HJ-CD-4 661, 642, 604 673 0.04 HJ-AD-4 662, 642, 601 673 0.02 HJ-AC-4 674, 641, 604 673 0.02 HJ-BD-4 , 643, 604 669 0.01
Note that all absorption data acquired at room temperature, at 2 M concentration in 1 TAE buffer with 15 mM MgCl.sub.2 (for HJ assemblies) or at 4 M concentration in 1 TAE buffer with 100 mM NaCl (for dsDNA assemblies). The three absorbance peak wavelengths listed from longest to shortest correspond to the two absorption peaks resulting from Davydov splitting, and the first vibronic peak. A dash indicates the peak was not measurable. Fluorescence data were acquired upon dilution to 1 M concentration, with excitation at 615 nm. .sub.F presented here were determined against secondary standards as detailed in the Methods section and SI Table S4. The uncertainty in .sub.F is 5%. indicates the average excited state lifetime (blank entries indicate that no measurement was performed).
[0054] Absorption and Circular Dichroism of Cy5-n Dimers on dsDNA and DNA-HJs. The absorption spectra for Cy5-n dimers on dsDNA are shown in
[0055] The corresponding CD spectra are shown in
[0056] Because the Cy5 monomer absorption and fluorescence spectra varied somewhat with each sequence for the HJs, we characterized all 18 permutations of HJ dimers when examining the effect of linker length on the optical properties.
[0057] The absorption spectra of the transverse dimers show increasing relative intensity of the higher energy vibronic band as the linker length increases. The CD spectra of the transverse dimers are highly variable. For example, HJ-AC-2 and HJ-BD-2 show weak CD signals, while the CD spectrum of HJ-AC-4 is nearly inverted from that of HJ-BD-4, which indicates opposite handedness for opposite transverse dimers. In contrast, HJ-AC-3 and HJ-BD-3 have nearly identical CD spectra, indicating identical handedness for opposite transverse dimers.
[0058]
[0059] Fluorescence Properties of Cy5-n Dimers on dsDNA and DNA-HJs. To further assess the nature of the dye-dye interactions in Cy5-n dimers we characterized their fluorescence properties. Beginning with spectral shape, we normalized the fluorescence spectra of all dimers and overlaid them with the nearest representative monomer. The features we closely consider are: 1) fluorescence .sub.max, 2) primary fluorescence band shape, and 3) red/trailing vibronic shoulder relative intensity. Most of the dimers with n=3 and n=4 demonstrate fluorescence spectra that are identical to or deviate minimally from the parent monomers. Previous studies of excitonic Cy5 dimers have shown strong fluorescence quenching, 17, 26, 32, 40 so a small monomer-like population that is not quenched can dominate the fluorescence. The monomer-like fluorescence is likely due to a small subpopulation of dimers behaving as monomer-like species where the dyes are spaced relatively far apart (e.g., from DNA breathing), or from small amounts of unhybridized DNA strands containing the Cy5 monomer. The Cy5-2 dimers are exceptions to this behavior.
[0060]
[0061] We also determined the .sub.F for all Cy5-n dimers (Table 4). The .sub.F clearly decrease as the linker length increases, regardless of the assembly type. Assembly HJ-CD-3 is an outlier, exhibiting notably larger .sub.F than the other Cy5-3 labeled HJs. The Cy5-2 dimers generally have larger .sub.F than the Cy5-3 and Cy5-4 dimers. Even so, the Cy5-2 dimers are quenched by 3-4 times relative to the parent monomers, suggesting there is a facile mechanism for non-radiative relaxation made available by the proximity of the dyes. The quenching is further substantiated by the shorter fluorescence decay times of the Cy5-2 dimers on dsDNA and adjacent dimers on DNA-HJs relative to the respective Cy5-2 monomers. Within the DNA-HJs, the transverse dimers exhibit smaller .sub.F than the adjacent dimers of the same series. This observation is consistent with a low oscillator strength of the emitting state of H-like dimers with relatively long radiative lifetimes and greater susceptibility to quenching from non-radiative relaxation.
[0062] Photo-Selective Ultrafast Transient Absorption. To address the question of how dye linker length affects orientational heterogeneity for Cy5-n dimers on dsDNA and DNA-HJs, we use the method of photo-selective ultrafast transient absorption (TA) spectroscopy to probe for possible sub-populations of distinct dimer geometries. This method has been used to demonstrate that solutions of Cy5-3 adjacent dimers on DNA-HJs consist of a mixture of J-like and H-like dimers..sup.18, 21
[0063]
[0064] Molecular Dynamics Simulations. To gain additional insight into the effect of linker length on orientational heterogeneity, we performed molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the Cy5-n dimers on dsDNA and then used umbrella sampling to estimate the most probable dimer geometries. Since the Cy5-n dimers on dsDNA and HJs show qualitatively similar steady state and TA spectra, we consider the MD simulations for the dimers on dsDNA to be reasonable representations for the dimers on HJs, which would involve much more time-consuming MD simulations. We show the results as heat maps in
[0065] The MD simulations suggest that orientational heterogeneity for Cy5-n dimers on dsDNA can be suppressed using short linkers. This may be understood intuitively as follows. While the hydrophobic nature of the Cy5 dyes favors their proximity, when the linker is short it restricts the dyes from moving into a co-facial orientation via TT-stacking interactions. To reach full co-facial overlap, the DNA scaffold would need to adjust to accommodate the dye movement, however, the degree of adjustment that is needed appears to be energetically unfavorable. Thus, the Cy5 dyes partially overlap to the extent allowed by the short linkers and the DNA scaffold. On the other hand, the increased flexibility of the longer linkers allows the Cy5 dyes greater freedom to move towards co-facial overlap.
[0066]
4. Materials and Methods
[0067] Chemical Dye Synthesis, DNA Synthesis and Purification. All details related to chemical synthesis, automated DNA synthesis, post DNA synthesis processing and purification can be found within the Supporting Information. The ssDNA oligos A, B, C, D and Ac that were either unlabeled or labeled with Cy5-3 were purchased from Integrated DNA Technologies (Coralville, IA) and used without further purification.
[0068] DNA Assembly. The various dsDNA and DNA HJs were prepared in analogous fashion to our previous reports..sup.17 First, ssDNA was reconstituted in molecular biology grade water to 100 UM solution. Next, for construction of DNA Holliday junctions, equal volumes of the 100 M parent strand (A, B, C, D) solutions were combined and diluted to a final concentration of 10 UM with respect to completed assembly in 1 TAE (40 mM tris(hydroxymethyl) aminomethane, 20 mM acetic acid, 1 mM ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid, pH 8.0) buffer and 15 mM MgCl.sub.2. For DNA duplexes, equal volumes of the A and Acomp (Ac) parent strand solutions were combined and then diluted to 10 UM concentration in the presence of 1 TAE and 100 mM NaCl..sup.26 Note that for Cy5-n dimers assembled within dsDNA the use of NaCl instead of MgCl.sub.2 was necessary to prevent aggregation of HJs and the formation of a mobile tetramer as described by Cannon et al..sup.44 An example of the change in absorption properties of dye-labeled dsDNA, as a function of salt concentration, was found. Once combined, samples were subjected to thermal annealing in a PCR thermal cycler..sup.39, 51 Annealing followed a program that maintained the lid temperature at 95 C. constantly, began with a melt at 95 C. for 5 minutes, cooled to 85 C. at a rate of 5 minutes/1 C. drop, held at 85 C. for 10 minutes, then cooled to 4 C. at a cooling rate of 10 minutes/1 C. drop. Samples were held at 4 C. until they were removed for experiments without further purification or stored in the refrigerator in the dark.
[0069] Small Molecule and DNA Oligonucleotide Structural Characterization. .sup.1H and .sup.13C NMR spectra were recorded on a Bruker Avance III HD, 400 MHZ spectrometer (Bruker Corporation, Billerica, MA.) Chemical shifts for .sup.1H and .sup.13C NMR spectra are reported relative to the tetramethylsilane (TMS) signal in deuterated solvent (TMS, 8=0.00 ppm). 52 All J values for NMR are reported in hertz. Mass spectral analysis for both small molecules and DNA oligonucleotides was performed using ACQUITY UPLC system equipped with a single quadrupole (SQD2) mass detector (Waters Inc, Milford MA) as described..sup.53, 54 In addition to MS, purity of the DNA oligonucleotides was assessed on the ACQUITY UPLC using the photodiode array detector (PDA e) Detector) and fluorescence detector (FLR Detector) modules (sample chromatogram with description of analysis is provided in SI). All LCMS samples were injected from either Millipore-Sigma Supelco or Fisherbrand Optima LCMS grade solvents (water for DNA oligonucleotides and methanol for small molecules). Once injected, oligonucleotides were eluted from a Waters oligonucleotide BEH C18 column (part no. 186003949) using a shallow (6%) increasing gradient of methanol in aqueous 0.05 M TEAA buffer (pH 7.0), the gradients used on a per-sequence basis can be found in SI. Small molecules were injected directly into the SQD2 detector, bypassing the column and in-line detectors.
[0070] Absorption Spectra were measured at room temperature using a Cary 60 UV-vis (Agilent Technologies Inc., Santa Clara, CA), in the range of 200-850 nm, with 1 nm intervals and a 0.1s integration time. In all instances, a quartz spectrophotometer cell with 1 cm path length was used. For HJs and ssDNA, sample concentration was 2 M, for dsDNA sample concentration was 4 M.
[0071] Circular Dichroism (CD) Spectra were measured at room temperature using a J-1500 CD spectrophotometer (Jasco Corp., Tokyo, JPN) in the range of 200-900 nm, with 1 nm intervals at a rate of 100 nm/minute and a 4s integration time. In all instances, a quartz spectrophotometer cell with 1 cm path length was used. For HJs and ssDNA, sample concentration was 2 M, for dsDNA sample concentration was 4 M.
[0072] Fluorescence Spectra for parent Cy5s were recorded at room temperature on either a FluoroMax-4 or FluoroMax-Plus spectrofluorometer (Horiba Scientific, Piscataway, NJ) in the range of 600-850 nm, with 0.5 nm intervals, 0.3s integration time and excitation at 600 nm, using a quartz spectrophotometer cell with 1 cm path length and an optical density (OD) below 0.1 to prevent inner filter effects. The obtained fluorescence spectra were corrected for wavelength-dependent instrumental sensitivity.
[0073] Fluorescence Spectra for all dye-labeled DNA (ssDNA) and assemblies (HJs and dsDNA) were acquired on a Spark microplate reader (Tecan Group, Ltd., Zurich, CH), with excitation source above the plate. A common excitation wavelength of 615 nm was used, and fluorescence was recorded from 630-900 nm, with 1 nm intervals, 50 flashed per nm, and an integration time of 3 milliseconds. For fluorescence excitation spectra, fluorescence was measured at 740 nm while the excitation wavelength was tuned from 500-720 nm. For each sample, 100 l of a 1 M solution was added to a well in a 96 well black microtiter plate, resulting in a 1.25 mm pathlength and a maximum OD of 0.05. The obtained fluorescence spectra were corrected for wavelength-dependent instrumental sensitivity. Data were acquired in the follows sets: set 1) all HJ assemblies and parent ssDNA containing Cy5-2, set 2) all HJ assemblies and parent ssDNA containing Cy5-3, set 2) all HJ assemblies and parent ssDNA containing Cy5-4 and set 4) all dsDNA assemblies.
[0074] Fluorescence Quantum Yields (F) for parent Cy5s, ssDNA and select HJ assemblies were determined on either a FluoroMax-4 or FluoroMax-Plus spectrofluorometer (Horiba Scientific, Piscataway, NJ) against the 5,19,15,20-tetraphenylporphyrin (TPP) standard (.sub.F=0.07 in toluene)..sup.55 Reported OF obtained with scan window of 610-850 nm, 0.3s integration time (at 0.5 nm intervals) and excitation at 600 nm, using a quartz spectrophotometer cell with 1 cm path length and an OD below 0.1 to prevent inner filter effects. All fluorescence spectra were corrected for wavelength-dependent instrumental sensitivity. The TPP standard was purchased from Frontier Specialty Chemicals (Logan, UT) and then oxidized with 2,3-dichloro-5,6-cyano-p-benzoquinone (DDQ) to convert the stated 1-3% chlorin impurity to TPP. TPP was cross-referenced against oxazine 720 perchlorate (Luxottica-Exciton, Lockbourne, OH, .sub.F=0.63 in MeOH) 56, 57 upon excitation at 580 nm and found to have agreement of +5%. To mitigate the large time requirement in determining .sub.F, the .sub.F of remaining DNA assemblies were determined by comparing the integrated fluorescence (acquired by Spark microplate reader, described above) against one or more secondary standards. Error with respect to the mean .sub.F was found to be below 5% in all cases, thus the uncertainty is assumed to be the standard 5% inherent with the original .sub.F determination of the secondary standards.
[0075] Transient Absorption Measurements Ultrafast transient absorption (TA) spectra were recorded using a commercial Helios TA spectrometer (Ultrafast Systems, Sarasota, FL) driven by a 1 kHz 100 fs Ti: Sapphire amplifier (Legend Elite, Coherent, Inc., Santa Clara, CA) and a tunable optical parametric amplifier (Topas, Coherent, Inc., Santa Clara, CA). Dye-labeled DNA solutions were prepared to 6.67 M in 1 TAE buffer with 100 mM NaCl for Cy5-n dimers on dsDNA and 15 mM MgCl.sub.2 for Cy5-n dimers on DNA-HJs, and measured in both cases in a 2 mm cuvette. The solution was filtered through 0.2-micron PES filters to remove debris that scatter light. The solution was stirred during illumination to minimize photodegradation. The excitation beam was polarized at the magic angle with respect to the white light probe to eliminate artifacts associated with rotational depolarization. All data were chirp corrected using the ultrafast response of pure buffer. The response of the relevant Cy5 monomers was recorded and subtracted from the dimer response to remove small 1 ns lifetime photoresponses that arise from monomer or monomer-like structures in the solution. Photoselection of the reddest absorption peak as well as the strongly enhanced 0-1 vibronic shoulder were used to preferentially photoexcite J-like and H-like geometry dimer subpopulations, respectively, and thereby evaluate heterogeneity.
[0076] Excited State Lifetimes The excited state lifetimes were measured at room temperature using time-correlated single photon counting (TCSPC). The excitation source was a laser diode (Becker-Hickl GmbH, Berlin, DE) operating at 50 MHz, with a 70 ps pulse, at a wavelength of 630 nm. The dye-DNA structures were placed in a 1 mm path quartz spectrophotometric cell at a concentration between 1-2 M. Sample fluorescence was collected and sent through a polarizer set to the magic angle and then filtered using a monochromator. A micro channel plate photomultiplier tube (Hamamatsu 2809 Photonics, Hamamatsu, JP) was used to detect the fluorescence with a 40 ps instrument response function. The TCSPC waveforms were collected with greater than 10,000 counts in the peak channel.
[0077] Molecular Dynamics Simulation: Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were carried out with the Gromacs 5.1.5 package.sup.60 using Amber OL 15 force field parameters.sup.61 for DNA and the general Amber force field (GAFF) 62 for dyes. The long-range electrostatics were computed using the particle-mesh Ewald method with a real-space Coulomb cutoff of 1.0 nm. The van der Waals interactions were cut off at 1.0 nm. All bonds were constrained using the LINCS algorithm..sup.63 The neighbor searching algorithm was used with a cutoff of 1.0 nm, and the neighbor list was updated every 10th step. A time step of 2 fs was used for all simulations. The starting dye-DNA structures were built using the UCSF Chimera software, production version 1.13.1.64 Rectangular periodic boundary conditions were used with the box dimensions of 13.5 nm13.5 nm13.5 nm, ensuring a water layer of at least 1 nm between the DNA and the edge of the box. The systems were solvated in TIP3P water, and Na+ and CI-ions were added to satisfy the salt concentration of 100 mM. The systems were then energy-minimized using the steepest descent method for 1000 steps. The systems were first equilibrated for 10 ns at a constant temperature of 300 K and pressure of 1 atm. The dye-DNA and solvent were coupled separately to temperature baths of the reference temperature (300 K) with a coupling time of 0.1 ps, whereas the pressure was kept constant to a bath of the reference pressure (1 atm) using a coupling time of 1.0 ps. The production trajectories of the dye-DNA complex were calculated for 1 us, keeping the number of particles, temperature, and pressure constant. The Langevin thermostat.sup.65 was used at 300 K with a coupling constant of 1 ps applied to dye-DNA and water separately. The pressure was maintained at 1 atm isotropically with the Parrinello-Rahman barostat.sup.66 and a coupling constant of 2.0 ps. The coordinates were written every 100 ps for the analysis.
[0078] Umbrella Sampling. The umbrella sampling was performed to compute the free energy in the two-dimensional (R, ) space, where R is the center-of-mass distance between two dyes and K is the orientation factor defined as
with {right arrow over (.sub.1)} and {right arrow over (.sub.2)} being the unit dipole vectors of the dyes and at the unit vector connecting two centers of mass for the dyes. A series of windows is evenly placed in the (R, ) space with 0.2 nm spacing in the r dimension between 0.4 nm and 3.6 nm and 0.2 spacing in the K dimension between-2 and 2, resulting in a total of more than 200 windows for each system. A harmonic bias potential, .sub.i=k(rr.sub.i) 2+(1).sup.2, is applied in each window with the spring constant, k, of 200 KJ/mol.nm.sup.2, where r.sub.i and k.sub.i are the reference values of a window i. The initial structure of each window is taken either from structures of a room-temperature 1 s MD simulation or among the final structures of neighboring windows, whichever has the closest R and to the reference values. All biased MD simulations were performed using Gromacs.sup.60 (version 2022.3) for 20 ns. We used the weighted histogram analysis method (WHAM) 67, 68 to remove the biasing potential and construct the two-dimensional potential of mean force (PMF) after discarding first 2 ns trajectories from the biased simulations.
5. Conclusions
[0079] In this work we explored how variable-length dye linkers affect the geometry and orientational heterogeneity of excitonically coupled Cy5 dimers on dsDNA and DNA-HJ scaffolds. From experiment, we have shown that the linker length can be used to influence dimer geometry. In particular, short n=2 linkers limit the dye's degrees of freedom to achieve full co-facial overlap under the driving force of attractive TT-TT interactions. The combination of these attractive forces and restricted access to free volume can be used, through judicious choice of attachment points, to engineer J-like geometries. In addition, we showed that the limited flexibility of the short linker can largely eliminate the orientational heterogeneity that occurs for longer and more flexible n=3 and 4 linkers. Importantly, the chemistry required for control of aggregate formation is straightforward. The process of shortening commercial linkers from 3 carbons to 2 carbons results in only a modest decrease in the yield of the Cy5-labeled DNA oligo, while lengthening the linker to 4 carbons results in no decrease in yield.
[0080] One consequence of the short linker is that it leads to suppression of the non-radiative relaxation that has been reported for closely spaced Cy3 and Cy5 dimers (n=3) on DNA..sup.27, 32, 41 It was previously reported that restricting dye motion through viscous solvents or low temperatures reduces fluorescence quenching where the origin was conjectured to arise from restricting twisting about the polymethine bridge..sup.27 Here, the correlation between a sample of dimers with a greater fraction of population in the co-facial geometry and stronger quenching instead suggests that the origin for the nonradiative recombination may be collisional quenching, facilitated by short dye distances, freedom of motion, and high wavefunction overlap in the co-facial geometry. The restricted motion and partial overlap achieved with the n=2 linker would suppress such a mechanism, leading to increased excited state lifetime and higher fluorescence quantum yields. Definitive identification of the quenching mechanism operative in Cy dimers would require a careful comparison of different dye attachment geometries as a function of environmental variables, which we plan to pursue in subsequent work.
[0081] Going forward, it will be useful to investigate whether other types of short dye linkers can also promote the formation of J-like dimers while suppressing orientational heterogeneity. It will also be useful to investigate the performance of homogeneous J-like dimers as energy transfer relays in cascaded dye arrays on DNA scaffolds..sup.31, 50 If highly efficient arrays can be realized, they would find applications as exciton transmission lines in exciton devices.
FURTHER EMBODIMENTS
[0082] Due to the nature of this modification, it is potentially suitable for application on other molecules, including but not limited to other indocyanine-type dies (e.g., Cy3, Cy3.5, Cy5.5).
[0083] Depending on the application, for example, utilizing an H-type aggregate as a turn on fluorescence sensor, one would simply select the correct linker length. An added benefit of these modifications is that they do not require additional chemical reactions, when compared to those dyes currently commercially available. J-aggregates are also of interest for biosensing, imaging, quantum computing, optoelectronics, excitonics, and a variety of other optically-based applications.
Advantages
[0084] Utilizing cyanines with variable linker lengths within DNA scaffolds offers the following non-limiting advantages, benefits, and characteristics: [0085] 1. The unique ability to tune H-like vs J-like aggregation tendencies, making different sets of photophysical properties accessible. [0086] 2. Applications in sensing as fluorescence turn-on (H-like) or ratiometric fluorescence (J-like) materials. [0087] 3. Precision control of chromophore locations can facilitate mimicry of different advanced structure formation, for example, light harvesting units of the photosynthetic reaction center. [0088] 4. Synthetic methodology matches the complexity (number of transformations, reaction conditions, reagent toxicity/hazards, etc.) of existing, commercially available materials. [0089] 5. Aggregate formation is a key feature of systems currently examined for quantum coherence, the ability to modulate the aggregates in a predictable manner is unprecedented. [0090] 6. J-like aggregate is suitable in the role of energy donor or energy acceptor for FRET based systems (where H-like aggregates are only suitable as terminal energy acceptors). [0091] 7. The short linker appears to mitigate the structural homogeneity of a mixed H-/J-like system making it more J-like. The converse is true for the long linker and the H-like aggregate.
Concluding Remarks
[0092] Although the present subject disclosure has been described in connection with preferred embodiments thereof, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that additions, deletions, modifications, and substitutions not specifically described may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the subject disclosure. Terminology used herein should not be construed as being means-plus-function language unless the term means is expressly used in association therewith.
[0093] The foregoing disclosure of the exemplary embodiments of the present subject disclosure has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the subject disclosure to the precise forms disclosed. Many variations and modifications of the embodiments described herein will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art in light of the above disclosure. The scope of the subject disclosure is to be defined only by the claims appended hereto, and by their equivalents.
[0094] Further, in describing representative embodiments of the present subject disclosure, the specification may have presented the method and/or process of the present subject disclosure as a particular sequence of steps. However, to the extent that the method or process does not rely on the particular order of steps set forth herein, the method or process should not be limited to the particular sequence of steps described. As one of ordinary skill in the art would appreciate, other sequences of steps may be possible. Therefore, the particular order of the steps set forth in the specification should not be construed as limitations on the claims. In addition, the claims directed to the method and/or process of the present subject disclosure should not be limited to the performance of their steps in the order written, and one skilled in the art can readily appreciate that the sequences may be varied and still remain within the spirit and scope of the present subject disclosure.
[0095] All documents mentioned herein are hereby incorporated by reference for the purpose of disclosing and describing the particular materials and methodologies for which the document was cited.
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