Site-specific fluorescence-resonance-energy-transfer donor-Acceptor dual-labelled oligonucleotide probes are widely used in state-of-Art biotechnological applications. Such applications include their usage as primers in polymerase chain reaction. However, the steady-state fluorescence intensity signal emitted by these molecular tools strongly depends from the specificities of the probe conformation. For this reason, the information which can be reliably inferred by steady-state fluorimetry performed on such samples is forcedly confined to a semi-qualitative level. Namely, fluorescent emission is frequently used as ON/OFF indicator of the probe hybridization state, i.e. detection of fluorescence signals indicates either hybridization to or detachment from the template DNA of the probe. Nonetheless, a fully quantitative analysis of their fluorescence emission properties would disclose other exciting applications of dual-labelled probes in biosensing. Here we show how time-correlated single-photon counting can be applied to get rid of the technical limitations and interpretational ambiguities plaguing the intensity analysis, and to derive information on the template DNA reaching single-base.

Superiorities of time-correlated single-photon counting against standard fluorimetry in exploiting the potential of fluorochromized oligonucleotide probes for biomedical investigation

Lamperti M.;Nardo L.;Bondani M.
2015-01-01

Abstract

Site-specific fluorescence-resonance-energy-transfer donor-Acceptor dual-labelled oligonucleotide probes are widely used in state-of-Art biotechnological applications. Such applications include their usage as primers in polymerase chain reaction. However, the steady-state fluorescence intensity signal emitted by these molecular tools strongly depends from the specificities of the probe conformation. For this reason, the information which can be reliably inferred by steady-state fluorimetry performed on such samples is forcedly confined to a semi-qualitative level. Namely, fluorescent emission is frequently used as ON/OFF indicator of the probe hybridization state, i.e. detection of fluorescence signals indicates either hybridization to or detachment from the template DNA of the probe. Nonetheless, a fully quantitative analysis of their fluorescence emission properties would disclose other exciting applications of dual-labelled probes in biosensing. Here we show how time-correlated single-photon counting can be applied to get rid of the technical limitations and interpretational ambiguities plaguing the intensity analysis, and to derive information on the template DNA reaching single-base.
2015
Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
SPIE Conference on Photon Counting Applications 2015
Praga (CZ)
2015
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11383/2133928
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