Abstract
The catalytic ability of Ricin Toxin A-Chain (RTA) to create an abasic site in a 14-mer stem-tetraloop RNA is exploited for its detection. RTA catalyzes the hydrolysis of the N-glycosidic bond of a specific adenosine in the G A GA tetraloop of stem-loop RNA. Thus, a 14-mer stem-loop RNA substrate containing an intact “G A GA” sequence can be discriminated from the product containing an abasic “G ab GA” sequence by hybridization with a 14-mer DNA stem-loop probe sequence and following the fluorescent response of the heteroduplexes. Three DNA beacon probe designs are described. Beacon 1 probe is a stem-loop structure and has a fluorophore and a quencher covalently linked to the 5′- and 3′-ends. In this format the probe–substrate heteroduplex gives a fluorescent signal while the probe–product one remains quenched. Beacon 2 is a modified version of 1 and incorporates a pyrene deoxynucleoside for recognition of the abasic site. In this format both the substrate and product heteroduplexes give a fluorescent response. Beacon 3 utilizes a design where the fluorophore is on the substrate RNA sequence at its 5′-end while the quencher is on the probe DNA sequence at its 3′-end. In this format the fluorescence of the substrate–probe heteroduplex is quenched while that of the product–probe one is enhanced. The lower limit of detection with beacons is 14 ng/mL of RTA.
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