Abstract
RNA and DNA play distinct roles in biological systems. However, the underlying physicochemical difference has been poorly understood, in particular, that in dynamical aspects. In this paper, we report on a comparative study of the formation-dissociation dynamics of a hairpin structure of RNA and DNA with development of two-color two-dimensional fluorescence lifetime correlation spectroscopy (two-color 2D FLCS). In this extension of 2D FLCS, we newly introduce the two-color detection scheme to analyze not only donor fluorescence photons but also acceptor fluorescence photons from a doubly labeled Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) pair. This new 2D FLCS is utilized to resolve multiple species present in an equilibrated condition with a microsecond time resolution and enhanced sensitivity, and the combined use with the filtered fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) method enables a quantitative discussion on microsecond structural dynamics occurring in the equilibrium. This integrated approach is applied to FRET-labeled RNA/DNA oligonucleotides having analogous hairpin-forming sequences, and it was revealed that the hairpin dissociation rate of RNA is an order of magnitude slower than that of DNA while their hairpin-forming rates are comparable. This marked difference is attributable to the distinct duplex structure of RNA and DNA. The present study demonstrates that the integrated approach combining two-color 2D FLCS and filtered FCS has a high potential for quantifying microsecond kinetics at the single-molecule level, which allows us to experimentally construct a free energy landscape.
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