Massively Parallel Selection of NanoCluster Beacons
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Abstract
NanoCluster Beacons (NCBs) are multicolor silver nanocluster probes whose fluorescence can be activated or tuned by a proximal DNA strand called the activator. While a single‐nucleotide difference in a pair of activators can lead to drastically different activation outcomes, termed polar opposite twins (POTs), it is difficult to discover new POT‐NCBs using the conventional low‐throughput characterization approaches. Here, a high‐throughput selection method is reported that takes advantage of repurposed next‐generation‐sequencing chips to screen the activation fluorescence of ≈40 000 activator sequences. It is found that the nucleobases at positions 7–12 of the 18‐nucleotide‐long activator are critical to creating bright NCBs and positions 4–6 and 2–4 are hotspots to generate yellow–orange and red POTs, respectively. Based on these findings, a “zipper‐bag” model is proposed that can explain how these hotspots facilitate the formation of distinct silver cluster chromophores and alter their chemical yields. Combining high‐throughput screening with machine‐learning algorithms, a pipeline is established to design bright and multicolor NCBs in silico.
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Excerpt
In search of a bright beacon: High-throughput screening of nanocluster beacons for new colors and improved brightness
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