Moirangthem Kiran Singh
Jawaharlal Nehru University
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Featured researches published by Moirangthem Kiran Singh.
Analytical Chemistry | 2011
Nibedita Pal; Sachin Dev Verma; Moirangthem Kiran Singh; Sobhan Sen
Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) is an ideal tool for measuring molecular diffusion and size under extremely dilute conditions. However, the power of FCS has not been utilized to its best to measure diffusion and size parameters of complex chemical systems. Here, we apply FCS to measure the size, and, most importantly, the size distribution and polydispersity of a supramolecular nanostructure (i.e., microemulsion droplets, MEDs) in dilute solution. It is shown how the refractive index mismatch of a solution can be corrected in FCS to obtain accurate size parameters of particles, bypassing the optical matching problem of light scattering techniques that are used often for particle-size measurements. We studied the MEDs of 13 different W(0) values from 2 to 50 prepared in a ternary mixture of water, sodium bis(2-ethylhexyl) sulfosuccinate (AOT), and isooctane, with sulforhodamine-B as a fluorescent marker. We find that, near the optical matching point of MEDs, the dynamic light scattering (DLS) measurements underestimate the droplet sizes while FCS estimates the accurate ones. A Gaussian distribution model (GDM) and a maximum-entropy-based FCS data fitting model (MEMFCS) are used to analyze the fluorescence correlation curves that unfold Gaussian-type size distributions of MEDs in solution. We find the droplet size varies linearly with W(0) up to ~20, but beyond this W(0) value, the size variation deviates from this linearity. To explain nonlinear variation of droplet size for W(0) values beyond ~20, we invoke a model (the coated-droplet model) that incorporates the size polydispersity of the droplets.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2016
Mohammad Firoz Khan; Moirangthem Kiran Singh; Sobhan Sen
Water-in-oil microemulsion droplets (MEDs) are thermodynamically stable supramolecular structures formed in a mixture of water and oil, stabilized by surfactant layer. Here we use fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) to measure the diffusion, and the size, size distribution, and polydispersity of MEDs prepared in ternary mixtures of water/oil/sodium bis(2-ethylhexyl) sulfosuccinate (AOT) in heptane, isooctane, and nonane at (near) single droplet level. We compare FCS data directly to dynamic light scattering (DLS) data, which shows that the optical matching point (OMP) conditions of MEDs in different oils (where excess optical polarizability of droplets vanish) severely influence DLS data, while FCS extracts the accurate size, size distribution, and polydispersity of AOT-MEDs in all three oils. This suggests that extreme precaution must be taken in acquiring and explaining DLS data of MEDs in solution. FCS data show nearly identical W0-dependent (peak) size variations of AOT-MEDs in all three oils, though a subtle increase in (average) polydispersity of droplets is observed with increase in carbon chain length of oils. Establishing the accuracy of FCS data for AOT-MEDs, we further apply FCS to measure the size parameters of MEDs prepared in a quaternary mixture of water/oil/cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB)/1-butanol in hexane, heptane, and isooctane. Unlike AOT-MEDs, FCS data show substantial effect of added cosurfactant (1-butanol) and external oil on size, size distribution and polydispersity of quaternary CTAB-MEDs. Analysis of size distributions reveals large variation of polydispersity which possibly indicates the existence of larger shape heterogeneity, together with size heterogeneity, of CTAB-MEDs compared to AOT-MEDs in solution.
Analytical Chemistry | 2012
Sachin Dev Verma; Nibedita Pal; Moirangthem Kiran Singh; Him Shweta; Mohammad Firoz Khan; Sobhan Sen
The study of ligand interaction with G-quadruplex DNA is an active research area, because many ligands are shown to bind G-quadruplex structures, showing anticancer effects. Here, we show, for the first time, how fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) can be used to study binding kinetics of ligands with G-quadruplex DNA at the single molecule level. As an example, we study interaction of a benzo-phenoxazine ligand (Cresyl Violet, CV) with antiparallel and (3 + 1) hybrid G-quadruplex structures formed by human telomeric sequence. By using simple modifications in FCS setup, we describe how one can extract the reaction kinetics from diffusion-coupled correlation curves. It is found that the ligand (CV) binds stronger, by an order of magnitude, to a (3 + 1) hybrid structure, compared to an antiparallel one. Ensemble-averaged time-resolved fluorescence experiments are also carried out to obtain the binding equilibrium constants (K) of ligand-quadruplex interactions in bulk solution for the first time, which are found to match very well with FCS results. Global analysis of FCS data provides association (k(+)) and dissociation (k(-)) rates of the ligand in the two structures. Results indicate that stronger ligand binding to the (3 + 1) hybrid structure is controlled by the dissociation rate, rather than the association rate of ligand in the quadruplexes. Circular dichroism (CD) and induced-CD spectra show that the ligand not only binds at different conformations in the quadruplexes, but also induces antiparallel structure to form a mixed-type hybrid structure in Na(+) solution. However, in K(+) solution, the ligand stabilizes the (3 + 1) hybrid structure. Molecular docking studies predict the possible differences in binding sites of the ligand inside two quadruplexes, which strongly support the experimental observations. Results suggest that different binding modes of the ligand to the quadruplex structures actually assist the alteration of structures differently.
Methods and Applications in Fluorescence | 2016
Moirangthem Kiran Singh; Him Shweta; Sobhan Sen
G-quadruplex DNA (GqDNA) structures play an important role in many specific cellular functions and are promising anti-tumor targets for small molecules (ligands). Here, we measured the dynamic Stokes shift of a ligand (Hoechst) bound to parallel c-Myc (mPu22) GqDNA over five decades of time from 100 fs to 10 ns, and compared it with the previously reported dynamics of DAPI bound to antiparallel human telomeric (hTelo22) GqDNA (Pal et al 2015 J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 6 1754). Stokes shift data from fluorescence up-conversion and time-correlated single photon counting experiments was combined to cover the broad dynamic range. The results show that the solvation dynamics of Hoechst in parallel mPu22 GqDNA follow a power law relaxation, added to fast 2 ps exponential relaxation, from 100 fs to 10 ns, with only a subtle difference of power law exponents in the two ligand-GqDNA systems (0.06 in Hoechst-mPu22 compared to 0.16 in DAPI-hTelo22). We measured steady-state fluorescence spectra and time-resolved anisotropy decays which confirm the tight binding of Hoechst to parallel mPu22 with a binding constant of ~1 × 105 M-1. The molecular docking of Hoechst in parallel GqDNA followed by a 50 ns molecular dynamics (MD) simulation on a Hoechst-GqDNA complex reveals that Hoechst binds to one of the outer G-tetrads by end-stacking near G13 and G4, which is different from the binding site of DAPI inside a groove of antiparallel hTelo22 GqDNA. Reconciling previous experimental and simulation results, we assign the 2 ps component to the hydration dynamics of only weakly perturbed water near mPu22 and the power law relaxation to the coupled motion of water and DNA (i.e. DNA backbone, unpaired bases and loops connecting G-tetrads) which come near the Hoechst inside parallel GqDNA.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2017
Him Shweta; Moirangthem Kiran Singh; Kavita Yadav; Sachin Dev Verma; Nibedita Pal; Sobhan Sen
Recognition of DNA base mismatches and their subsequent repair by enzymes is vital for genomic stability. However, it is difficult to comprehend such a process in which enzymes sense and repair different types of mismatches with different ability. It has been suggested that the differential structural changes of mismatched bases act as cues to the repair enzymes, although the effect of such DNA structural changes on surrounding water and ion dynamics is inevitable due to strong electrostatic coupling among them. Thus, collective dynamics of DNA, water, and ions near the mismatch site is believed to be important for mismatch recognition and repair mechanism. Here we show that introduction of a T·T mismatch in the minor groove of DNA induces dispersed (collective) power-law solvation dynamics (of exponent ∼0.24), measured by monitoring the time-resolved fluorescence Stokes shifts (TRFSS) of two popular minor groove binders (Hoechst 33258 and DAPI) over five decades of time from 100 fs to 10 ns. The same ligands however sense different dynamics (power-law of exponent ∼0.15 or power-law multiplied with biexponential relaxation) in the minor groove of normal-DNA. The similar fluorescence anisotropy decays of ligands measured in normal- and T·T-DNA suggest that Stokes shift dynamics and their changes in T·T-DNA purely originate from the solvation process, and not from any internal rotational motion of probe-ligands. The dispersed power-law solvation dynamics seen in T·T-DNA indicate that the ligands do not sense any particular (exponential) relaxation specific to T·T wobbling and/or other conformational changes. This could be the reason why T·T mismatch is recognized by enzymes with lower efficiency compared to purine-pyrimidine and purine-purine mismatches.
Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2018
Jasvir Kaur; Neetu Singh Yadav; Moirangthem Kiran Singh; Mohd Jahir Khan; Sobhan Sen; Aparna Dixit; Devapriya Choudhury
The photophysics of green fluorescent protein (GFP) is remarkable because of its exceptional property of excited state proton transfer (ESPT) and the presence of a functional proton wire. Another interesting property of wild‐type GFP is that its absorption and fluorescence excitation spectra are sensitive to the presence of polar organic solvents even at very low concentrations. Here, we use a combination of methodologies including site‐specific mutagenesis, absorption spectroscopy, steady‐state and time‐resolved fluorescence measurements and all‐atom molecular dynamics simulations in explicit solvent, to uncover the mechanism behind the unique spectral sensitivity of GFP toward organic solvents. Based on the evidences provided herein, we suggest that organic solvent‐induced changes in the proton wire prevent ground state movement of a proton through the wire and thus bring about the spectral changes observed. The present study can not only help to understand the mechanism of proton transfer by further dissecting the intricate steps in GFP photophysics but also encourages to develop GFP‐based organic solvent biosensors.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2012
Sachin Dev Verma; Nibedita Pal; Moirangthem Kiran Singh; Sobhan Sen
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015
Nibedita Pal; Him Shweta; Moirangthem Kiran Singh; Sachin Dev Verma; Sobhan Sen
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015
Sachin Dev Verma; Nibedita Pal; Moirangthem Kiran Singh; Sobhan Sen
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016
Moirangthem Kiran Singh; Him Shweta; Mohammad Firoz Khan; Sobhan Sen