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Featured researches published by Sina Berndl.


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

Fluorescent color readout of DNA hybridization with thiazole orange as an artificial DNA base.

Sina Berndl; Hans-Achim Wagenknecht

A fluorescent chameleon: A single thiazole orange (TO) dye, when used as an artificial DNA base shows the typical green emission, whereas the interstrand TO dimer exhibits an orange excimer-type emission inside duplex DNA (see picture).


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2008

Thiazole orange and Cy3: Improvement of fluorescent DNA probes with use of short range electron transfer

Florian Menacher; Moritz M. Rubner; Sina Berndl; Hans-Achim Wagenknecht

Thiazole orange was synthetically incorporated into oligonucleotides by using the corresponding phosphoramidite as the building block for automated DNA synthesis. Due to the covalent fixation of the TO dye as a DNA base surrogate, the TO-modified oligonucleotides do not exhibit a significant increase of fluorescence upon hybridization with the counterstrand. However, if 5-nitroindole (NI) is present as a second artificial DNA base (two base pairs away from the TO dye) a fluorescence increase upon DNA hybridization can be observed. That suggests that a short-range photoinduced electron transfer causes the fluorescence quenching in the single strand. The latter result represents a concept that can be transferred to the commercially available Cy3 label. It enables the Cy3 fluorophore to display the DNA hybridization by a fluorescence increase that is normally not observed with this dye.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016

Thiazole Orange Dimers in DNA: Fluorescent Base Substitutions with Hybridization Readout

Sina Berndl; Stoichko D. Dimitrov; Florian Menacher; Torsten Fiebig; Hans-Achim Wagenknecht

By using (S)-2-amino-1,3-propanediol as a linker, thiazole orange (TO) was incorporated in a dimeric form into DNA. The green fluorescence (λ=530 nm) of the intrastrand TO dimer is quenched, whereas the interstrand TO dimer shows a characteristic redshifted orange emission (λ=585 nm). Steady-state optical spectroscopic methods reveal that the TO dimer fluorescence is independent of the sequential base contexts. Time-resolved pump-probe measurements and excitation spectra reveal the coexistence of conformations, including mainly stacked TO dimers and partially unstacked ones, which yield exciton and excimer contributions to the fluorescence, respectively. The helicity of the DNA framework distorts the excitonic coupling. In particular, the interstrand TO dimer could be regarded as an excitonically interacting base pair with fluorescence readout for DNA hybridization. Finally, the use of this fluorescent readout was representatively demonstrated in molecular beacons.


Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2010

Synthetic incorporation of Nile Blue into DNA using 2′-deoxyriboside substitutes: Representative comparison of (R)- and (S)-aminopropanediol as an acyclic linker

Daniel Lachmann; Sina Berndl; Otto S. Wolfbeis; Hans-Achim Wagenknecht

Summary The Nile Blue chromophore was incorporated into oligonucleotides using “click” chemistry for the postsynthetic modification of oligonucleotides. These were synthesized using DNA building block 3 bearing an alkyne group and reacted with the azide 4. (R)-3-amino-1,2-propanediol was applied as the linker between the phosphodiester bridges. Two sets of DNA duplexes were prepared. One set carried the chromophore in an A-T environment, the second set in a G-C environment. Both were characterized by optical spectroscopy. Sequence-dependent fluorescence quenching was applied as a sensitive tool to compare the stacking interactions with respect to the chirality of the acyclic linker attachment. The results were compared to recent results from duplexes that carried the Nile Blue label in a sequentially and structurally identical context, except for the opposite chirality of the linker ((S)-3-amino-1,2-propandiol). Only minor, negligible differences were observed. Melting temperatures, UV–vis absorption spectra together with fluorescence quenching data indicate that Nile Blue stacks perfectly between the adjacent base pairs regardless of whether it has been attached via an S- or R-configured linker. This result was supported by geometrically optimized DNA models.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2009

Comparison of a Nucleosidic vs Non-Nucleosidic Postsynthetic “Click” Modification of DNA with Base-Labile Fluorescent Probes

Sina Berndl; Nadine Herzig; Péter Kele; Daniel Lachmann; Xiaohua Li; Otto S. Wolfbeis; Hans-Achim Wagenknecht


European Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2010

Synthesis and Optical Properties of Cyanine Dyes as Fluorescent DNA Base Substitutions for Live Cell Imaging

Carolin Holzhauser; Sina Berndl; Florian Menacher; Miriam Breunig; Achim Göpferich; Hans-Achim Wagenknecht


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

Fluoreszenz‐Farbwechsel bei der DNA‐Hybridisierung mit Thiazolorange als artifizieller DNA‐Base

Sina Berndl; Hans-Achim Wagenknecht


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2010

Photoinduced short-range electron transfer in DNA with fluorescent DNA bases: lessons from ethidium and thiazole orange as charge donors

Christa Prunkl; Sina Berndl; Claudia Wanninger-Weiß; Janez Barbaric; Hans-Achim Wagenknecht


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2010

Imaging of RNA delivery to cells by thiazole orange as a fluorescent RNA base substitution.

Sina Berndl; Miriam Breunig; Achim Göpferich; Hans-Achim Wagenknecht


European Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2010

Synthesis and Optical Properties of Cyanine Dyes as Fluorescent DNA Base Substitutions for Live Cell Imaging (Eur. J. Org. Chem. 7/2010)

Carolin Holzhauser; Sina Berndl; Florian Menacher; Miriam Breunig; Achim Göpferich; Hans-Achim Wagenknecht

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Hans-Achim Wagenknecht

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Miriam Breunig

University of Regensburg

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Carolin Holzhauser

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Janez Barbaric

University of Regensburg

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Christa Prunkl

University of Regensburg

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