8-hydroxyguanine and Cystic-Fibrosis

8-hydroxyguanine has been researched along with Cystic-Fibrosis* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for 8-hydroxyguanine and Cystic-Fibrosis

ArticleYear
Site-selective electron transfer from purines to electrocatalysts: voltammetric detection of a biologically relevant deletion in hybridized DNA duplexes.
    Chemistry & biology, 1999, Volume: 6, Issue:9

    The one-electron oxidation of guanine nucleobases is of interest for understanding the mechanisms of mutagenesis, probing electron-transfer reactions in DNA, and developing sensing schemes for nucleic acids. The electron-transfer rates for oxidation of guanine by exogenous redox catalysts depend on the base paired to the guanine. An important goal in developing the mismatch sensitivity is to identify a means for monitoring the current resulting from electron transfer at a single base in the presence of native oligonucleotides that contain all four bases.. The nucleobase 8-oxo-guanine (8G) is selectively oxidized by the redox catalyst Os(bpy)(3)(3+/2+) (bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine) in the presence of native guanine. Cyclic voltammograms of Os(bpy)(3)(2+) show current enhancements indicative of nucleobase oxidation upon addition of oligonucleotides that contain 8G, but not in the presence of native guanine. As expected, similar experiments with Ru(bpy)(3)(2+) show enhancement with both guanine and 8G. The current enhancements for the 8G/Os(III) reaction increase in the order 8G-C approximately 8G.T < 8G.G < 8G.A < 8G, the same order as that observed for guanine/Ru(III). This site-selective mismatch sensitivity can be applied to detection of a TTT deletion, which is important in cystic fibrosis.. The base 8G can be effectively used in conjunction with a low-potential redox catalyst as a probe for selective electron transfer at a single site. Because of the high selectivity for 8G, rate constants can be obtained that reflect the oxidation of only one base. The mismatch sensitivity can be used to detect biologically relevant abnormalities in DNA.

    Topics: Base Pair Mismatch; Catalysis; Cystic Fibrosis; DNA; Electrochemistry; Electron Transport; Guanine; Hybridization, Genetic; Kinetics; Oligonucleotides; Oxidation-Reduction; Purines; Sequence Deletion

1999