Bruce A. Armitage

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Name: Armitage, Bruce
Organization: Carnegie Mellon University , USA
Department: Department of Chemistry and Center for Nucleic Acids Science and Technology
Title: Professor(PhD)

TOPICS

Co-reporter:Xiaohong Tan, Tudor P. Constantin, Kelly L. Sloane, Alan S. Waggoner, Marcel P. Bruchez, and Bruce A. Armitage
Journal of the American Chemical Society July 5, 2017 Volume 139(Issue 26) pp:9001-9001
Publication Date(Web):June 23, 2017
DOI:10.1021/jacs.7b04211
An RNA aptamer selected for binding to the fluorogenic cyanine dye, dimethylindole red (DIR), also binds and activates another cyanine, oxazole thiazole blue (OTB), giving two well-resolved emission colors. The aptamer binds to each dye with submicromolar KD values, and the resulting fluoromodules exhibit fluorescence quantum yields ranging from 0.17 to 0.51 and excellent photostability. The aptamer was fused to a second aptamer previously selected for binding to the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) to create a bifunctional aptamer that labels cell-surface EGFR on mammalian cells. The fluorescent color of the aptamer-labeled EGFR can be switched between blue and red in situ simply by exchanging the dye in the medium. The promiscuity of the aptamer can also be used to distinguish between cell-surface and internalized EGFR on the basis of the addition of red or blue fluorogen at different times.
Co-reporter:Karen A. Kormuth, John L. Woolford Jr., and Bruce A. Armitage
Biochemistry 2016 Volume 55(Issue 12) pp:1749-1757
Publication Date(Web):March 7, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.biochem.6b00026
Potential guanine (G) quadruplex-forming sequences (QFSs) found throughout the genomes and transcriptomes of organisms have emerged as biologically relevant structures. These G-quadruplexes represent novel opportunities for gene regulation at the DNA and RNA levels. Recently, the definition of functional QFSs has been expanding to include a variety of unconventional motifs, including relatively long loop sequences (i.e., >7 nucleotides) separating adjacent G-tracts. We have identified a QFS within the 25S rDNA gene from Saccharomyces cerevisae that features a long loop separating the two 3′-most G-tracts. An oligonucleotide based on this sequence, QFS3, folds into a stable G-quadruplex in vitro. We have studied the interaction between QFS3 and several loop mutants with a small, homologous (G-rich) peptide nucleic acid (PNA) oligomer that is designed to form a DNA/PNA heteroquadruplex. The PNA successfully invades the DNA quadruplex target to form a stable heteroquadruplex, but with surprisingly high PNA:DNA ratios based on surface plasmon resonance and mass spectrometric results. A model for high stoichiometry PNA–DNA heteroquadruplexes is proposed, and the implications for quadruplex targeting by G-rich PNA are discussed.
Co-reporter:Stanley N. Oyaghire, Collin J. Cherubim, Cheryl A. Telmer, Joe A. Martinez, Marcel P. Bruchez, and Bruce A. Armitage
Biochemistry 2016 Volume 55(Issue 13) pp:1977-1988
Publication Date(Web):March 9, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.biochem.6b00055
We have examined the abilities of three complementary γ-peptide nucleic acid (γPNA) oligomers to invade an RNA G-quadruplex and potently inhibit translation of a luciferase reporter transcript containing the quadruplex-forming sequence (QFS) within its 5′-untranslated region. All three γPNA oligomers bind with low nanomolar affinities to an RNA oligonucleotide containing the QFS. However, while all probes inhibit translation with low to midnanomolar IC50 values, the γPNA designed to hybridize to the first two G-tracts of the QFS and adjacent 5′-overhanging nucleotides was 5–6 times more potent than probes directed to either the 3′-end or internal regions of the target at 37 °C. This position-dependent effect was eliminated after the probes and target were preincubated at an elevated temperature prior to translation, demonstrating that kinetic effects exert significant control over quadruplex invasion and translation inhibition. We also found that antisense γPNAs exhibited similarly potent effects against luciferase reporter transcripts bearing QFS motifs having G2, G3, or G4 tracts. Finally, our results indicate that γPNA oligomers exhibit selectivity and/or potency higher than those of other antisense molecules such as standard PNA and 2′-OMe RNA previously reported to target G-quadruplexes in RNA.
Co-reporter:Taylor D. Canady; Cheryl A. Telmer; Stanley N. Oyaghire; Bruce A. Armitage;Marcel P. Bruchez
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2015 Volume 137(Issue 32) pp:10268-10275
Publication Date(Web):August 4, 2015
DOI:10.1021/jacs.5b05351
On-demand regulation of gene expression in living cells is a central goal of chemical biology and antisense therapeutic development. While significant advances have allowed regulatory modulation through inserted genetic elements, on-demand control of the expression/translation state of a given native gene by complementary sequence interactions remains a technical challenge. Toward this objective, we demonstrate the reversible suppression of a luciferase gene in cell-free translation using Watson–Crick base pairing between the mRNA and a complementary γ-modified peptide nucleic acid (γPNA) sequence with a noncomplementary toehold. Exploiting the favorable thermodynamics of γPNA−γPNA interactions, the antisense sequence can be removed by hybridization of a second, fully complementary γPNA, through a strand displacement reaction, allowing translation to proceed. Complementary RNA is also shown to displace the bound antisense γPNA, opening up possibilities of in vivo regulation by native gene expression.
Co-reporter:Ha H. Pham, Christopher Szent-Gyorgyi, Wendy L. Brotherton, Brigitte F. Schmidt, Kimberly J. Zanotti, Alan S. Waggoner and Bruce A. Armitage  
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2015 vol. 13(Issue 12) pp:3699-3710
Publication Date(Web):13 Feb 2015
DOI:10.1039/C4OB02522A
Dye-protein fluoromodules consist of fluorogenic dyes and single chain antibody fragments that form brightly fluorescent noncovalent complexes. This report describes two new bichromophoric dyes that extend the range of wavelengths of excitation or emission of existing fluoromodules. In one case, a fluorogenic thiazole orange (TO) was attached to an energy acceptor dye, Cy5. Upon binding to a protein that recognizes TO, red emission due to efficient energy transfer from TO to Cy5 replaces the green emission observed for monochromophoric TO bound to the same protein. Separately, TO was attached to a coumarin that serves as an energy donor. The same green emission is observed for coumarin-TO and TO bound to a protein, but efficient energy transfer allows violet excitation of coumarin-TO, versus longer wavelength, blue excitation of monochromophoric TO. Both bichromophores exhibit low nanomolar KD values for their respective proteins, >95% energy transfer efficiency and high fluorescence quantum yields.
Co-reporter:Elizabeth E. Rastede, Matteus Tanha, David Yaron, Simon C. Watkins, Alan S. Waggoner and Bruce A. Armitage  
Photochemical & Photobiological Sciences 2015 vol. 14(Issue 9) pp:1703-1712
Publication Date(Web):14 Jul 2015
DOI:10.1039/C5PP00117J
The introduction of electron donor and acceptor groups at strategic locations on a fluorogenic cyanine dye allows fine-tuning of the absorption and emission spectra while preserving the ability of the dye to bind to biomolecular hosts such as double-stranded DNA and a single-chain antibody fragment originally selected for binding to the parent unsubstituted dye, thiazole orange (TO). The observed spectral shifts are consistent with calculated HOMO–LUMO energy gaps and reflect electron density localization on the quinoline half of TO in the LUMO. A dye bearing donating methoxy and withdrawing trifluoromethyl groups on the benzothiazole and quinoline rings, respectively, shifts the absorption spectrum to sufficiently longer wavelengths to allow excitation at green wavelengths as opposed to the parent dye, which is optimally excited in the blue.
Co-reporter:Ha H. Pham, Connor T. Murphy, Gopalsamy Sureshkumar, Danith H. Ly, Patricia L. Opresko and Bruce A. Armitage  
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2014 vol. 12(Issue 37) pp:7345-7354
Publication Date(Web):2014/07/30
DOI:10.1039/C4OB00953C
GammaPNA oligomers having one or two repeats of the sequence AATCCC were designed to hybridize to DNA having one or more repeats of the complementary TTAGGG sequence found in the human telomere. UV melting curves and surface plasmon resonance experiments demonstrate high affinity and cooperativity for hybridization of these miniprobes to DNA having multiple complementary repeats. Fluorescence spectroscopy for Cy3-labeled miniprobes demonstrate increases in fluorescence intensity for assembling multiple short probes on a DNA target compared with fewer longer probes. The fluorescent γPNA miniprobes were then used to stain telomeres in metaphase chromosomes derived from U2OS cells possessing heterogeneous long telomeres and Jurkat cells harboring homogenous short telomeres. The miniprobes yielded comparable fluorescence intensity to a commercially available PNA 18mer probe in U2OS cells, but significantly brighter fluorescence was observed for telomeres in Jurkat cells. These results suggest that γPNA miniprobes can be effective telomere-staining reagents with applications toward analysis of critically short telomeres, which have been implicated in a range of human diseases.
Co-reporter:Dr. Anisha Gupta;Ling-Ling Lee;Dr. Subhadeep Roy;Farial A. Tanious;Dr. W. David Wilson;Dr. Danith H. Ly;Dr. Bruce A. Armitage
ChemBioChem 2013 Volume 14( Issue 12) pp:1476-1484
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201300263

Abstract

Molecular recognition of DNA quadruplex structures is envisioned to be a strategy for regulating gene expression at the transcriptional level and for in situ analysis of telomere structure and function. The recognition of DNA quadruplexes by peptide nucleic acid (PNA) oligomers is presented here, with a focus on comparing complementary, heteroduplex-forming and homologous, heteroquadruplex-forming PNAs. Surface plasmon resonance and optical spectroscopy experiments demonstrated that the efficacy of a recognition mode depended strongly on the target. Homologous PNA readily invades a quadruplex derived from the promoter regulatory region found upstream of the MYC proto-oncogene to form a heteroquadruplex at high potassium concentration mimicking the intracellular environment, whereas complementary PNA exhibits virtually no hybridization. In contrast, complementary PNA is superior to the homologous in hybridizing to a quadruplex modeled on the human telomere sequence. The results are discussed in terms of the different structural morphologies of the quadruplex targets and the implications for in vivo recognition of quadruplexes by PNAs.

Co-reporter:Nathaniel I. Shank ; Ha H. Pham ; Alan S. Waggoner
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2012 Volume 135(Issue 1) pp:242-251
Publication Date(Web):December 20, 2012
DOI:10.1021/ja308629w
The cyanine dye thiazole orange (TO) is a well-known fluorogenic stain for DNA and RNA, but this property precludes its use as an intracellular fluorescent probe for non-nucleic acid biomolecules. Further, as is the case with many cyanines, the dye suffers from low photostability. Here, we report the synthesis of a bridge-substituted version of TO named α-CN-TO, where the central methine hydrogen of TO is replaced by an electron withdrawing cyano group, which was expected to decrease the susceptibility of the dye toward singlet oxygen-mediated degradation. An X-ray crystal structure shows that α-CN-TO is twisted drastically out of plane, in contrast to TO, which crystallizes in the planar conformation. α-CN-TO retains the fluorogenic behavior of the parent dye TO in viscous glycerol/water solvent, but direct irradiation and indirect bleaching studies showed that α-CN-TO is essentially inert to visible light and singlet oxygen. In addition, the twisted conformation of α-CN-TO mitigates nonspecific binding and fluorescence activation by DNA and a previously selected TO-binding protein and exhibits low background fluorescence in HeLa cell culture. α-CN-TO was then used to select a new protein that binds and activates fluorescence from the dye. The new α-CN-TO/protein fluoromodule exhibits superior photostability to an analogous TO/protein fluoromodule. These properties indicate that α-CN-TO will be a useful fluorogenic dye in combination with specific RNA and protein binding partners for both in vitro and cell-based applications. More broadly, structural features that promote nonplanar conformations can provide an effective method for reducing nonspecific binding of cationic dyes to nucleic acids and other biomolecules.
Co-reporter:Subhadeep Roy, Kimberly J. Zanotti, Connor T. Murphy, Farial A. Tanious, W. David Wilson, Danith H. Ly and Bruce A. Armitage  
Chemical Communications 2011 vol. 47(Issue 30) pp:8524-8526
Publication Date(Web):30 Jun 2011
DOI:10.1039/C1CC12805A
Guanine-rich peptide nucleic acid probes hybridize to DNA G quadruplex targets with high affinity, forming PNA–DNA heteroquadruplexes. We report a surprising degree of kinetic discrimination for PNA heteroquadruplex formation with a series of DNA targets. The fastest hybridization is observed for targets folded into parallel morphologies.
Co-reporter:Andrea L. Stadler, Junriz O. Delos Santos, Elizabeth S. Stensrud, Anna Dembska, Gloria L. Silva, Shengpeng Liu, Nathaniel I. Shank, Ezgi Kunttas-Tatli, Courtney J. Sobers, Philipp M. E. Gramlich, Thomas Carell, Linda A. Peteanu, Brooke M. McCartney, and Bruce A. Armitage
Bioconjugate Chemistry 2011 Volume 22(Issue 8) pp:1491
Publication Date(Web):July 14, 2011
DOI:10.1021/bc100485f
We have synthesized fluorescent DNA duplexes featuring multiple thiazole orange (TO) intercalating dyes covalently attached to the DNA via a triazole linkage. The intercalating dyes stabilize the duplex against thermal denaturation and show bright fluorescence in the green region of the spectrum. The emission color can be changed to orange or red by addition of energy-accepting Cy3 or Cy5 dyes attached covalently to the DNA duplex. The dye-modified DNA duplexes were then attached to a secondary antibody for intracellular fluorescence imaging of centrosomes in Drosophila embryos. Bright fluorescent foci were observed at the centrosomes in both the donor (TO) and acceptor (Cy5) channels, because the energy transfer efficiency is moderate. Monitoring the Cy5 emission channel significantly minimized the background signal because of the large shift in emission wavelength allowed by energy transfer.
Co-reporter:Kimberly J. Zanotti, Gloria L. Silva, Yehuda Creeger, Kelly L. Robertson, Alan S. Waggoner, Peter B. Berget and Bruce A. Armitage  
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2011 vol. 9(Issue 4) pp:1012-1020
Publication Date(Web):22 Dec 2010
DOI:10.1039/C0OB00444H
Fluoromodules are complexes formed upon the noncovalent binding of a fluorogenic dye to its cognate biomolecular partner, which significantly enhances the fluorescence quantum yield of the dye. Previously, several single-chain, variable fragment (scFv) antibodies were selected from a yeast cell surface-displayed library that activated fluorescence from a family of unsymmetrical cyanine dyes covering much of the visible and near-IR spectrum. The current work expands our repertoire of genetically encodable scFv-dye pairs by selecting and characterizing a group of scFvs that activate fluorogenic violet-absorbing, blue-fluorescing cyanine dyes, based on oxazole and thiazole heterocycles. The dye binds to both yeast cell surface-displayed and soluble scFvs with low nanomolar Kd values. These dye-protein fluoromodules exhibit high quantum yields, approaching unity for the brightest system. The promiscuity of these scFvs with other fluorogenic cyanine dyes was also examined. Fluorescence microscopy demonstrates that the yeast cell surface-displayed scFvs can be used for multicolor imaging. The prevalence of 405 nm lasers on confocal imaging and flow cytometry systems make these new reagents potentially valuable for cell biological studies.
Co-reporter:Andrea L. Stadler, Babu Rao Renikuntla, David Yaron, Adam S. Fang, and Bruce A. Armitage
Langmuir 2011 Volume 27(Issue 4) pp:1472-1479
Publication Date(Web):December 21, 2010
DOI:10.1021/la104329c
Double-helical DNA was used as a template for the assembly of helical cyanine dye aggregates. The aggregates consist of cofacial dimers aligned end-to-end in the minor groove of the DNA. The effect of methoxy or fluoro substituents placed on the periphery of the cyanine dye heterocycles on aggregation both in water and on the DNA template was studied by UV−vis and circular dichroism spectroscopy. Methoxy groups were found to be stronger promoters of aggregation than fluoro, and a dimethoxy dye exhibited a higher propensity to aggregate compared with an unsymmetrical methoxy/fluoro dye. Semiempirical calculations supported the experimental observation of methoxy substitution favoring aggregation. These results indicate that dispersion and hydrophobic effects contribute more to dimerization/aggregation than do electron donor−acceptor effects.
Co-reporter:Sabrina Lusvarghi, Jenny Morana Kim, Yehuda Creeger and Bruce Alan Armitage  
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2009 vol. 7(Issue 9) pp:1815-1820
Publication Date(Web):10 Mar 2009
DOI:10.1039/B820013K
A multiple antigen peptide display scaffold was used to create multivalent versions of a heptapeptide selected previously by phage display to bind to Bacillus subtilis spores. A simple flow cytometric assay was developed in which a biotinylated form of the peptide was first bound to fluorescent streptavidin, then the fluorescent streptavidin-peptide complex was bound to spores before introduction into the cytometer. This assay clearly demonstrated that the tetravalent scaffold enhanced the affinity for B. subtilis spores by greater than 1 and 2 orders of magnitude when compared to divalent and monovalent analogues, respectively. However, variations in the number and flexibility of spacer residues within the scaffold did not significantly affect the binding affinity of the tetravalent peptides. Similar to prior reports, these multivalent scaffolds are effective most likely because they mimic the multivalent display of the original peptide library on the phage coat. Moreover, the tetravalent peptides can be readily integrated into a variety of heterogeneous and homogeneous spore-detection assay formats.
Co-reporter:Sabrina Lusvarghi, Jenny Morana Kim, Yehuda Creeger and Bruce Alan Armitage
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2009 - vol. 7(Issue 9) pp:NaN1820-1820
Publication Date(Web):2009/03/10
DOI:10.1039/B820013K
A multiple antigen peptide display scaffold was used to create multivalent versions of a heptapeptide selected previously by phage display to bind to Bacillus subtilis spores. A simple flow cytometric assay was developed in which a biotinylated form of the peptide was first bound to fluorescent streptavidin, then the fluorescent streptavidin-peptide complex was bound to spores before introduction into the cytometer. This assay clearly demonstrated that the tetravalent scaffold enhanced the affinity for B. subtilis spores by greater than 1 and 2 orders of magnitude when compared to divalent and monovalent analogues, respectively. However, variations in the number and flexibility of spacer residues within the scaffold did not significantly affect the binding affinity of the tetravalent peptides. Similar to prior reports, these multivalent scaffolds are effective most likely because they mimic the multivalent display of the original peptide library on the phage coat. Moreover, the tetravalent peptides can be readily integrated into a variety of heterogeneous and homogeneous spore-detection assay formats.
Co-reporter:Subhadeep Roy, Kimberly J. Zanotti, Connor T. Murphy, Farial A. Tanious, W. David Wilson, Danith H. Ly and Bruce A. Armitage
Chemical Communications 2011 - vol. 47(Issue 30) pp:NaN8526-8526
Publication Date(Web):2011/06/30
DOI:10.1039/C1CC12805A
Guanine-rich peptide nucleic acid probes hybridize to DNA G quadruplex targets with high affinity, forming PNA–DNA heteroquadruplexes. We report a surprising degree of kinetic discrimination for PNA heteroquadruplex formation with a series of DNA targets. The fastest hybridization is observed for targets folded into parallel morphologies.
Co-reporter:Kimberly J. Zanotti, Gloria L. Silva, Yehuda Creeger, Kelly L. Robertson, Alan S. Waggoner, Peter B. Berget and Bruce A. Armitage
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2011 - vol. 9(Issue 4) pp:NaN1020-1020
Publication Date(Web):2010/12/22
DOI:10.1039/C0OB00444H
Fluoromodules are complexes formed upon the noncovalent binding of a fluorogenic dye to its cognate biomolecular partner, which significantly enhances the fluorescence quantum yield of the dye. Previously, several single-chain, variable fragment (scFv) antibodies were selected from a yeast cell surface-displayed library that activated fluorescence from a family of unsymmetrical cyanine dyes covering much of the visible and near-IR spectrum. The current work expands our repertoire of genetically encodable scFv-dye pairs by selecting and characterizing a group of scFvs that activate fluorogenic violet-absorbing, blue-fluorescing cyanine dyes, based on oxazole and thiazole heterocycles. The dye binds to both yeast cell surface-displayed and soluble scFvs with low nanomolar Kd values. These dye-protein fluoromodules exhibit high quantum yields, approaching unity for the brightest system. The promiscuity of these scFvs with other fluorogenic cyanine dyes was also examined. Fluorescence microscopy demonstrates that the yeast cell surface-displayed scFvs can be used for multicolor imaging. The prevalence of 405 nm lasers on confocal imaging and flow cytometry systems make these new reagents potentially valuable for cell biological studies.
Co-reporter:Ha H. Pham, Connor T. Murphy, Gopalsamy Sureshkumar, Danith H. Ly, Patricia L. Opresko and Bruce A. Armitage
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2014 - vol. 12(Issue 37) pp:NaN7354-7354
Publication Date(Web):2014/07/30
DOI:10.1039/C4OB00953C
GammaPNA oligomers having one or two repeats of the sequence AATCCC were designed to hybridize to DNA having one or more repeats of the complementary TTAGGG sequence found in the human telomere. UV melting curves and surface plasmon resonance experiments demonstrate high affinity and cooperativity for hybridization of these miniprobes to DNA having multiple complementary repeats. Fluorescence spectroscopy for Cy3-labeled miniprobes demonstrate increases in fluorescence intensity for assembling multiple short probes on a DNA target compared with fewer longer probes. The fluorescent γPNA miniprobes were then used to stain telomeres in metaphase chromosomes derived from U2OS cells possessing heterogeneous long telomeres and Jurkat cells harboring homogenous short telomeres. The miniprobes yielded comparable fluorescence intensity to a commercially available PNA 18mer probe in U2OS cells, but significantly brighter fluorescence was observed for telomeres in Jurkat cells. These results suggest that γPNA miniprobes can be effective telomere-staining reagents with applications toward analysis of critically short telomeres, which have been implicated in a range of human diseases.
Co-reporter:Ha H. Pham, Christopher Szent-Gyorgyi, Wendy L. Brotherton, Brigitte F. Schmidt, Kimberly J. Zanotti, Alan S. Waggoner and Bruce A. Armitage
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2015 - vol. 13(Issue 12) pp:NaN3710-3710
Publication Date(Web):2015/02/13
DOI:10.1039/C4OB02522A
Dye-protein fluoromodules consist of fluorogenic dyes and single chain antibody fragments that form brightly fluorescent noncovalent complexes. This report describes two new bichromophoric dyes that extend the range of wavelengths of excitation or emission of existing fluoromodules. In one case, a fluorogenic thiazole orange (TO) was attached to an energy acceptor dye, Cy5. Upon binding to a protein that recognizes TO, red emission due to efficient energy transfer from TO to Cy5 replaces the green emission observed for monochromophoric TO bound to the same protein. Separately, TO was attached to a coumarin that serves as an energy donor. The same green emission is observed for coumarin-TO and TO bound to a protein, but efficient energy transfer allows violet excitation of coumarin-TO, versus longer wavelength, blue excitation of monochromophoric TO. Both bichromophores exhibit low nanomolar KD values for their respective proteins, >95% energy transfer efficiency and high fluorescence quantum yields.
2H-1-Benzopyran-2-one, 3-azido-7-hydroxy-
3-Pyridinecarboxylic acid, 6-[2-(1-methylethylidene)hydrazinyl]-, 2,5-dioxo-1-pyrrolidinyl ester
2-Propenoic acid, 2-methyl-, 2-(2-bromo-2-methyl-1-oxopropoxy)ethyl ester, homopolymer
2,5-Pyrrolidinedione, 1-[(1-oxo-2-propynyl)oxy]-
ACETAMIDE, N-[7-(ACETYLOXY)-2-OXO-2H-1-BENZOPYRAN-3-YL]-
4-Quinolinethiol,7-(trifluoromethyl)-
Benzothiazolium, 5-methoxy-2,3-dimethyl-, iodide