词条 | Cyanine | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
Cyanine is the non-systematic name of a synthetic dye family belonging to polymethine group. The word cyanin is from the English word "cyan", which conventionally means a shade of blue-green (close to "aqua") and is derived from the Greek {{lang|grc|κυάνεος}}/{{lang|grc|κυανοῦς}} kyaneos/kyanous which means a somewhat different color: "dark blue". Cyanines were and are still used in industry, and more recently in biotechnology (labeling, analysis). Cyanines have many uses as fluorescent dyes, particularly in biomedical imaging. Depending on the structure, they cover the electromagnetic spectrum from near IR to UV. There are a large number reported in the literature. StructureThere are three types of cyanines:[1]
R2N+=CH[CH=CH]n-NR2 (I)
Aryl=N+=CH[CH=CH]n-NR2 (II)
Aryl=N+=CH[CH=CH]n-N=Aryl (III) where two quaternary nitrogens are joined by a polymethine chain.[2] Both nitrogens may each be independently part of a heteroaromatic moiety, such as pyrrole, imidazole, thiazole, pyridine, quinoline, indole, benzothiazole, etc. History and Use in IndustryCyanines were first synthesized over a century ago. They were originally used, and still are, to increase the sensitivity range of photographic emulsions, i.e., to increase the range of wavelengths which will form an image on the film, making the film panchromatic. Cyanines are also used in CD-R and DVD-R media. The ones used are mostly green or light blue in color, and are chemically unstable. This makes unstabilized cyanine discs unsuitable for archival CD and DVD use, as they can fade and become unreadable in a few years, however, recent cyanine discs contain stabilizers that slow down the deterioration significantly. These discs are often rated with an archival life of 75 years or more. The other dyes used in CD-Rs are phthalocyanine and azo. Use in BiotechnologyCyanines dyes are usually synthesized from 2, 3, 5 or 7-methine structures with reactive groups on either one or both of the nitrogen ends so that they can be chemically linked to either nucleic acids or protein molecules. Labeling is done for visualization and quantification purposes. Biological applications include comparative genomic hybridization and gene chips, which are used in transcriptomics, and various studies in proteomics such as RNA localization,[3] molecular interaction studies by fluorescence energy transfer (FRET) and fluorescent immunoassays. Alan S. Waggoner et al. of Carnegie-Mellon University filed a key patent application in this field in 1986, which later resulted in the grant of a number of patents relating to the use of Cyanine dyes including US6225050 (B1) in 2001 and US6956032 (B1) in 2005. This intellectual property was licensed to GE Healthcare. In addition GE Healthcare registered "Cy" and "CyDye" as trademarks. Cyanines dyes are available with different modifications such as methyl, ethyl or butyl substituents, carboxyl, acetylmethoxy, and sulfo groups which alter their hydrophilicity.[4]
Ex (nm): Excitation wavelength in nanometers Em (nm): Emission wavelength in nanometers MW: Molecular weight QY: Quantum yield Common Cyanine dyes and their usesCyanines can advantageously replace conventional dyes such as fluorescein and rhodamines because they yield brighter and more stable fluorescence.
Cy3 fluoresces greenish yellow (~550 nm excitation, ~570 nm emission), while Cy5 is fluorescent in the red region (~650 excitation, 670 nm emission).[7] Cy3 can be detected by various fluorometers, imagers, and microscopes with standard filters for Tetramethylrhodamine (TRITC). Due to its high molar extinction coefficient, this dye is also easily detected by naked eye on electrophoresis gels, and in solution. Cy5 became a popular replacement for far red fluorescent dyes because of its high extinction coefficient (as small as 1 nanomol can be detected in gel electrophoresis by naked eye) and its fluorophore emission maximum in the red region, where many CCD detectors have maximum sensitivity and biological objects give low background interference. The scanners actually use different laser emission wavelengths (typically 532 nm and 635 nm) and filter wavelengths (550-600 nm and 655-695 nm) to avoid background contamination. They are thus able to easily distinguish colors from Cy3 and from Cy5, and also able to quantify the amount of Cy3 and Cy5 labeling in one sample (multiparametric detection).
Cy3.5 can replace SulfoRhodamine 101. Cy5.5 is a near-infrared (IR) fluorescence-emitting dye (Excitation/emission maximum 678/694 nm). Cy7 is a near-IR fluor that is invisible to the naked eye (Excitation/emission maximum 750/776 nm). It is used in in vivo imaging applications, as well as the Cy7.5 dye. Sulfo–Cyanine dyes bear one or two sulfo groups, rendering the Cy dye water-soluble, but tri- and quadri-sulfonated forms are available for even higher water solubility.[4] PEGylation is another modification that confers hydrophilicity, not only to the dye but also to the labeled conjugate. Nomenclature and StructureStandard chemical names exactly specify the chemical structure of molecules. The Cy3 and Cy5 nomenclature was first proposed by Ernst, et al.[2] in 1989, and is non-standard since it gives no hint of their chemical structures. In the original paper the number designated the count of the methines (as shown), and the side chains were unspecified. Due to this ambiguity various structures are designated Cy3 and Cy5 in the literature. The R groups do not have to be identical. In the dyes as used they are short aliphatic chains one or both of which ends in a highly reactive moiety such as N-hydroxysuccinimide or maleimide. Cyanine Dye AlternativesMany analogs of standard Cy 2 / 3 / 3.5 / 5 / 5.5 / 7 / 7.5 dyes were developed, using diverse modification: Alexa Fluor dyes, Dylight, FluoProbes dyes, Sulfo Cy dyes,[8] Seta dyes,[9] IRIS dyes from Cyanine Technologies [10] and others can be used interchangeably with Cy dyes in most biochemical applications, with claimed improvements in solubility, fluorescence, or photostability.[11][12]Whilst patent based IP protection for the standard Cy series of dyes has now lapsed, trademark based IP continues to inhibit the promotion of dyes with the original Cy naming. As a result, dyes that are chemically identical to Cy dyes, but called different names, are now sold. Cy5 ozone susceptibilityIn 2003, researchers at Inpharmatics and Agilent reported in Analytical Chemistry that microarrays which used Cy5 were susceptible to intermittent data quality decrease caused by environmental ozone. Exposures to ozone levels above 5-10 ppb for 10–30 seconds were reported to decrease the reproducibility of Cy5 microarrays. Much higher levels of ozone (>100 ppb) were required to observe an effect in Cy3.[13] There are devices that claim to remove ambient ozone levels but they have not been 3rd party tested. ApplicationsCyanine dyes are used to label proteins, antibodies, peptides, nucleic acid probes, and any kind of other biomolecules to be used in a variety of fluorescence detection techniques: Flow cytometry, Microscopy (mainly Visible range, but also UV, IR), Microplate assays, Microarrays, as well as "light-up Probes".[14] Nucleic Acid LabelingIn microarray experiments DNA or RNA is labeled with either Cy3 or Cy5 that has been synthesized to carry an N-hydroxysuccinimidyl ester (NHS-ester) reactive group. Since NHS-esters react readily only with aliphatic amine groups, which nucleic acids lack, nucleotides have to be modified with aminoallyl groups. This is done through incorporating aminoallyl-modified nucleotides during synthesis reactions. A good ratio is a label every 60 bases such that the labels are not too close to each other, which would result in quenching effects. Protein labelingFor protein labeling, Cy3 and Cy5 dyes sometimes bear a succinimidyl group to react with amines, or a maleimide group to react with a sulfhydryl group of cysteine residues. Cy5 is sensitive to the electronic environment it resides in. Changes in the conformation of the protein it is attached to will produce either enhancement or quenching of the emission. The rate of this change can be measured to determine enzyme kinetic parameters. The dyes can be used for similar purposes in FRET experiments. Cy3 and Cy5 are used in proteomics experiments so that samples from two sources can be mixed and run together through the separation process.[15][16] This eliminates variations due to differing experimental conditions that are inevitable if the samples were run separately. These variations make it extremely difficult, if not impossible, to use computers to automate the acquisition of the data after the separation is complete. Using these dyes makes the automation trivial. References1. ^{{cite book|last1=Kim|first1=Eunha|last2=Park|first2=Seung Bum|editor1-last=Demchenko|editor1-first=Alexander P.|title=Advanced Fluorescence Reporters in Chemistry and Biology I: Fundamentals and Molecular Design Volume 8 of Springer Series on Fluorescence|date=2010|publisher=Springer|location=Berlin|isbn=9783642047022|page=172|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oaA8Msj61JEC&pg=PA172|chapter=Discovery of New Synthetic Dyes: Targeted Synthesis or Combinatorial Approach?}} 2. ^1 {{cite journal | vauthors = Ernst LA, Gupta RK, Mujumdar RB, Waggoner AS | title = Cyanine dye labeling reagents for sulfhydryl groups | journal = Cytometry | volume = 10 | issue = 1 | pages = 3–10 | date = Jan 1989 | pmid = 2917472 | doi = 10.1002/cyto.990100103 }} 3. ^{{cite journal | vauthors = Blower MD, Feric E, Weis K, Heald R | title = Genome-wide analysis demonstrates conserved localization of messenger RNAs to mitotic microtubules | journal = The Journal of Cell Biology | volume = 179 | issue = 7 | pages = 1365–73 | date = Dec 2007 | pmid = 18166649 | pmc = 2373496 | doi = 10.1083/jcb.200705163 | url = http://www.jcb.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=18166649 }} 4. ^1 CYanine dyes 5. ^1 {{cite journal | vauthors = Mujumdar B, Ernst A, Mujumdar SR, Lewis CJ, Waggoner AS | title = Cyanine dye labeling reagents: Sulfoindocyanine succinimidyl esters | journal = Bioconjugate Chemistry | date = Mar 1993 | volume = 4 | issue = 2 | pages = 105–111 | doi = 10.1021/bc00020a001 }} 6. ^{{cite journal | vauthors = Umezawa K, Matsui A, Nakamura Y, Citterio D, Suzuki K | title = Bright, color-tunable fluorescent dyes in the Vis/NIR region: establishment of new "tailor-made" multicolor fluorophores based on borondipyrromethene | journal = Chemistry | volume = 15 | issue = 5 | pages = 1096–106 | year = 2009 | pmid = 19117043 | doi = 10.1002/chem.200801906 }} 7. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.jacksonimmuno.com/technical/f-cy3-5.asp |author=Jackson ImmunoResearch |title=Cyanine Dyes (Cy2, Cy3, and Cy5) |website= |accessdate=2008-10-31}} 8. ^Cyandye, LLC 9. ^SETA BioMedicals 10. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.cyanines.eu/life-science/products/iris-dyes |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2015-01-26 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://archive.is/20150126174359/http://www.cyanines.eu/life-science/products/iris-dyes |archivedate=2015-01-26 |df= }} 11. ^FluoProbes488 comparison to FITC, Cyanine2 12. ^FluoProbes547H comparison in Confocal Microscopy 13. ^{{cite journal | vauthors = Fare TL, Coffey EM, Dai H, He YD, Kessler DA, Kilian KA, Koch JE, LeProust E, Marton MJ, Meyer MR, Stoughton RB, Tokiwa GY, Wang Y | title = Effects of atmospheric ozone on microarray data quality | journal = Analytical Chemistry | volume = 75 | issue = 17 | date = Sep 2003 | pmid = 14632079 | pages=4672–5 | doi=10.1021/ac034241b}} 14. ^{{cite book |last1=Armitage |first1=Bruce A. |title=Cyanine Dye–DNA Interactions: Intercalation, Groove Binding, and Aggregation |journal=Topics in Current Chemistry |volume=253 |date=27 January 2005 |pages=55–76 |doi=10.1007/b100442 |language=en|isbn=978-3-540-22835-6 }} 15. ^{{cite journal | vauthors = Unlü M, Morgan ME, Minden JS | title = Difference gel electrophoresis: a single gel method for detecting changes in protein extracts | journal = Electrophoresis | volume = 18 | issue = 11 | pages = 2071–7 | date = Oct 1997 | pmid = 9420172 | doi = 10.1002/elps.1150181133 }} 16. ^{{cite journal | vauthors = Osterman IA, Ustinov AV, Evdokimov DV, Korshun VA, Sergiev PV, Serebryakova MV, Demina IA, Galyamina MA, Govorun VM, Dontsova OA | title = A nascent proteome study combining click chemistry with 2DE | journal = Proteomics | volume = 13 | issue = 1 | pages = 17–21 | date = Jan 2013 | pmid = 23161590 | doi = 10.1002/pmic.201200393 | url = https://www.cyandye.com/A_nascent_proteome_study_combining_click_chemistry_with_2DE.pdf }} External links{{wiktionary}}{{Authority control}} 2 : Cyanine dyes|Quaternary ammonium compounds |
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