Issue 7, 2005

Molecular beacons for bioanalytical applications

Abstract

Molecular beacons (MBs) are hairpin-shaped oligonucleotides that contain both fluorophore and quencher moieties. They act like switches and are normally in a closed state, when the fluorophore and the quencher are brought together to turn “off” the fluorescence. When prompted to undergo conformational changes that open the hairpin structure, the fluorophore and the quencher are separated, and fluorescence is turned “on.” This Education will outline the principles of MBs and discuss recent bioanalytical applications of these probes for in vitro RNA and DNA monitoring, biosensors and biochips, real-time monitoring of genes and gene expression in living systems, as well as the next generation of MBs for studies on proteins, the MB aptamers. These important applications have shown that MBs hold great potential in genomics and proteomics where real-time molecular recognition with high sensitivity and excellent specificity is critical.

Graphical abstract: Molecular beacons for bioanalytical applications

Article information

Article type
Education
Submitted
07 Jan 2005
Accepted
10 May 2005
First published
09 Jun 2005

Analyst, 2005,130, 1002-1005

Molecular beacons for bioanalytical applications

L. Tan, Y. Li, T. J. Drake, L. Moroz, K. Wang, J. Li, A. Munteanu, C. James Yang, K. Martinez and W. Tan, Analyst, 2005, 130, 1002 DOI: 10.1039/B500308N

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