Molecular probe
A molecular probe is a group of atoms or molecules used in molecular biology or chemistry to study the properties of other molecules or structures. If some measurable property of the molecular probe used changes when it interacts with the analyte, the interactions between the probe and the analyte can be studied. This makes it possible to indirectly study the properties of compounds and structures which may be hard to study directly.
The choice of molecular probe will depend on which compound or structure is being studied as well as on what property is of interest. Radioactive DNA or RNA sequences are used in molecular genetics to detect the presence of a complementary sequence by molecular hybridization.
Common probes
There are two main classes of antibodies- Covalently bound probes, that bind to the target molecule
- Non-covalent probes that interact with the target protein through intramolecular interactions
Covalent Molecular Probes
The goal of covalently bound probes is to cause an irreversible covalent link to form between the probe and the target molecule, so that when the fluorophore is used to identify the molecule, it is physically attached to the target molecule. Proteins are a common target of molecular probes, and can either be targeted through specific amino acids, or through their active site.For molecular probes that interact with the active site, what often occurs is the receptor portion of the probe is typically a ligand, with an electrophilic or nucleophilic functional group attached to the ligand that can then covalently bind to an amino acid in the active site, so that the fluorophore can be directly linked to the target protein. An example of this, Pablo Martin-Gago Et. Al designed a Woodward Reagent K probe, that reacts with a neighbouring glutamic acid in the active site of PDE6δ, after the ligand portion of the molecule bound to the Active site. This allows for the fluorophore attached to the probe to be identified by researchers, after successfully binding to the protein.
Another application of this is with photo-reactive molecules that can bind after being excited by light, which has been worked on by Dr. Michael Taylor’s lab group at the University of Arizona. Pyridinium and Pyrimidinium salts are a pertinent example of this, as when they are activated by 427 nm light and 467 nm light respectively, they form a reactive fluorophore that then binds to the amino acid tryptophan.
Non-Covalent Probes
The goal of non-covalent is to design a receptor that maximizes the amount of intramolecular reactions.A class of probes that achieve this are “Alexa” probes. This class of probes contains hundreds of different antibodies that are designed to bind tightly to the target molecule or protein, allowing for further reactions to be conducted, or for attached fluorophores to be recognized through fluorescence detection at their specified wavelength.