In Situ Super-Resolution Imaging of Telomeres with DNA-PAINT

ACS Omega. 2022 Oct 31;7(44):40512-40519. doi: 10.1021/acsomega.2c05752. eCollection 2022 Nov 8.

Abstract

Telomeres are located at the ends of chromosomes and play an important role in maintaining the integrity of chromosomes and controlling the cycle of cell division. Studies have shown that abnormal telomere length may lead to the occurrence of some diseases. Therefore, accurate measurement of telomere length will be helpful for the prediction and diagnosis of related diseases. DNA point accumulation for imaging in nanoscale topography (PAINT) is an optical super-resolution technology that relies on the instantaneous binding of the fluorescent DNA imaging strand to the target epitope. Here, we present the first demonstration of DNA-PAINT-based in situ super-resolution imaging of telomeres as well as centromeres. For DNA-PAINT imaging, Cy5-labeled telomere DNA (5'-Cy5-TTTTTCCCTAACCCTAA-3') and Cy3-labeled centromere DNA (5'-Cy3-TTTTTAGCTTCTGTCTAGTTT-3') are utilized as the imager strands. Through an improved permeabilization strategy that we proposed, the imager strands can bind with intracellular telomeres and centromeres with high specificity, realizing super-resolution imaging of telomeres and centromeres. To check the applicability of DNA-PAINT in evaluating telomere length, we conducted an experiment using azidothymidine (AZT)-treated tumor cells as the imaging target. The DNA-PAINT imaging results clearly revealed the telomerase inhibition effect of AZT. Compared with single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) with peptide nucleic acid (PNA)-based fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), our method has the advantages of low cost, low toxicity, and simple equipment. Such a DNA-PAINT-based imaging strategy holds great potential in measuring telomere length with high accuracy, which would play an important role in the study of telomere-related diseases such as cancer.