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Further Probing of Cu(2+)-Dependent PNAzymes Acting as Artificial RNA Restriction Enzymes

Peptide nucleic acid (PNA)-neocuproine conjugates have been shown to efficiently catalyse the cleavage of RNA target sequences in the presence of Cu(2+) ions in a site-specific manner. These artificial enzymes are designed to force the formation of a bulge in the RNA target, the sequence of which ha...

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Autores principales: Luige, Olivia, Murtola, Merita, Ghidini, Alice, Strömberg, Roger
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6412939/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30769777
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules24040672
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author Luige, Olivia
Murtola, Merita
Ghidini, Alice
Strömberg, Roger
author_facet Luige, Olivia
Murtola, Merita
Ghidini, Alice
Strömberg, Roger
author_sort Luige, Olivia
collection PubMed
description Peptide nucleic acid (PNA)-neocuproine conjugates have been shown to efficiently catalyse the cleavage of RNA target sequences in the presence of Cu(2+) ions in a site-specific manner. These artificial enzymes are designed to force the formation of a bulge in the RNA target, the sequence of which has been shown to be key to the catalytic activity. Here, we present a further investigation into the action of Cu(2+)-dependent PNAzymes with respect to the dependence on bulge composition in 3- and 4-nucleotide bulge systems. Cu(2+)-dependent PNAzymes were shown to have a clear preference for 4-nucleotide bulges, as the cleavage of 3-nucleotide bulge-forming RNA sequences was significantly slower, which is illustrated by a shift in the half-lives from approximately 30 min to 24 h. Nonetheless, the nucleotide preferences at different positions in the bulge displayed similar trends in both systems. Moreover, the cleavage site was probed by introducing critical chemical modifications to one of the cleavage site nucleotides of the fastest cleaved 4-nucleotide RNA bulge. Namely, the exclusion of the exocyclic amine of the central adenine and the replacement of the 2′-hydroxyl nucleophile with 2′-H or 2′-OMe substituents in the RNA severely diminished the rate of RNA cleavage by the Cu(2+)-dependent PNAzyme, giving insight into the mechanism of cleavage. Moreover, the shorter recognition arm of the RNA/PNAzyme complex was modified by extending the PNAzyme by two additional nucleobases. The new PNAzyme was able to efficiently promote the cleavage of RNA when fully hybridised to a longer RNA target and even outperform the previous fastest PNAzyme. The improvement was demonstrated in cleavage studies with stoichiometric amounts of either PNAzyme present, and the extended PNAzyme was also shown to give turnover with a 10-fold excess of the RNA target.
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spelling pubmed-64129392019-04-09 Further Probing of Cu(2+)-Dependent PNAzymes Acting as Artificial RNA Restriction Enzymes Luige, Olivia Murtola, Merita Ghidini, Alice Strömberg, Roger Molecules Article Peptide nucleic acid (PNA)-neocuproine conjugates have been shown to efficiently catalyse the cleavage of RNA target sequences in the presence of Cu(2+) ions in a site-specific manner. These artificial enzymes are designed to force the formation of a bulge in the RNA target, the sequence of which has been shown to be key to the catalytic activity. Here, we present a further investigation into the action of Cu(2+)-dependent PNAzymes with respect to the dependence on bulge composition in 3- and 4-nucleotide bulge systems. Cu(2+)-dependent PNAzymes were shown to have a clear preference for 4-nucleotide bulges, as the cleavage of 3-nucleotide bulge-forming RNA sequences was significantly slower, which is illustrated by a shift in the half-lives from approximately 30 min to 24 h. Nonetheless, the nucleotide preferences at different positions in the bulge displayed similar trends in both systems. Moreover, the cleavage site was probed by introducing critical chemical modifications to one of the cleavage site nucleotides of the fastest cleaved 4-nucleotide RNA bulge. Namely, the exclusion of the exocyclic amine of the central adenine and the replacement of the 2′-hydroxyl nucleophile with 2′-H or 2′-OMe substituents in the RNA severely diminished the rate of RNA cleavage by the Cu(2+)-dependent PNAzyme, giving insight into the mechanism of cleavage. Moreover, the shorter recognition arm of the RNA/PNAzyme complex was modified by extending the PNAzyme by two additional nucleobases. The new PNAzyme was able to efficiently promote the cleavage of RNA when fully hybridised to a longer RNA target and even outperform the previous fastest PNAzyme. The improvement was demonstrated in cleavage studies with stoichiometric amounts of either PNAzyme present, and the extended PNAzyme was also shown to give turnover with a 10-fold excess of the RNA target. MDPI 2019-02-14 /pmc/articles/PMC6412939/ /pubmed/30769777 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules24040672 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Luige, Olivia
Murtola, Merita
Ghidini, Alice
Strömberg, Roger
Further Probing of Cu(2+)-Dependent PNAzymes Acting as Artificial RNA Restriction Enzymes
title Further Probing of Cu(2+)-Dependent PNAzymes Acting as Artificial RNA Restriction Enzymes
title_full Further Probing of Cu(2+)-Dependent PNAzymes Acting as Artificial RNA Restriction Enzymes
title_fullStr Further Probing of Cu(2+)-Dependent PNAzymes Acting as Artificial RNA Restriction Enzymes
title_full_unstemmed Further Probing of Cu(2+)-Dependent PNAzymes Acting as Artificial RNA Restriction Enzymes
title_short Further Probing of Cu(2+)-Dependent PNAzymes Acting as Artificial RNA Restriction Enzymes
title_sort further probing of cu(2+)-dependent pnazymes acting as artificial rna restriction enzymes
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6412939/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30769777
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules24040672
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