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1.
The aim of this review is to draw a correlation between the structure of the DNA/RNA hybrid and its properties as a substrate for the RNase H, as well as to point the crucial structural requirements for the modified AONs to preserve their RNase H potency. The review is divided into the following parts: (1) mechanistic considerations, (2) target RNA folding-AON folding-RNase H assistance in AON/RNA hybrid formation, (3) carbohydrate modifications, (4) backbone modifications, (5) base modifications, (6) conjugated AONs, (7) importance of the tethered chromophore in AON for the AON/RNA hybrid interactions with the RNase H. The structural changes in the AON/RNA hybrid duplexes brought by different modifications of the sugar, backbone or base in the antisense strand, and the effect of these changes on the RNase H recognition of the modified substrates have been addressed. Only those AON modifications and the corresponding AON/RNA hybrids, which have been structurally characterized by spectroscopic means and functionally analyzed by their ability to elicit RNase H potency in comparison with the native counterpart have been presented here.  相似文献   

2.
The synthesis of oligonucleotides containing 2′-deoxy-2′-fluoro-4′-thioarabinonucleotides is described. 2′-Deoxy-2′-fluoro-5-methyl-4′-thioarabinouridine (4′S-FMAU) was incorporated into 18-mer antisense oligonucleotides (AONs). 4′S-FMAU adopts a predominantly northern sugar conformation. Oligonucleotides containing 4′S-FMAU, unlike those containing FMAU, were unable to elicit E. coli or human RNase H activity, thus corroborating the hypothesis that RNase H prefers duplexes containing oligonucleotides that can adopt eastern conformations in the antisense strand. The duplex structure and stability of these oligonucleotides was also investigated via circular dichroism (CD)- and UV- binding studies. Replacement of the 4′-oxygen by a sulfur atom resulted in a marked decrease in melting temperature of AON:RNA as well as AON:DNA duplexes. 2′-Deoxy-2′-fluoro-4′-thioarabinouridine (4′S-FAU) was incorporated into 21-mer small interfering RNA (siRNA) and the resulting siRNA molecules were able to trigger RNA interference with good efficiency. Positional effects were explored, and synergy with 2′F-ANA, which has been previously established as a functional siRNA modification, was demonstrated.  相似文献   

3.
Ten different chemically modified nucleosides were incorporated into short DNA strands (chimeric oligonucleotides ON3-ON12 and ON15-ON24) and then tested for their capacity to mediate RNAse H cleavage of the complementary RNA strand. The modifications were placed at two central positions directly in the RNase H cleaving region. The RNA strand of duplexes with ON3, ON5 and ON12 were cleaved more efficiently than the RNA strand of the DNA:RNA control duplex. There seems to be no correlation between the thermal stability between the duplexes and RNase H cleavage.  相似文献   

4.
We have characterized cloned His-tag human RNase H1. The activity of the enzyme exhibited a bell-shaped response to divalent cations and pH. The optimum conditions for catalysis consisted of 1 mM Mg(2+) and pH 7-8. In the presence of Mg(2+), Mn(2+) was inhibitory. Human RNase H1 shares many enzymatic properties with Escherichia coli RNase H1. The human enzyme cleaves RNA in a DNA-RNA duplex resulting in products with 5'-phosphate and 3'-hydroxy termini, can cleave overhanging single strand RNA adjacent to a DNA-RNA duplex, and is unable to cleave substrates in which either the RNA or DNA strand has 2' modifications at the cleavage site. Human RNase H1 binds selectively to "A-form"-type duplexes with approximately 10-20-fold greater affinity than that observed for E. coli RNase H1. The human enzyme displays a greater initial rate of cleavage of a heteroduplex-containing RNA-phosphorothioate DNA than an RNA-DNA duplex. Unlike the E. coli enzyme, human RNase H1 displays a strong positional preference for cleavage, i.e. it cleaves between 8 and 12 nucleotides from the 5'-RNA-3'-DNA terminus of the duplex. Within the preferred cleavage site, the enzyme displays modest sequence preference with GU being a preferred dinucleotide. The enzyme is inhibited by single-strand phosphorothioate oligonucleotides and displays no evidence of processivity. The minimum RNA-DNA duplex length that supports cleavage is 6 base pairs, and the minimum RNA-DNA "gap size" that supports cleavage is 5 base pairs.  相似文献   

5.
We report that combining a DNA analog (2′F-ANA) with rigid RNA analogs [2′F-RNA and/or locked nucleic acid (LNA)] in siRNA duplexes can produce gene silencing agents with enhanced potency. The favored conformations of these two analogs are different, and combining them in a 1–1 pattern led to reduced affinity, whereas alternating short continuous regions of individual modifications increased affinity relative to an RNA:RNA duplex. Thus, the binding affinity at key regions of the siRNA duplex could be tuned by changing the pattern of incorporation of DNA-like and RNA-like nucleotides. These heavily or fully modified duplexes are active against a range of mRNA targets. Effective patterns of modification were chosen based on screens using two sequences targeting firefly luciferase. We then applied the most effective duplex designs to the knockdown of the eIF4E binding proteins 4E-BP1 and 4E-BP2. We identified modified duplexes with potency comparable to native siRNA. Modified duplexes showed dramatically enhanced stability to serum nucleases, and were characterized by circular dichroism and thermal denaturation studies. Chemical modification significantly reduced the immunostimulatory properties of these siRNAs in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells.  相似文献   

6.
Ribonuclease HI (RNase H) is a member of the nucleotidyl-transferase superfamily and endo-nucleolytically cleaves the RNA portion in RNA/DNA hybrids and removes RNA primers from Okazaki fragments. The enzyme also binds RNA and DNA duplexes but is unable to cleave either. Three-dimensional structures of bacterial and human RNase H catalytic domains bound to RNA/DNA hybrids have revealed the basis for substrate recognition and the mechanism of cleavage. In order to visualize the enzyme’s interactions with duplex DNA and to establish the structural differences that afford tighter binding to RNA/DNA hybrids relative to dsDNA, we have determined the crystal structure of Bacillus halodurans RNase H in complex with the B-form DNA duplex [d(CGCGAATTCGCG)]2. The structure demonstrates that the inability of the enzyme to cleave DNA is due to the deviating curvature of the DNA strand relative to the substrate RNA strand and the absence of Mg2+ at the active site. A subset of amino acids engaged in contacts to RNA 2′-hydroxyl groups in the substrate complex instead bind to bridging or non-bridging phosphodiester oxygens in the complex with dsDNA. Qualitative comparison of the enzyme’s interactions with the substrate and inhibitor duplexes is consistent with the reduced binding affinity for the latter and sheds light on determinants of RNase H binding and cleavage specificity.  相似文献   

7.
Minasov G  Teplova M  Nielsen P  Wengel J  Egli M 《Biochemistry》2000,39(13):3525-3532
The origins of the substrate specificity of Escherichia coli RNase H1 (termed RNase H here), an enzyme that hydrolyzes the RNA strand of DNA-RNA hybrids, are not understood at present. Although the enzyme binds double-stranded RNA, no cleavage occurs with such duplexes [Lima, W. F., and Crooke, S. T. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 390]. Therefore, the hybrid substrates may not adopt a canonical A-form geometry. Furthermore, RNase H is exquisitely sensitive to chemical modification of the DNA strands in hybrid duplexes. This is particularly relevant to the RNase H-dependent pathway of antisense action. Thus, only very few of the modifications currently being evaluated as antisense therapeutics are tolerated by the enzyme, among them phosphorothioate DNA (PS-DNA). Recently, hybrids of RNA and arabinonucleic acid (ANA) as well as the 2'F-ANA analogue were shown to be substrates of RNase H [Damha, M. J., et al. (1998) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 120, 12976]. Using X-ray crystallography, we demonstrate here that ANA analogues, such as 2'F-ANA [Berger, I., et al. (1998) Nucleic Acids Res. 26, 2473] and [3.3.0]bicyclo-ANA (bc-ANA), may not be able to adopt sugar puckers that are compatible with pure A- or a B-form duplex geometries, but rather prefer the intermediate O4'-endo conformation. On the basis of the observed conformations of these ANA analogues in a DNA dodecamer duplex, we have modeled a duplex of an all-C3'-endo RNA strand and an all-O4'-endo 2'F-ANA strand. This duplex exhibits a minor groove width that is intermediate between that of A-form RNA and B-form DNA, a feature that may be exploited by the enzyme in differentiating between RNA duplexes and DNA-RNA hybrids. Therefore, the combination of the established structural and functional properties of ANA analogues helps settle existing controversies concerning the discrimination of substrates by RNase H. Knowlegde of the structure of an analogue that exhibits enhanced RNA affinity while not interfering with RNase H activity may prove helpful in the design of future antisense modifications.  相似文献   

8.
The structural requirements for DNA/RNA hybrids to be suitable substrates for RNase H1 are well described; however the tolerance level of this enzyme towards modifications that do not alter the duplex conformation is not clearly understood, especially with respect to the sense RNA strand. In order to investigate the molecular requirements of Escherichia coli RNase H1 (termed RNase H1 here) with respect to the sense RNA strand, we synthesized a series of oligonucleotides containing 2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro-beta-D-ribose (2'F-RNA) as a substitute for the natural beta-D-ribose sugars found in RNA. Our results from a series of RNase H1 binding and cleavage studies indicated that 2'F-RNA/DNA hybrids are not substrates of RNase H1 and ultimately led to the conclusion that the 2'-hydroxyl moiety of the RNA strand in a DNA/RNA hybrid is required for both binding and hydrolysis by RNase H1. Through the synthesis of a series of chimeric sense oligonucleotides of mixed RNA and 2'F-RNA composition, the gap requirements of RNase H1 within the sense strand were examined. Results from these studies showed that RNase H1 requires at least five or six natural RNA residues within the sense RNA strand of a hybrid substrate for both binding and hydrolysis. The RNase H1-mediated degradation patterns of these hybrids agree with previous suggestions on the processivity of RNase H1, mainly that the binding site is located 5' to the catalytic site with respect to the sense strand. They also suggest, however, that the binding and catalytic domains of RNase H1 might be closer than has been previously suggested. In addition to the above, physicochemical studies have revealed the thermal stabilities and relative conformations of these modified heteroduplexes under physiological conditions. These findings offer further insights into the physical binding and catalytic properties of the RNase H1-substrate interaction, and have been incorporated into a general model summarizing the mechanism of action of this unique enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
An oligodeoxyribonucleotide (ODN) containing three C5-substituted arabinofuranosyluracils was synthesized by the post-synthetic modification method from the ODN containing three C5-substituted 2,2'-anhydrouridines. The stability of the modified ODN/DNA duplex was lower than that of the corresponding normal duplex but that of the modified ODN/RNA duplex showed little change. The modified ODN could induce RNase H activity and was resistant against nuclease.  相似文献   

10.
Hybrids of RNA and arabinonucleic acid (ANA) as well as the 2′-fluoro-ANA analog (2′F-ANA) were recently shown to be substrates of the enzyme RNase H. Although RNase H binds to double-stranded RNA, no cleavage occurs with such duplexes. Therefore, knowledge of the structure of ANA/RNA hybrids may prove helpful in the design of future antisense oligonucleotide analogs. In this study, we have determined the NMR solution structures of ANA/RNA and DNA/RNA hairpin duplexes and compared them to the recently published structure of a 2′F-ANA/RNA hairpin duplex. We demonstrate here that the sugars of RNA nucleotides of the ANA/RNA hairpin stem adopt the C3′-endo (north, A-form) conformation, whereas those of the ANA strand adopt a ‘rigid’ O4′-endo (east) sugar pucker. The DNA strand of the DNA/RNA hairpin stem is flexible, but the average DNA/RNA hairpin structural parameters are close to the ANA/RNA and 2′F-ANA/RNA hairpin parameters. The minor groove width of ANA/RNA, 2′F-ANA/RNA and DNA/RNA helices is 9.0 ± 0.5 Å, a value that is intermediate between that of A- and B-form duplexes. These results rationalize the ability of ANA/RNA and 2′F-ANA/RNA hybrids to elicit RNase H activity.  相似文献   

11.
We have designed and synthesized mixed backbone oligonucleotides (MBOs) containing 2'-5'-ribo- and 3'-5'-deoxyribonucleotide segments. Thermal melting studies of the phosphodiester MBOs (three 2'-5'linkages at each end) with the complementary 3'-5'-DNA and -RNA target strands suggest that 2'-5'-ribonucleoside incorporation into 3'-5'-oligodeoxyribonucleotides reduces binding to the target strands compared with an all 3'-5'-oligodeoxyribonucleotide of the same sequence and length. Increasing the number of 2'-5'linkages (from six to nine) further reduces binding to the DNA target strand more than the RNA target strand [Kandimalla,E.R. and Agrawal,S. (1996)Nucleic Acids Symp. Ser., 35, 125-126]. Phosphorothioate (PS) analogs of MBOs destabilize the duplex with the DNA target strand more than the duplex with the RNA target strand. Circular dichroism studies indicate that the duplexes of MBOs with the DNA and RNA target strands have spectral characteristics of both A- and B-type conformations. Compared with the control oligonucleotide, MBOs exhibit moderately higher stability against snake venom phosphodiesterase, S1 nuclease and in fetal calf serum. Although 2'-5'modification does not evoke RNase H activity, this modification does not effect the RNase H activation property of the 3'-5'-deoxyribonucleotide segment adjacent to the modification. In vitro studies with MBOs suggest that they have lesser effects on cell proliferation, clotting prolongation and hemolytic complement lysis than do control PS oligodeoxyribonucleotides. PS analogs of MBOs show HIV-1 inhibition comparable with that of a control PS oligodeoxyribonucleotide with all 3'-5'linkages. The current results suggest that a limited number of 2'-5'linkages could be used in conjunction with PS oligonucleotides to further modulate the properties of antisense oligonucleotides as therapeutic agents.  相似文献   

12.
Uniformly modified nucleic acids analogues, oligonucleotide N3'-->P5' phosphoramidates, containing 3'-amino instead of 3'-hydroxyl nucleosides, were synthesized and studied. These compounds form very stable duplexes with complementary native phosphodiester DNA and exceptionally stable duplexes with RNA strands. Increases in duplex melting temperature, deltaTm, relatively to their phosphodiester counterparts, reaches 2.9-3.5 degrees C per modified nucleoside. Moreover, the phosphoramidate compounds form extremely stable triple stranded complexes with single or double stranded DNA oligomers under near physiological salt and pH conditions. Melting temperatures of these triplexes usually exceed that of the isosequential phosphodiester counterparts by up to 35 degrees C. For 11-15-mers 2'-deoxyphosphoramidates are structurally and functionally similar to the native RNA molecules and thus can be used as RNA decoys. They are resistant to enzymatic digestion by nucleases both in vitro and in vivo. Oligonucleotide phosphoramidates apparently are cell permeable, and they have a good bioavailability and biodistribution, while being non-toxic in mice at therapeutically relevant doses. Duplexes of the several studied phosphoramidates with complementary RNA strands apparently are not substrates for RNase H in vitro. Despite that, these compounds exerted high sequence-specific antisense activity in various cell lines and in SCID mice. The observed in vitro lack of RNase H recognition of the RNA:phosphoramidate duplexes may result in better specificity in biological activity of these compounds relative to RNase H inducing oligonucleotides. Experimental results also indicate that oligonucleotide phosphoramidates can be used as efficient and specific modulators of gene expression by an antigene mechanism of action. Finally, the oligo-2'-deoxyphosphoramidate double stranded complexes can structurally mimic native RNA complexes, which could be efficiently and specifically recognized by the RNA binding proteins, such as HIV-1 Rev and Tat.  相似文献   

13.
Solution structures of DNA/RNA hybrid duplexes, d(GCGCA*AA*ACGCG): r(cgcguuuugcg)d(C) (designated PP57), containing two C8-propynyl 2'-deoxyadenosines (A*) and unmodified hybrid (designated U4A4) are solved. The C8-propynyl groups on 2'-deoxyadenosine perturb the local structure of the hybrid duplex, but overall the structure is similar to that of canonical DNA/RNA hybrid duplex except that Hoogsteen hydrogen bondings between A* and U result in lower thermal stability. RNase H is known to cleave RNA only in DNA/RNA hybrid duplexes. Minor groove widths of hybrid duplexes, sugar puckerings of DNA are reported to be responsible for RNase H mediated cleavage, but structural requirements for RNase H mediated cleavage still remain elusive. Despite the presence of bulky propynyl groups of PP57 in the minor groove and greater flexibility, the PP57 is an RNase H substrate. To provide an insight on the interactions between RNase H and substrates we have modeled Bacillus halodurans RNase H-PP57 complex, our NMR structure and modeling study suggest that the residue Gly(15) and Asn(16) of the loop residues between first beta sheet and second beta sheet of RNase HI of Escherichia coli might participate in substrate binding.  相似文献   

14.
Nucleobase modifications dramatically alter nucleic acid structure and thermodynamics. 2-thiouridine (s2U) is a modified nucleobase found in tRNAs and known to stabilize U:A base pairs and destabilize U:G wobble pairs. The recently reported crystal structures of s2U-containing RNA duplexes do not entirely explain the mechanisms responsible for the stabilizing effect of s2U or whether this effect is entropic or enthalpic in origin. We present here thermodynamic evaluations of duplex formation using ITC and UV thermal denaturation with RNA duplexes containing internal s2U:A and s2U:U pairs and their native counterparts. These results indicate that s2U stabilizes both duplexes. The stabilizing effect is entropic in origin and likely results from the s2U-induced preorganization of the single-stranded RNA prior to hybridization. The same preorganizing effect is likely responsible for structurally resolving the s2U:U pair-containing duplex into a single conformation with a well-defined H-bond geometry. We also evaluate the effect of s2U on single strand conformation using UV- and CD-monitored thermal denaturation and on nucleoside conformation using 1H NMR spectroscopy, MD and umbrella sampling. These results provide insights into the effects that nucleobase modification has on RNA structure and thermodynamics and inform efforts toward improving both ribozyme-catalyzed and nonenzymatic RNA copying.  相似文献   

15.
Small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) and microRNAs (miRNAs) guide catalytic sequence-specific cleavage of fully or nearly fully complementary target mRNAs or control translation and/or stability of many mRNAs that share 6-8 nucleotides (nt) of complementarity to the siRNA and miRNA 5' end. siRNA- and miRNA-containing ribonucleoprotein silencing complexes are assembled from double-stranded 21- to 23-nt RNase III processing intermediates that carry 5' phosphates and 2-nt overhangs with free 3' hydroxyl groups. Despite the structural symmetry of a duplex siRNA, the nucleotide sequence asymmetry can generate a bias for preferred loading of one of the two duplex-forming strands into the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC). Here we show that the 5'-phosphorylation status of the siRNA strands also acts as an important determinant for strand selection. 5'-O-methylated siRNA duplexes refractory to 5' phosphorylation were examined for their biases in siRNA strand selection. Asymmetric, single methylation of siRNA duplexes reduced the occupancy of the silencing complex by the methylated strand with concomitant elimination of its off-targeting signature and enhanced off-targeting signature of the phosphorylated strand. Methylation of both siRNA strands reduced but did not completely abolish RNA silencing, without affecting strand selection relative to that of the unmodified siRNA. We conclude that asymmetric 5' modification of siRNA duplexes can be useful for controlling targeting specificity.  相似文献   

16.
A model for the complex between E. coli RNase HI and the DNA/RNA hybrid (previously refined by molecular dynamics simulations) was used to determine the impact of the internucleotide linkage modifications (either 3-O-CH2-P-O-5' or 3-O-P-CH2-O-5) on the ability of the modified-DNA/RNA hybrid to create a complex with the protein. Modified internucleotide linkages were incorporated systematically at different positions close to the 3-end of the DNA strand to interfere with the DNA binding site of RNase H. Altogether, six trajectories were produced (length 1.5ns). Mutual hydrogen bonds connecting both strands of the nucleic acids hybrid, DNA with RNase H, RNA with RNase H, and the scissile bond with the Mg++. 4H2O chelate complex (bound in the active site) were analyzed in detaiL Many residues were involved in binding of the DNA (Arg88, Asn84, Trp85, Trp104, Tyr73, Lys99, Asn100, Thr43, and Asn 16) and RNA (Gln76, Gln72, Tyr73, Lys122, Glu48, Asn44, and Cys13) strand to the substrate-binding site of the RNase H enzyme. The most remarkable disturbance of the hydrogen bonding net was observed for structures with modified internucleotide linkages positioned in a way to interact with the Trp104, Tyr73, Lys99, and Asn100 residues (situated in the middle of the DNA binding site, where a cluster of Trp residues forms a rigid core of the protein structure).  相似文献   

17.
18.
Bacteriophage T4 RNase H belongs to a family of prokaryotic and eukaryotic nucleases that remove RNA primers from lagging strand fragments during DNA replication. Each enzyme has a flap endonuclease activity, cutting at or near the junction between single- and double-stranded DNA, and a 5'- to 3'-exonuclease, degrading both RNA.DNA and DNA.DNA duplexes. On model substrates for lagging strand synthesis, T4 RNase H functions as an exonuclease removing short oligonucleotides, rather than as an endonuclease removing longer flaps created by the advancing polymerase. The combined length of the DNA oligonucleotides released from each fragment ranges from 3 to 30 nucleotides, which corresponds to one round of processive degradation by T4 RNase H with 32 single-stranded DNA-binding protein present. Approximately 30 nucleotides are removed from each fragment during coupled leading and lagging strand synthesis with the complete T4 replication system. We conclude that the presence of 32 protein on the single-stranded DNA between lagging strand fragments guarantees that the nuclease will degrade processively, removing adjacent DNA as well as the RNA primers, and that the difference in the relative rates of synthesis and hydrolysis ensures that there is usually only a single round of degradation during each lagging strand cycle.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Syntheses of non ionic oligodeoxynucleoside phosphoramidates (P-NH2) and mixed phosphoramidate- phosphodiester oligomers were accomplished on automated solid supported DNA synthesizer using both H-phosphonate and phosphoramidite chemistries, in combination with t-butylphenoxyacetyl for N-protection of nucleoside bases, an oxalyl anchored solid support and a final treatment with methanolic ammonia. Thermal stabilities of the hybrids formed between these new analogues and their DNA and RNA complementary strands were determined and compared with those of the corresponding unmodified oligonucleotides, as well as of the phosphorothioate and methylphosphonate derivatives. Dodecathymidines containing P-NH2 links form less stable duplexes with DNA targets, d(C2A12C2) (deltaTm/modification -1.4 degrees C) and poly dA (deltaTm/modification -1.1 degrees C) than the corresponding phosphodiester and methylphosphonate analogues, but the hybrids are slightly more stable than the one obtained with phosphorothioate derivative. The destabilization is more pronounced with poly rA as the target (deltaTm/modification -3 degrees C) and could be compared with that found with the dodecathymidine methylphosphonate. The modification is less destabilizing in an heteropolymer-RNA duplex (deltaTm/modification -2 degrees C). As expected, the P-NH2 modifications are highly resistant towards the action of various nucleases. It is also demonstrated that an all P-NH2 oligothymidine does not elicit Escherichia coli RNase H hydrolysis of the poly rA target but that the modification may be exploited in chimeric oligonucleotides combining P-NH2 sections with a central phosphodiester section.  相似文献   

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