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1.
Oligonucleotides capable of sequence-specific triple helix formation have been proposed as DNA binding ligands useful for modulation of gene expression and for directed genome modification. However, the effectiveness of such triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) depends on their ability to bind to their target sites within cells, and this can be limited under physiologic conditions. In particular, triplex formation in the pyrimidine motif is favored by unphysiologically low pH and high magnesium concentrations. To address these limitations, a series of pyrimidine TFOs were tested for third-strand binding under a variety of conditions. Those containing 5-(1-propynyl)-2'-deoxyuridine (pdU) and 5-methyl-2'-deoxycytidine (5meC) showed superior binding characteristics at neutral pH and at low magnesium concentrations, as determined by gel mobility shift assays and thermal dissociation profiles. Over a range of Mg2+ concentrations, pdU-modified TFOs formed more stable triplexes than did TFOs containing 2'-deoxythymidine. At 1 mM Mg2+, a DeltaTm of 30 degreesC was observed for pdU- versus T-containing 15-mers (of generic sequence 5' TTTTCTTTTTTCTTTTCT 3') binding to the cognate A:T bp rich site, indicating that pdU-containing TFOs are capable of substantial binding even at physiologically low Mg2+ concentrations. In addition, the pdU-containing TFOs were superior in gene targeting experiments in mammalian cells, yielding 4-fold higher mutation frequencies in a shuttle vector-based mutagenesis assay designed to detect mutations induced by third-strand-directed psoralen adducts. These results suggest the utility of the pdU substitution in the pyrimidine motif for triplex-based gene targeting experiments.  相似文献   

2.
As an alternative to standard gene transfer techniques for genetic manipulation, we have investigated the use of triple helix-forming oligonucleotides to target mutations to selected genes within mammalian cells. By treating monkey COS cells with oligonucleotides linked to psoralen, we have generated targeted mutations in a simian virus 40 (SV40) vector contained within the cells via intracellular triple helix formation. Oligonucleotide entry into the cells and sequence-specific triplex formation within the SV40 DNA deliver the psoralen to the targeted site. Photoactivation of the psoralen by long-wavelength UV light yields adducts and thereby mutations at that site. We engineered into the SV40 vector novel supF mutation reporter genes containing modified polypurine sites amenable to triplex formation. By comparing the abilities of a series of oligonucleotides to target these new sites, we show that targeted mutagenesis in vivo depends on the strength and specificity of the third-strand binding. Oligonucleotides with weak target site binding affinity or with only partial target site homology were ineffective at inducing mutations in the SV40 vectors within the COS cells. We also show that the targeted mutagenesis is dependent on the oligonucleotide concentration and is influenced by the timing of the oligonucleotide treatment and of the UV irradiation of the cells. Frequencies of intracellular targeted mutagenesis in the range of 1 to 2% were observed, depending upon the conditions of the experiment. DNA sequence analysis revealed that most of the mutations were T.A-to-A.T transversions precisely at the targeted psoralen intercalation site. Several deletions encompassing that site were also seen. The ability to target mutations to selected sites within mammalian cells by using modified triplex-forming oligonucleotides may provide a new research tool and may eventually lead to therapeutic applications.  相似文献   

3.
The specific recognition of homopurine–homo pyrimidine regions in duplex DNA by triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) provides an attractive strategy for genetic manipulation. Alkylation of nucleobases with functionalized TFOs would have the potential for site-directed mutagenesis. Recently, we demonstrated that a TFO bearing 2-amino-6-vinylpurine derivative, 1, achieves triplex-mediated reaction with high selectivity toward the cytosine of the G-C target site. In this report, we have investigated the use of this reagent to target mutations to a specific site in a shuttle vector plasmid, which replicates in mammalian cells. TFOs bearing 1 produced adducts at the complementary position of 1 and thereby introduced mutations at that site during replication/repair of the plasmid in mammalian cells. Reagents that produce covalent cytosine modifications are relatively rare. These TFOs enable the preparation of templates carrying targeted cytosine adducts for in vitro and in vivo studies. The ability to target mutations may prove useful as a tool for studying DNA repair, and as a technique for gene therapy and genetic engineering.  相似文献   

4.
Triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) bind specifically to duplex DNA and provide a strategy for site-directed modification of genomic DNA. Recently we demonstrated TFO-mediated targeted gene knockout following systemic administration in animals. However, a limitation to this approach is the requirement for a polypurine tract (typically 15-30 base pairs (bp)) in the target DNA to afford high affinity third strand binding, thus restricting the number of sites available for effective targeting. To overcome this limitation, we have investigated the ability of chemically modified TFOs to target a short (10 bp) site in a chromosomal locus in mouse cells and induce site-specific mutations. We report that replacement of the phosphodiester backbone with cationic phosphoramidate linkages, either N,N-diethylethylenediamine or N,N-dimethylaminopropylamine, in a 10-nucleotide, psoralen-conjugated TFO confers substantial increases in binding affinity in vitro and is required to achieve targeted modification of a chromosomal reporter gene in mammalian cells. The triplex-directed, site-specific induction of mutagenesis in the chromosomal target was charge- and modification-dependent, with the activity of N,N-diethylethylenediamine > N,N-dimethylaminopropylamine phosphodiester, resulting in 10-, 6-, and <2-fold induction of target gene mutagenesis, respectively. Similarly, N,N-diethylethylenediamine and N,N-dimethylaminopropylamine TFOs were found to enhance targeting at a 16-bp G:C bp-rich target site in a chromatinized episomal target in monkey COS cells, although this longer site was also targetable by a phosphodiester TFO. These results indicate that replacement of phosphodiester bonds with positively charged N,N-diethylethylenediamine linkages enhances intracellular activity and allows targeting of relatively short polypurine sites, thereby substantially expanding the number of potential triplex target sites in the genome.  相似文献   

5.
Successful gene-targeting reagents must be functional under physiological conditions and must bind chromosomal target sequences embedded in chromatin. Triple helix-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) recognize and bind specific sequences via the major groove of duplex DNA and may have potential for gene targeting in vivo. We have constructed chemically modified, psoralen-linked TFOs that mediate site-specific mutagenesis of a chromosomal gene in living cells. Here we show that targeting efficiency is sensitive to the biology of the cell, specifically, cell cycle status. Targeted mutagenesis was variable across the cycle with the greatest activity in S phase. This was the result of differential TFO binding as measured by cross-link formation. Targeted cross-linking was low in quiescent cells but substantially enhanced in S phase cells with adducts in approximately 20-30% of target sequences. 75-80% of adducts were repaired faithfully, whereas the remaining adducts were converted into mutations (>5% mutation frequency). Clones with mutations could be recovered by direct screening of colonies chosen at random. These results demonstrate high frequency target binding and target mutagenesis by TFOs in living cells. Successful protocols for TFO-mediated manipulation of chromosomal sequences are likely to reflect a combination of appropriate oligonucleotide chemistry and manipulation of the cell biology.  相似文献   

6.
Kim KH  Nielsen PE  Glazer PM 《Biochemistry》2006,45(1):314-323
DNA-binding molecules, including triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) and peptide nucleic acids (PNAs), can be utilized to introduce site-specific mutations or to promote recombination at selected genomic sites. To further evaluate the utility of PNAs for site-specific gene modification, we tested dimeric bis-PNAs conjugated to psoralen. These PNAs are designed to form a triplex-invasion complex within the supF reporter gene in an episomal shuttle vector and to direct site-specific photoadduct formation by the conjugated psoralen. The psoralen-bis-PNA conjugate was found to direct photoadduct formation to the intended 5'-TpA base step next to the PNA-binding site, and the photoadduct formation efficiency displayed both concentration and UVA irradiation dependence. The effect of PNA-targeted photoadducts in a mammalian system was tested by SV40-based shuttle vector assay. After in vitro binding, we found that photoadducts directed by PNAs conjugated to psoralen-induced mutations at frequencies in the range of 0.46%, 6.5-fold above the background. In a protocol for intracellular gene targeting in the episomal shuttle vector, the psoralen-PNA-induced mutation frequency was 0.13%, 3.5-fold higher than the background. Most of the induced mutations were deletions and single-base-pair substitutions at or adjacent to the targeted PNA-binding and photoadduct-formation sites. When the results are taken together, they demonstrate the ability of bis-PNAs conjugated with psoralen to mediate site-specific gene modification, and they further support the development of PNAs as tools for gene-targeting applications.  相似文献   

7.
Gene targeting by triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) has proven useful for gene modulation in vivo. Photoreactive molecules have been conjugated to TFOs to direct sequence-specific damage in double-stranded DNA. However, the photoproducts are often repaired efficiently in cells. This limitation has led to the search for sequence-specific photoreactive reagents that can produce more genotoxic lesions. Here we demonstrate that photoactivated pyrene-conjugated TFOs (pyr-TFOs) induce DNA strand breaks near the pyrene moiety with remarkably high efficiency and also produce covalent pyrene-DNA adducts. Free radical scavenging experiments demonstrated a role for singlet oxygen activated by the singlet excited state of pyrene in the mechanism of pyr-TFO-induced DNA damage. In cultured mammalian cells, the effect of photoactivated pyr-TFO-directed DNA damage was to induce mutations, in the form of deletions, approximately 7-fold over background levels, at the targeted site. Thus, pyr-TFOs represent a potentially powerful new tool for directing DNA strand breaks to specific chromosomal locations for biotechnological and potential clinical applications.  相似文献   

8.
Sequence-specific DNA-binding molecules such as triple helix-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) provide a means for inducing site-specific mutagenesis and recombination at chromosomal sites in mammalian cells. However, the utility of TFOs is limited by the requirement for homopurine stretches in the target duplex DNA. Here, we report the use of pseudo-complementary peptide nucleic acids (pcPNAs) for intracellular gene targeting at mixed sequence sites. Due to steric hindrance, pcPNAs are unable to form pcPNA–pcPNA duplexes but can bind to complementary DNA sequences by Watson–Crick pairing via double duplex-invasion complex formation. We show that psoralen-conjugated pcPNAs can deliver site-specific photoadducts and mediate targeted gene modification within both episomal and chromosomal DNA in mammalian cells without detectable off-target effects. Most of the induced psoralen-pcPNA mutations were single-base substitutions and deletions at the predicted pcPNA-binding sites. The pcPNA-directed mutagenesis was found to be dependent on PNA concentration and UVA dose and required matched pairs of pcPNAs. Neither of the individual pcPNAs alone had any effect nor did complementary PNA pairs of the same sequence. These results identify pcPNAs as new tools for site-specific gene modification in mammalian cells without purine sequence restriction, thereby providing a general strategy for designing gene targeting molecules.  相似文献   

9.
Molecules that interact with DNA in a sequence-specific manner are attractive tools for manipulating gene sequence and expression. For example, triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs), which bind to oligopyrimidine.oligopurine sequences via Hoogsteen hydrogen bonds, have been used to inhibit gene expression at the DNA level as well as to induce targeted mutagenesis in model systems. Recent advances in using oligonucleotides and analogs to target DNA in a sequence-specific manner will be discussed. In particular, chemical modification of TFOs has been used to improve binding to chromosomal target sequences in living cells. Various oligonucleotide analogs have also been found to expand the range of sequences amenable to manipulation, including so-called "Zorro" locked nucleic acids (LNAs) and pseudo-complementary peptide nucleic acids (pcPNAs). Finally, we will examine the potential of TFOs for directing targeted gene sequence modification and propose that synthetic nucleases, based on conjugation of sequence-specific DNA ligands to DNA damaging molecules, are a promising alternative to protein-based endonucleases for targeted gene sequence modification.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) are DNA-binding molecules, which offer the potential to selectively modulate gene expression. However, the biological activity of TFOs as potential antigene compounds has been limited by cellular uptake. Here, we investigate the effect of cell-penetrating peptides on the biological activity of TFOs as measured in an assay for gene-targeted mutagenesis. Using the transport peptide derived from the third helix of the homeodomain of antennapedia (Antp), we tested TFO–peptide conjugates compared with unmodified TFOs. TFOs covalently linked to Antp resulted in a 20-fold increase in mutation frequency when compared with ‘naked’ oligonucleotides. There was no increase above background in mutation frequency when Antp by itself was added to the cells or when Antp was linked to mixed or scrambled sequence control oligonucleotides. In addition, the TFO–peptide conjugates increased the mutation frequency of the target gene, and not the control gene, in a dose-responsive manner. Confocal microscopy using labeled oligonucleotides indicated increased cellular uptake of TFOs when linked to Antp, consistent with the gene-targeting data. These results suggest that peptide conjugation may enhance intranuclear delivery of reagents designed to bind to chromosomal DNA.  相似文献   

12.
Triple helix forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) that bind chromosomal targets in living cells may become tools for genome manipulation, including gene knockout, conversion, or recombination. However, triplex formation by DNA third strands, particularly those in the pyrimidine motif, requires nonphysiological pH and Mg(2+) concentration, and this limits their development as gene-targeting reagents. Recent advances in oligonucleotide chemistry promise to solve these problems. For this study TFOs containing 2'-O-methoxy (2'-OMe) and 2'-O-(2-aminoethyl) (2'-AE) ribose substitutions in varying proportion have been constructed. The TFOs were linked to psoralen and designed to target and mutagenize a site in the hamster HPRT gene. T(m) analyses showed that triplexes formed by these TFOs were more stable than the underlying duplex, regardless of 2'-OMe/2'-AE ratio. However, TFOs with 2'-AE residues were more stable in physiological pH than those with only 2'-OMe sugars, as a simple function of 2'-AE content. In contrast, gene knockout assays revealed a threshold requirement--TFOs with three or four 2'-AE residues were at least 10-fold more active than the TFO with two 2'-AE residues. The HPRT knockout frequencies with the most active TFOs were 300-400-fold above the background, whereas there was no activity against the APRT gene, a monitor of nonspecific mutagenesis.  相似文献   

13.
Triple helix-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) can bind to polypurine/polypyrimidine regions in DNA in a sequence-specific manner. Triple helix formation has been shown to stimulate recombination in mammalian cells in both episomal and chromosomal targets containing direct repeat sequences. Bifunctional oligonucleotides consisting of a recombination donor domain tethered to a TFO domain were found to mediate site-specific recombination in an intracellular SV40 vector target. To elucidate the mechanism of triplex-induced recombination, we have examined the ability of intermolecular triplexes to provoke recombination within plasmid substrates in human cell-free extracts. An assay for reversion of a point mutation in the supFG1 gene in the plasmid pSupFG1/G144C was established in which recombination in the extracts was detected upon transformation into indicator bacteria. A bifunctional oligonucleotide containing a 30-nucleotide TFO domain linked to a 40-nucleotide donor domain was found to mediate gene correction in vitro at a frequency of 46 x 10(-)5, at least 20-fold above background and over 4-fold greater than the donor segment alone. Physical linkage of the TFO to the donor was unnecessary, as co-mixture of separate TFO and donor segments also yielded elevated gene correction frequencies. When the recombination and repair proteins HsRad51 and XPA were depleted from the extracts using specific antibodies, the triplex-induced recombination was diminished, but was either partially or completely restored upon supplementation with the purified HsRad51 or XPA proteins, respectively. These results establish that triplex-induced, intermolecular recombination between plasmid targets and short fragments of homologous DNA can be detected in human cell extracts and that this process is dependent on both XPA and HsRad51.  相似文献   

14.
Triple helix formation by purine-rich oligonucleotides in the anti-parallel motif is inhibited by physiological concentrations of potassium. Substitution with 7-deazaxanthine (c7X) has been suggested as a strategy to overcome this effect. We have tested this by examining triple helix formation both in vitro and in vivo by a series of triple helix-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) containing guanine plus either adenine, thymine, or c7X. The TFOs were conjugated to psoralen at the 5'end and were designed to bind to a portion of the supF mutation reporter gene. Using in vitro gel mobility shift assays, we found that triplex formation by the c7X-substituted TFOs was relatively resistant to the presence of 140 mM K+. The c7X-containing TFOs were also superior in gene targeting experiments in mammalian cells, yielding 4- to 5-fold higher mutation frequencies in a shuttle vector-based mutagenesis assay designed to detect mutations induced by third strand-directed psoralen adducts. When the phosphodiester backbone was replaced by a phosphorothioate one, the in vitro binding of the c7X-TFOs was not affected, but the efficiency of in vivo triple helix formation was reduced. These results indicate the utility of the c7X substitution for in vivo gene targeting experiments, and they show that the feasibility of the triplex anti-gene strategy can be significantly enhanced by advances in nucleotide chemistry.  相似文献   

15.
16.
This study aimed to synthesize triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) containing 2′-deoxy-6-thioxanthosine (s6X) and 2′-deoxy-6-thioguanosine (s6Gs) residues and examined their triplex-forming ability. Consecutive arrangement of s6X and s6Gs residues increased the triplex-forming ability of the oligonucleotides more than 50 times, compared with the unmodified TFOs. Moreover, the stability of triplex containing a mismatched pair was much lower than that of the full-matched triplex, though s6X could form a s6X-GC mismatched pair via tautomerization of s6X. The present results reveal excellent properties of modified TFOs containing s6Xs and s6Gs residues, which may be harnessed in gene therapy and DNA nanotechnology.  相似文献   

17.
18.
19.
Gene therapy has been hindered by the low frequency of homologous recombination in mammalian cells. To stimulate recombination, we investigated the use of triple-helix-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) to target DNA damage to a selected site within cells. By treating cells with TFOs linked to psoralen, recombination was induced within a simian virus 40 vector carrying two mutant copies of the supF tRNA reporter gene. Gene conversion events, as well as mutations at the target site, were also observed. The variety of products suggests that multiple cellular pathways can act on the targeted damage, and data showing that the triple helix can influence these pathways are presented. The ability to specifically induce recombination or gene conversion within mammalian cells by using TFOs may provide a new research tool and may eventually lead to novel applications in gene therapy.  相似文献   

20.
A method has been developed to attach 4'-(hydroxymethyl)-4,5',8-trimethylpsoralen to the 5 position of thymine bases during solid-phase oligonucleotide synthesis. UV irradiation of triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) containing internally attached psoralens produces photoadducts at TpA steps within target duplexes, thus relaxing the constraints on selection of psoralen target sequences. Photoreaction of TFOs containing two psoralens, located at the 5'- and 3'-ends, has been used to create double-strand cross-links (triplex staples) at both termini of the TFO. Such complexes have no free single-stranded ends. TFOs containing 4'-(hydroxymethyl)-4,5',8-trimethylpsoralen, 3-methyl-2-aminopyridine, and 5-(3-aminoprop-2-ynyl)deoxyuridine formed photoadducts with target duplexes under near-physiological conditions.  相似文献   

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