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1.
Biotinylated homopyrimidine decamer peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) are shown to form sequence-specific and stable complexes with complementary oligopurine targets in linear double-stranded DNA. The noncovalent complexes are visualized by electron microscopy (EM) without chemical fixation using streptavidin as an EM marker. The triplex stoichiometry of the PNA-DNA complexes (two PNA molecules presumably binding by Watson-Crick and Hoogsteen pairing with one of the strands of the duplex DNA) is indicated by the appearance of two streptavidin 'beads' per target site in some micrographs, and is also supported by the formation of two retardation bands in a gel shift assay. Quantitative analysis of the positions of the streptavidin 'beads' revealed that under optimized conditions PNA-DNA complexes are preferably formed with the fully complementary target. An increase in either the PNA concentration or the incubation time leads to binding at sites containing one or two mismatches. Our results demonstrate that biotinylated PNAs can be used for EM mapping of short targets in duplex DNA.  相似文献   

2.
Peptide amphiphiles comprising a class of conjugates of peptide nucleic acid (PNA), natural amino acids, and n-alkanes were synthesized and studied. These PNA amphiphiles (PNAA) self-assemble at concentrations between 10 and 50 muM and exhibit water solubilities above 500 muM. The highly specific, stable DNA binding properties of PNAs are preserved by these modifications, with no significant differences between the thermodynamics of DNA binding of the PNA peptide and the PNA amphiphile. Proper solubilization of the PNAA required the attachment of (Lys)(2) and (Glu)(4) peptides to PNAs, which affected the PNAA-DNA duplex stability by electrostatic interactions between these charged amino acids and the negatively charged DNA backbone. These electrostatic effects did not affect the specificity of DNA binding, however. Electrostatic effects are screened with added salt, in a manner consistent with previous studies of PNA-DNA duplex stability and predictions from a charged-cylinder model for the duplex.  相似文献   

3.
Peptide nucleic acid (PNA) binding-mediated gene regulation   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Wang G  Xu XS 《Cell research》2004,14(2):111-116
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4.
The enhanced thermodynamic stability of PNA:DNA and PNA:RNA duplexes compared with DNA:DNA and DNA:RNA duplexes has been attributed in part to the lack of electrostatic repulsion between the uncharged PNA backbone and negatively charged DNA or RNA backbone. However, there are no previously reported studies that systematically evaluate the effect of ionic strength on duplex stability for PNA having a charged backbone. Here we investigate the role of charge repulsion in PNA binding by synthesizing PNA strands having negatively or positively charged side chains, then measuring their duplex stability with DNA or RNA at varying salt concentrations. At low salt concentrations, positively charged PNA binds more strongly to DNA and RNA than does negatively charged PNA. However, at medium to high salt concentrations, this trend is reversed, and negatively charged PNA shows higher affinity for DNA and RNA than does positively charged PNA. These results show that charge screening by counterions in solution enables negatively charged side chains to be incorporated into the PNA backbone without reducing duplex stability with DNA and RNA. This research provides new insight into the role of electrostatics in PNA binding, and demonstrates that introduction of negatively charged side chains is not significantly detrimental to PNA binding affinity at physiological ionic strength. The ability to incorporate negative charge without sacrificing binding affinity is anticipated to enable the development of PNA therapeutics that take advantage of both the inherent benefits of PNA and the multitude of charge-based delivery technologies currently being developed for DNA and RNA.  相似文献   

5.
Peptide nucleic acid (PNA) is a synthetic DNA mimic with valuable properties and a rapidly growing scope of applications. With the exception of recently introduced pseudocomplementary PNAs, binding of common PNA oligomers to target sites located inside linear double-stranded DNAs (dsDNAs) is essentially restricted to homopurine–homopyrimidine sequence motifs, which significantly hampers some of the PNA applications. Here, we suggest an approach to bypass this limitation of common PNAs. We demonstrate that PNA with mixed composition of ordinary nucleobases is capable of sequence-specific targeting of complementary dsDNA sites if they are located at the very termini of DNA duplex. We then show that such targeting makes it possible to perform capturing of designated dsDNA fragments via the DNA-bound biotinylated PNA as well as to signal the presence of a specific dsDNA sequence, in the case a PNA beacon is employed. We also examine the PNA–DNA conjugate and prove that it can initiate the primer-extension reaction starting from the duplex DNA termini when a DNA polymerase with the strand-displacement ability is used. We thus conclude that recognition of duplex DNA by mixed-base PNAs via the end invasion has a promising potential for site-specific and sequence-unrestricted DNA manipulation and detection.  相似文献   

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Peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) can be conveniently delivered into cells in complex with DNA and cationic lipid. This advance enables researchers to test the hypothesis that PNAs offer advantages for recognition of DNA or RNA targets within cells. In this review, I describe the intracellular delivery of PNAs as DNA-PNA-cationic lipid complexes and discuss recognition of three classes of nucleic acid target: duplex DNA, single-stranded mRNA, and the ribonucleoprotein telomerase. These targets differ dramatically in their potential for base-paired structure, offering distinct challenges for hybridization by PNAs. It is apparent that PNAs can exert sequence-specific effects within cells, and their full potential has only begun to be explored.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) can be conveniently delivered into cells in complex with DNA and cationic lipid. This advance enables researchers to test the hypothesis that PNAs offer advantages for recognition of DNA or RNA targets within cells. In this review, I describe the intracellular delivery of PNAs as DNA-PNA-cationic lipid complexes and discuss recognition of three classes of nucleic acid target: duplex DNA, single-stranded mRNA, and the ribonucleoprotein telomerase. These targets differ dramatically in their potential for base-paired structure, offering distinct challenges for hybridization by PNAs. It is apparent that PNAs can exert sequence-specific effects within cells, and their full potential has only begun to be explored.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) can be conveniently delivered into cells in complex with DNA and cationic lipid. This advance enables researchers to test the hypothesis that PNAs offer advantages for recognition of DNA or RNA targets within cells. In this review, I describe the intracellular delivery of PNAs as DNA-PNA-cationic lipid complexes and discuss recognition of three classes of nucleic acid target: duplex DNA, single-stranded mRNA, and the ribonucleoprotein telomerase. These targets differ dramatically in their potential for base-paired structure, offering distinct challenges for hybridization by PNAs. It is apparent that PNAs can exert sequence-specific effects within cells, and their full potential has only begun to be explored.  相似文献   

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Peptide nucleic acid oligomers (PNAs) have a remarkable ability to invade duplex DNA at polypurine–polypyrimidine target sequences. Applications for PNAs in medicine and biotechnology would increase if the rules governing their hybridization to mixed base sequences were also clear. Here we describe hybridization of PNAs to mixed base sequences and demonstrate that simple chemical modifications can enhance recognition. Easily synthesized and readily soluble eight and 10 base PNAs bind to plasmid DNA at an inverted repeat that is likely to form a cruciform structure, providing convenient tags for creating PNA–plasmid complexes. PNAs also bind to mixed base sequences that cannot form cruciforms, suggesting that recognition is a general phenomenon. Rates of strand invasion are temperature dependent and can be enhanced by attaching PNAs to positively charged peptides. Our results support use of PNAs to access the information within duplex DNA and demonstrate that simple chemical modifications can make PNAs even more powerful agents for strand invasion. Simple strategies for enhancing strand invasion should facilitate the use of PNAs: (i) as biophysical probes of double-stranded DNA; (ii) to target promoters to control gene expression; and (iii) to direct sequence-specific mutagenesis.  相似文献   

14.
Peptide nucleic acid (PNA) is a DNA analog with broad biotechnical applications, and possibly also treatment applications. Its suggested uses include that of a specific anchor sequence for biologically active peptides to plasmids in a sequence-specific manner. Such complexes, referred to as Bioplex, have already been used to enhance non-viral gene transfer in vitro. To investigate how hybridization of PNAs to supercoiled plasmids would be affected by the binding of multiple PNA-peptides to the same strand of DNA, we have developed a method of quantifying the specific binding of PNA using a PNA labeled with a derivative of the fluorophore thiazole orange (TO). Cooperative effects were found at a distance of up to three bases. With a peptide present at the end of one of the PNAs, steric hindrance occurred, reducing the increase in binding rate when the distance between the two sites was less than two bases. In addition, we found increased binding kinetics when two PNAs binding to overlapping sites on opposite DNA strands were used, without the use of chemically modified bases in the PNAs.  相似文献   

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Sequence-selective recognition of double-stranded (ds) DNA by homopyrimidine peptide nucleic acid (PNA) oligomers can occur by major groove triplex binding or by helix invasion via triplex P-loop formation. We have compared the binding of a decamer, a dodecamer and a pentadecamer thymine–cytosine homopyrimidine PNA oligomer to a sequence complementary homopurine target in duplex DNA using gel-shift and chemical probing analyses. We find that all three PNAs form stable triplex invasion complexes, and also conventional triplexes with the dsDNA target. Triplexes form with much faster kinetics than invasion complexes and prevail at lower PNA concentrations and at shorter incubation times. Furthermore, increasing the ionic strength strongly favour triplex formation over invasion as the latter is severely inhibited by cations. Whereas a single triplex invasion complex is formed with the decameric PNA, two structurally different target-specific invasion complexes were characterized for the dodecameric PNA and more than five for the pentadecameric PNA. Finally, it is shown that isolated triplex complexes can be converted to specific invasion complexes without dissociation of the Hoogsteen base-paired triplex PNA. These result demonstrate a clear example of a ‘triplex first’ mechanism for PNA helix invasion.  相似文献   

17.
Peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) are neutral DNA analogues, which bind single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) strongly and with high sequence specificity. However, binding efficiency is dependent on the purine content of the PNA strand. This property make more difficult application of PNA as hybridization probes in, e.g., PNA chips, since at a set temperature the hybridization of a fraction of the DNA targets to the PNA probes does not obey Watson-Crick binding rules. The polypurine PNAs, for example, bind the mismatch containing DNA targets stronger, than the pyrimidine rich PNAs their fully complementary targets. Herein we show that PNA-DNA binding efficiency can be finely tuned by the conjugation of derivatives of naphthalene diimide (NADI) to the N-terminus of PNA using polyamide linkers of different lengths. This approach can potentially be used for the design of PNA probes, which bind their DNA targets with similar affinity independently of the PNA sequence.  相似文献   

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Strand displacement binding kinetics of cationic pseudoisocytosine-containing linked homopyrimidine peptide nucleic acids (bis-PNAs) to fully matched and singly mismatched decapurine targets in double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) are reported. PNA-dsDNA complex formation was monitored by gel mobility shift assay and pseudo-first order kinetics of binding was obeyed in all cases studied. The kinetic specificity of PNA binding to dsDNA, defined as the ratio of the initial rates of binding to matched and mismatched targets, increases with increasing ionic strength, whereas the apparent rate constant for bis-PNA-dsDNA complex formation decreases exponentially. Surprisingly, at very low ionic strength two equally charged bis-PNAs which have the same sequence of nucleobases but different linkers and consequently different locations of three positive charges differ in their specificity of binding by one order of magnitude. Under appropriate experimental conditions the kinetic specificity for bis-PNA targeting of dsDNA is as high as 300. Thus multiply charged cationic bis-PNAs containing pseudoisocytosines (J bases) in the Hoogsteen strand combined with enhanced binding affinity also exhibit very high sequence specificity, thereby making such reagents extremely efficient for sequence-specific targeting of duplex DNA.  相似文献   

20.
Recently, we have shown that peptide nucleic acid (PNA) tridecamers targeted to the codon 74, 128 and 149 regions of Ha-ras mRNA arrested translation elongation in vitro. Our data demonstrated for the first time that PNAs with mixed base sequence targeted to the coding region of a messenger RNA could arrest the translation machinery and polypeptide chain elongation. The peculiarity of the complexes formed with PNA tridecamers and Ha-ras mRNA rests upon the stability of PNA-mRNA hybrids, which are not dissociated by cellular proteins or multiple denaturing conditions. In the present study, we show that shorter PNAs such as a dodecamer or an undecamer targeted to the codon 74 region arrest translation elongation in vitro. The 13, 12, and 11-mer PNAs contain eight and the 10-mer PNA seven contiguous pyrimidine residues. Upon binding with parallel Hoogsteen base-pairing to the PNA-RNA duplex, six of the cytosine bases and one thymine base of a second PNA can form C.G*C(+) and T.A*T triplets. Melting experiments show two well-resolved transitions corresponding to the dissociation of the third strand from the core duplex and to melting of duplex at higher temperature. The enzymatic structure mapping of a target 27-mer RNA revealed a hairpin structure that is disrupted upon binding of tri-, dodeca-, undeca- and decamer PNAs. We show that the non-bonded nucleobase overhangs on the RNA stabilize the PNA-RNA hybrids and probably assist the PNA in overcoming the stable secondary structure of the RNA target. The great stability of PNA-RNA duplex and triplex structures allowed us to identify both 1:1 and 2:1 PNA-RNA complexes using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of -flight mass spectrometry. Therefore, it is possible to successfully target mixed sequences in structured regions of messenger RNA with short PNA oligonucleotides that form duplex and triplex structures that can arrest elongating ribosomes.  相似文献   

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