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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
Peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) are DNA mimics with a neutral peptide backbone instead of the negatively charged sugar phosphates. PNAs exhibit several attractive features such as high chemical and thermal stability, resistance to enzymatic degradation, and stable binding to their RNA or DNA targets in a sequence‐specific manner. Therefore, they are widely used in molecular diagnosis of antisense‐targeted therapeutic drugs or probes and in pharmaceutical applications. However, the main hindrance to the effective use of PNAs is their poor uptake by cells as well as the difficult and laborious chemical synthesis. In order to achieve an efficient delivery of PNAs into cells, there are already many published reports of peptides being used for transport across the cell membrane. In this protocol, we describe the automated as well as cost‐effective semi‐automated synthesis of PNAs and PNA‐peptide constructs on an automated peptide synthesizer. The facile synthesis of PNAs will be helpful in generating PNA libraries usable, e.g. for high‐throughput screening in biomolecular studies. Efficient synthetic schemes, the automated procedure, the reduced consumption of costly reagents, and the high purity of the products are attractive features of the reported procedure. Copyright © 2010 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Genome sequencing has revealed thousands of novel genes, placing renewed emphasis on chemical approaches for controlling gene expression. Antisense oligomers designed directly from the information generated by sequencing are one option for achieving this control. Here we explore the rules governing the inhibition of gene expression by peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) inside cells. PNAs are a DNA/RNA mimic in which the phosphate deoxyribose backbone has been replaced by uncharged linkages. Binding to complementary sequences is not hindered by electrostatic repulsion and is characterized by high rates of association and elevated affinities. Here we test the hypothesis that the favorable properties of PNAs offer advantages for recognition of mRNA and antisense inhibition of gene expression in vivo. We have targeted 27 PNAs to 18 different sites throughout the 5'-untranslated region (5'-UTR), start site, and coding regions of luciferase mRNA. PNAs were introduced into living cells in culture as PNA-DNA-lipid complexes, providing a convenient high throughput method for cellular delivery. We find that PNAs targeted to the terminus of the 5'-UTR are potent and sequence-specific antisense agents. PNAs fifteen to eighteen bases in length were optimal inhibitors. The introduction of one or two mismatches abolished inhibition, and complementary PNAs targeted to the sense strand were also inactive. In striking contrast to effective inhibition by PNAs directed to the terminal region, PNAs complementary to other sites within the 5'-UTR do not inhibit gene expression. We also observe no inhibition by PNAs complementary to the start site or rest of the coding region, nor do we detect inhibition by PNAs that are highly C/G rich and possess extremely high affinities for their target sequences. Our results suggest that PNAs can block binding of the translation machinery but are less able to block the progress of the ribosome along mRNA. The high specificity of antisense inhibition by PNAs emphasizes both the promise and the challenges for PNAs as antisense agents and provides general guidelines for using PNAs to probe the molecular recognition of biological targets inside cells.  相似文献   

6.
Kaihatsu K  Huffman KE  Corey DR 《Biochemistry》2004,43(45):14340-14347
Peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) offer a distinct option for silencing gene expression in mammalian cells. However, the full value of PNAs has not been realized, and the rules governing the recognition of cellular targets by PNAs remain obscure. Here we examine the uptake of PNAs and PNA-peptide conjugates by immortal and primary human cells and compare peptide-mediated and DNA/lipid-mediated delivery strategies. We find that both peptide-mediated and lipid-mediated delivery strategies promote entry of PNA and PNA-peptide conjugates into cells. Confocal microscopy reveals a punctate distribution of PNA and PNA-peptide conjugates regardless of the delivery strategy used. Peptide D(AAKK)(4) and a peptide containing a nuclear localization sequence (NLS) promote the spontaneous delivery of antisense PNAs into cultured cells. The PNA-D(AAKK)(4) conjugate inhibits expression of human caveolin 1 (hCav-1) in both HeLa and primary endothelial cells. DNA/lipid-mediated delivery requires less PNA, while peptide-mediated delivery is simpler and is less toxic to primary cells. The ability of PNA-peptide conjugates to enter primary and immortal human cells and inhibit gene expression supports the use of PNAs as antisense agents for investigating the roles of proteins in cells. Both DNA/lipid-mediated and peptide-mediated delivery strategies are efficient, but the compartmentalized localization of PNAs suggests that improving the cellular distribution may lead to increased efficacy.  相似文献   

7.
Peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) and conjugates between oligonucleotides and cationic peptides possess superior potential for strand invasion at complementary sequences. We discovered that oligonucleotide-peptide conjugates and PNAs fall into three classes based on their hybridization efficiency; i) those complementary to inverted repeats within AT-rich region hybridize with highest efficiency; ii) those complementary to areas adjacent to inverted repeats or near AT-rich regions hybridize with moderate efficiency; and iii) those complementary to other regions do not detectably hybridize. The correlations between oligomer chemistry, DNA target sequence, and hybridization efficiency that we report here have important implications for the recognition of duplex DNA.  相似文献   

8.
Peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) containing an insert of three chiral monomers based on D-lysine ('chiral box') were synthesized and used as probes in Biospecific Interaction Analysis (BIA) for the recognition of DNA containing the W1282X point mutation of the cystic fibrosis gene. Hybridization experiments carried out in solution showed enhanced mismatch recognition when compared with the analogous achiral PNAs and oligonucleotides. The signal intensity was lower, but the selectivity of the Biacore response was found to be much higher than that observed with achiral PNAs. The newly designed chiral PNA probes were also found to hybridize with a 1:1 mixture of normal (N-W1282X) and mutated (M-W1282X) DNA oligomers immobilized on the biosensor, thus allowing discrimination not only between a normal and a mutated sequence (healthy/homozygous), but also between homo- and heterozygous individuals. These results suggest that 'chiral box' PNAs are potential powerful tools for the analysis of single point mutations of biological/biomedical relevance.  相似文献   

9.
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
  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The understanding of the interaction of chiral species with DNA or RNA is very important for the development of new tools in biology and of new drugs. Several cases in which chirality is a crucial point in determining the DNA binding mode are reviewed and discussed, with the aim of illustrating how chirality can be considered as a tool for improving the understanding of mechanisms and the effectiveness of nucleic acid recognition. The review is divided into two parts: the former describes examples of chiral species interacting with DNA: intercalators, metal complexes, and groove binders; the latter part is dedicated to chirality in DNA analogs, with discussion of phosphate stereochemistry and chirality of ribose substitutes, in particular of peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) for which a number of works have been published recently dealing with the effect of chirality in DNA recognition. The discussion is intended to show how enantiomeric recognition originates at the molecular level, by exploiting the enormous progresses recently achieved in the field of structural characterization of complexes formed by nucleic acid with their ligands by crystallographic and spectroscopic methods. Examples of application of the DNA binding molecules described and the role of chirality in DNA recognition relevant for biotechnology or medicinal chemistry are reported.  相似文献   

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15.
Oh SY  Ju Y  Kim S  Park H 《Oligonucleotides》2010,20(5):225-230
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are noncoding RNAs approximately 22 nucleotides in length that play a major role in the regulation of important biological processes, including cellular development, differentiation, and apoptosis. Antisense oligonucleotides against miRNAs are useful tools for studying the biological mechanisms and therapeutic targets of miRNAs. Various antisense oligonucleotides chemistries, including peptide nucleic acids (PNAs), have been developed to enhance nuclease-resistance and affinity and specificity for miRNA targets. PNAs have a greater specificity and affinity for DNA and RNA than do natural nucleic acids, and they are resistant to nucleases-an essential property of an miRNA inhibitor that will be exposed to cellular nucleases. However, the main limiting factor in the use of PNAs is their reduced penetration into cells. Recently, several cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) have been investigated as a means to overcome the limited penetration of PNAs. Here, we evaluated the ability of 11 CPPs to transport PNAs inside cells in the absence of transfection reagents and then investigated the ability of these CPPs to inhibit miRNAs. Of the 11 CPPs tested, Tat-modified-conjugated PNA showed the most effective penetration into cells in the absence of transfection reagents and most effectively inhibited miRNAs. Our data demonstrate that Tat-modified-conjugated CPP is the most suitable for supporting PNA-mediated miRNA inhibition.  相似文献   

16.
In some aspects, homogeneous (all-in-solution) nucleic acid hybridization assays are superior to the traditionally used heterogeneous (solution-to-surface) alternatives. Profluorescent probes, which reveal fluorescence enhancement or fluorescence polarization upon their binding to DNA and RNA targets, are a paradigm for the real-time sequence-specific homogeneous detection of nucleic acids. A variety of such DNA or RNA-derived probes of different constructs has already been developed with numerous applications. However, the recent additions to the field - locked nucleic acids (LNAs) and peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) - significantly increase the potential of profluorescent probes and provide a robust impulse for their new uses.  相似文献   

17.
Hu J  Corey DR 《Biochemistry》2007,46(25):7581-7589
Peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) are nonionic DNA/RNA mimics that can recognize complementary sequences by Watson-Crick base pairing. The neutral PNA backbone facilitates the recognition of duplex DNA by strand invasion, suggesting that antigene PNAs (agPNAs) can be important tools for exploring the structure and function of chromosomal DNA inside cells. However, before agPNAs can enter wide use, it will be necessary to develop straightforward strategies for introducing them into cells. Here, we demonstrate that agPNA-peptide conjugates can target promoter DNA and block progesterone receptor (PR) gene expression inside cells. Thirty-six agPNA-peptide conjugates were synthesized and tested. We observed inhibition of gene expression using cationic peptides containing either arginine or lysine residues, with eight or more cationic amino acids being preferred. Both 13 and 19 base agPNA-peptide conjugates were inhibitory. Inhibition was observed in human cancer cell lines expressing either high or low levels of progesterone receptor. Modification of agPNA-peptide conjugates with hydrophobic amino acids or small molecule hydrophobic moieties yielded improved potency. Inhibition by agPNAs did not require cationic lipid or any other additive, but adding agents to cell growth media that promote endosomal release caused modest increases in agPNA potency. These data demonstrate that chromosomal DNA is accessible to agPNA-peptide conjugates and that chemical modifications can improve potency.  相似文献   

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19.
Although peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) are neutral by themselves, they are usually appended with positively charged lysine residues to increase their solubility and binding affinity for nucleic acid targets. Thus obtained cationic PNAs very effectively interact with the designated duplex DNA targets in a sequence-specific manner forming strand-invasion complexes. We report on the study of the nonspecific effects in the kinetics of formation of sequence-specific PNA-DNA complexes. We find that in a typical range of salt concentrations used when working with strand-invading PNAs (10-20 mM NaCl) the PNA binding rates essentially do not depend on the presence of nontarget DNA in the reaction mixture. However, at lower salt concentrations (<10 mM NaCl), the rates of PNA binding to DNA targets are significantly slowed down by the excess of unrelated DNA. This effect of nontarget DNA arises from depleting the concentration of free PNA capable of interacting with DNA target due to adhesion of positively charged PNA molecules on the negatively charged DNA duplex. As expected, the nonspecific electrostatic effects are more pronounced for more charged PNAs. We propose a simple model quantitatively describing all major features of the observed phenomenon. This understanding is important for design of and manipulation with the DNA-binding polycationic ligands in general and PNA-based drugs in particular.  相似文献   

20.
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