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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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In an attempt to improve physico-chemical and biological properties of peptide nucleic acids (PNAs), particularly water solubility and cellular uptake, the synthesis of chimeric oligomers consisted of PNA and phosphono-PNA analogues (pPNAs) bearing the four natural nucleobases has been accomplished. To produce these chimeras, pPNA monomers of two types containing N-(2-hydroxyethyl)phosphonoglycine, or N-(2-aminoethyl)phosphonoglycine backbone, were used in conjunction with PNA monomers representing derivatives of N-(2-aminoethyl)glycine, or N-(2-hydroxyethyl)glycine. The oligomers obtained were composed of either PNA and pPNA stretches or alternating PNA and pPNA monomers. The examination of hybridization properties of PNA-pPNA chimeras to DNA and RNA complementary strands in comparison with pure PNAs, and pPNAs as well as DNA-pPNA hybrids and DNA fragments confirmed that these chimeras form stable complexes with complementary DNA and RNA fragments. They were found to be resistant to degradation by nucleases. All these properties together with good solubility in water make PNA-pPNA hybrids promising for further evaluation as potential therapeutic agents.  相似文献   

6.
PNA microarrays for hybridisation of unlabelled DNA samples   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
Several strategies have been developed for the production of peptide nucleic acid (PNA) microarrays by parallel probe synthesis and selective coupling of full-length molecules. Such microarrays were used for direct detection of the hybridisation of unlabelled DNA by time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry. PNAs were synthesised by an automated process on filter-bottom microtitre plates. The resulting molecules were released from the solid support and attached without any purification to microarray surfaces via the terminal amino group itself or via modifications, which had been chemically introduced during synthesis. Thus, only full-length PNA oligomers were attached whereas truncated molecules, produced during synthesis because of incomplete condensation reactions, did not bind. Different surface chemistries and fitting modifications of the PNA terminus were tested. For an examination of coupling selectivity, bound PNAs were cleaved off microarray surfaces and analysed by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. Additionally, hybridisation experiments were performed to compare the attachment chemistries, with fully acetylated PNAs spotted as controls. Upon hybridisation of unlabelled DNA to such microarrays, binding events could be detected by visualisation of phosphates, which are an integral part of nucleic acids but missing entirely in PNA probes. Overall best results in terms of selectivity and sensitivity were obtained with thiol-modified PNAs on maleimide surfaces.  相似文献   

7.
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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8.
Slow kinetics of homopyrimidine PNA binding to single stranded DNA and RNA targets is manifested in significant hysteresis in thermal UV absorption experiments. We have compared temperatures of dissociation (Tdis) and reassociation (Tass) for triplexes formed by DNA and single or bis PNAs with K50 derived from gel mobility experiments. Results indicated there was no correlation between Tdis and K50 while reasonable correlation between Tass and K50 was found. This correlation enabled use of easy thermal UV absorption experiments for evaluation of PNA binding to DNA/RNA targets.  相似文献   

9.
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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Mixed pyrimidine-purine peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) composed of thymines and guanines are shown to form a PNA(2)-DNA triplex with Watson-Crick complementary adenine-cytosine oligonucleotides and to bind complementary adenine-cytosine targets in double stranded DNA by helix invasion. These results for the first time demonstrate binding of an unmodified PNA oligomer to a mixed pyrimidine-purine target in double stranded DNA and illustrate a novel binding mode of PNA.  相似文献   

11.
Peptide nucleic acid (PNA) is a DNA mimic in which the nucleobases are linked by an N-(2-aminoethyl) glycine backbone. Here we report that PNA can interact with single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) in a non-sequence-specific fashion. We observed that a 15mer PNA inhibited the ssDNA-stimulated ATPase activity of a bacteriophage T4 helicase, Dda. Surprisingly, when a fluorescein-labeled 15mer PNA was used in binding studies no interaction was observed between PNA and Dda. However, fluorescence polarization did reveal non-sequence-specific interactions between PNA and ssDNA. Thus, the inhibition of ATPase activity of Dda appears to result from depletion of the available ssDNA due to non-Watson–Crick binding of PNA to ssDNA. Inhibition of the ssDNA-stimulated ATPase activity was observed for several PNAs of varying length and sequence. To study the basis for this phenomenon, we examined self-aggregation by PNAs. The 15mer PNA readily self-aggregates to the point of precipitation. Since PNAs are hydrophobic, they aggregate more than DNA or RNA, making the study of this phenomenon essential for understanding the properties of PNA. Non-sequence-specific interactions between PNA and ssDNA were observed at moderate concentrations of PNA, suggesting that such interactions should be considered for antisense and antigene applications.  相似文献   

12.
PNA/DNA interstrand cross-links (ICLs) were observed when peptide nucleic acids (PNAs) containing modified thymine derivatives were hybridized with the complementary or one-base mismatched DNA upon photolysis or treatments of oxidative agent. PNA/DNA ICL formation provides a useful method for biological applications such as antisense technologies or PNA chips.  相似文献   

13.
The thermodynamics of 13 hybridization reactions between 10 base DNA sequences of design 5'-ATGCXYATGC-3' with X, Y = A, C, G, T and their complementary PNA and DNA sequences were determined from isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) measurements at ambient temperature. For the PNA/DNA hybridization reactions, the binding constants range from 1.8 x 10(6)M(-1)for PNA(TT)/DNA to 4.15 x 10(7)M(-1)for PNA(GA)/DNA and the binding enthalpies range from -194 kJ mol(-1)for PNA(CG)/DNA to -77 kJ mol(-1)for PNA(GT)/DNA. For the corresponding DNA/DNA binding reactions, the binding constants range from 2.9 x 10(5)M(-1)for DNA(GT)/DNA to 1.9 x 10(7)M(-1)for DNA(CC)/DNA and the binding enthalpies range from -223 kJ mol(-1)for DNA(CG)/DNA to -124 kJ mol(-1)for DNA(TT)/DNA. Most of the PNA sequences exhibited tighter binding affinities than their corresponding DNA sequences resulting from smaller entropy changes in the PNA/DNA hybridization reactions. van't Hoff enthalpies and extrapolated Delta G values determined from UV melting studies on the duplexes exhibited closer agreement with the ITC binding enthalpies and Delta G values for the DNA/DNA duplexes than for the PNA/DNA duplexes.  相似文献   

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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   

15.
Bentin T  Larsen HJ  Nielsen PE 《Biochemistry》2003,42(47):13987-13995
"Tail-clamp" PNAs composed of a short (hexamer) homopyrimidine triplex forming domain and a (decamer) mixed sequence duplex forming extension have been designed. Tail-clamp PNAs display significantly increased binding to single-stranded DNA compared with PNAs lacking a duplex-forming extension as determined by T(m) measurements. Binding to double-stranded (ds) DNA occurred by combined triplex and duplex invasion as analyzed by permanganate probing. Furthermore, C(50) measurements revealed that tail-clamp PNAs consistently bound the dsDNA target more efficiently, and kinetics experiments revealed that this was due to a dramatically reduced dissociation rate of such complexes. Increasing the PNA net charge also increased binding efficiency, but unexpectedly, this increase was much more pronounced for tailless-clamp PNAs than for tail-clamp PNAs. Finally, shortening the tail-clamp PNA triplex invasion moiety to five residues was feasible, but four bases were not sufficient to yield detectable dsDNA binding. The results validate the tail-clamp PNA concept and expand the applications of the P-loop technology.  相似文献   

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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   

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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.
ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Synthetic antisense molecules have an enormous potential for therapeutic applications in humans. The major aim of such strategies is to specifically interfere with gene function, thus modulating cellular pathways according to the therapeutic demands. Among the molecules which can block mRNA function in a sequence specific manner are peptide nucleic acids (PNA). They are highly stable and efficiently and selectively interact with RNA. However, some properties of non-modified aminoethyl glycine PNAs (aegPNA) hamper their in vivo applications. RESULTS: We generated new backbone modifications of PNAs, which exhibit more hydrophilic properties. When we examined the activity and specificity of these novel phosphonic ester PNAs (pePNA) molecules in medaka (Oryzias latipes) embryos, high solubility and selective binding to mRNA was observed. In particular, mixing of the novel components with aegPNA components resulted in mixed PNAs with superior properties. Injection of mixed PNAs directed against the medaka six3 gene, which is important for eye and brain development, resulted in specific six3 phenotypes. CONCLUSIONS: PNAs are well established as powerful antisense molecules. Modification of the backbone with phosphonic ester side chains further improves their properties and allows the efficient knock down of a single gene in fish embryos.  相似文献   

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