Triplex formation with alpha anomers of purine-rich and pyrimidine-rich oligodeoxynucleotides. |
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Authors: | S B Noonberg, J C Fran ois, D Praseuth, A L Guieysse-Peugeot, J Lacoste, T Garestier, C H l ne |
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Affiliation: | S B Noonberg, J C François, D Praseuth, A L Guieysse-Peugeot, J Lacoste, T Garestier, and C Hélène |
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Abstract: | Nuclease-resistant alpha anomers of pyrimidine-rich CT- and purine-rich GA- and GT-containing oligonucleotides were investigated for their triplex-forming potential and compared with their corresponding nuclease-sensitive beta anomers. Both 23mer CT-alpha and 23mer CT-beta had quite similar triplex binding affinities. Synthetic 23mer GT-alpha oligonucleotides were capable of triplex formation with binding affinities slightly lower than corresponding 23mer GT-beta oligonucleotides. The orientation of third strand GT-alpha binding was parallel to the purine strand of the duplex DNA target, whereas the orientation of third strand GT-beta binding was found to be antiparallel. Triplex formation with both GT oligonucleotides showed the typical dependence on magnesium and temperature. In contrast, 23mer GA-alpha oligonucleotides did not support triplex formation in either orientation under a variety of experimental conditions, whereas the corresponding 23mer GA-beta oligonucleotides demonstrated strong triplex formation in the antiparallel orientation. GA-alpha oligonucleotides covalently conjugated to acridine were similarly unable to demonstrate triplex formation. GA-alpha oligonucleotides, in contrast to GT-alpha oligonucleotides, were capable of self-association, detectable by gel retardation and UV spectroscopy, but competing self-association could not fully account for the lack of triplex formation. Thus for in vivo triplex gene regulation strategies using GT oligonucleotides the non-natural alpha anomer may be a feasible alternative to the natural beta anomer, allowing for a comparable degree of triplex formation without rapid cellular degradation. However, alpha anomeric inversion does not appear to be a feasible alternative in applications involving GA oligonucleotides. |
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