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SELEX 12/1/03 11:01 PM Have a random 40-mer synthesized, between 2 arbitrary 20-mers (PCR sites) 20-mer Random 40 20-mer 440 = 1024 Practical limit = 1015 = ~ 2 nmoles = ~ 50 ug DNA 1015 is a large number. Very large (e.g., 500,000 times as many as all the unique 40-mers in the human genome. These 1015 sequences are known as “sequence space” Each DNA molecule of these 1015 (or RNA molecule copied from them) can fold into a particular 3-D structure. We know little as yet about these structures. But we can select the molecules that bind to our target by: AFFINITY CHROMATOGRAPHY 1 SELEX: Systematic Evolution 2 of Ligands by EXponential enrichment (1015) RNA DNA RNA RNA e.g., soluble form of the affinity column material 3 AMP-binding aptamer Streptomycin-binding aptamer 4 5 Tobramycin (antibiotic) bound to its aptamer (backbone) 6 Some examples of aptamer targets Zn2 ATP adenosine cyclic AMP GDP FMN (and naturally in E.coli) cocaine dopamine amino acids (arginine) porphyrin biotin organic dyes (cibacron blue, malachite green) neutral disaccharides (cellobiose) oligopeptides aminoglycoside antibiotics (tobramycin) proteins (thrombin, tat, rev, Factor IX, VEGF, PDGF, ricin) large glycoproteins such as CD4 anthrax spores 7 G-quartets dominate the structure of antithrombin DNA aptamers 8 Hermann, T. and Patel, D.J. 2000. Adaptive recognition by nucleic acid aptamers. Science 287: 820-825. 9 Hermann, T. and Patel, D.J. 2000. Adaptive recognition by nucleic acid aptamers. Science 287: 820-825. Aromatic ring stacking interactions theophilline RNA FMN RNA AMP AMP H-bonding Specificity: Caffeine = theophilline + a methyl group on a ring N (circle); binding is >1000 times weaker DNA RNA 10 Electrostatic surface map: red= - blue = + Base flap shuts door 11 Hermann, T. and Patel, D.J. 2000. Adaptive recognition by nucleic acid aptamers. Science 287: 820-825. One anti-Rev aptamer: binds peptide in alpha-helical conformation Another anti-Rev aptamer: binds peptide in an extended conformation MS2 protein as beta sheet bound via protruding side chains 12 RNA aptamers are unstable in vivo (bloodstream) DNA aptamers are more stable but still can be destroyed by DNases. Modification to protect: 2’ F-YTP (Y = pyrimidine) 2’ NH2-YTP But not substrates for PCR enzymes. OK for T7 RNA polymerase and reverse transcriptase. So: Isolation of an RNase-resistant aptamer 1015 random DNA synthesizer T7 prom PCR site T7 polymerase, 2’F-CTP + 2’F-UTP 2’F-RNA Lots of normal DNA version Affinity chromatography selection PCR Reverse transcriptase Normal DNA version Normal deoxynucleoside triphosphates Enriched stable aptamer Final product after N iterations Spiegelmers for more stable RNA aptamers (spiegel = mirror) 13 Natural enantiomers: peptides = L-amino acids nucleic acids = D-ribose Synthesize a D-amino acid version of your peptide target the target Ordinary D-ribose nucleic acid Synthesize the L-ribose version of the best one Noxxon (Germany) the best one L-RNA is resistant to nucleases First products: Anti-CGRP Anti-Grehlin Reading: 14 Rusconi, C.P., Scardino, E., Layzer, J., Pitoc, G.A., Ortel, T.L., Monroe, D., and Sullenger, B.A. 2002. RNA aptamers as reversible antagonists of coagulation factor IXa. Nature 419: 90-94. Therapeutic use of an aptamer that binds to and inhibits clotting factor IX Inverted T at 3’ end slows exonucleolytic degradation 15 Kd for Factor IX = 0.6 nM FIXa + FVIIIa cleave FX Aptamer inhibits this activity Conjugate to polyethylenglycol to increase bloodstream lifetime 16 An antidote to stop the anti-clotting action if a patient begins to bleed Just use the complementary strand (partial) The 2 strands find each other in the bloodstream! In human plasma Oligomer 5-2 Anti-coagulant activity 16-fold excess Ratio 17 Tested in human serum Antidote acts fast (10 min) Antidote lasts a long time 18 In serum of patients with heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (can no longer use heparin) 19 Aptamer vs, prostate cancer cell membrane antigen (PMSA), conjugated to rhodamine Lupold, S.E., Hicke, B.J., Lin, Y., and Coffey, D.S. 2002. Identification and characterization of nuclease-stabilized RNA molecules that bind human prostate cancer cells via the prostate-specific membrane antigen. Cancer Res 62: 4029-4033. Potential use as an anticancer diagnostic, and therapeutic. ORIGINAL SELEX PAPER: C. Tuerk and L. Gold. "Systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment: RNA ligands to bacteriophage T4 DNA polymerase," Science, 249:505-10, 1990 More recently: Somalogic, Inc.: Photoaptamers Wash stringently to Produce a low background. albumin Stain with a protein-specific sensitive fluosecent stain (e.g, for primary amine groups) prolactin LDH protein B B B covalent cross-links 20 21 Ribozymes 1982 Cech: Tetrahymena rRNA intron is self-spliced out (GR + Mg++) Altman and Pace: Ribonuclease P RNP: RNA component alone can process the 5’ ends of tRNAs Mitochondrial group I introns (GR –catalyzed) also can self-splice Then group II introns in mitochondria (lariat-formers) Mutations (100’s): Internal guide sequence GR-binding site secondary structure Conserved base analysis (100’s) confirms structure X-ray diffraction: a few 3-D structures 22 Free guanosine Hammerhead ribozyme (self-cleavage): plant viroids and human delta virus (with Hepatitis C) Self-cleavage via the hammerhead motif 23 24 Hammerhead ribozyme (RNase) Synthetic variation (cleaves in trans) You are in charge of what it will cleave 25 Model of hammerhead ribozyme (data based) 26 New synthetic ribozymes, and DNAzymes Start with 1015 DNA molecules again Select for enzyme activity: E.g., cleaves itself off a solid support in the presence of Mg++ Many different activities have been selected. Most have to do with nucleic acid transformations; RNase, ligase, kinase, etc. But not all (C-C bond formation). Generally much slower than protein enzymes. Most work has been on RNases (usually associated with the word “ribozymes”) 27 You can use SELEX to isolate new artificial ribozymes Tang, J. and Breaker, R.R. 2000. Structural diversity of self-cleaving ribozymes. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 97: 5784-5789. Proposed cleavage zone molecules under non-permissive conditions so they stay intact (without Mg++) RT -> cDNA PCR lots of DS-DNA T7 transcription-> Lots of RNA Add Mg++ Proposed cleavage zone i.e., al 16 dinucleotides present as possible cleavage sites 12 different evolved ribozyme structures Most common = X-motif Hammerhead was one 28 Tang, J. and Breaker, R.R. 2000. Structural diversity of self-cleaving ribozymes. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 97: 5784-5789. 29 DNA can also form enzymes: DNAzymes Selection scheme for self-cleaving DNase DNAzymes Putative cleavage region Li, Y. and R. R. Breaker (1999). "Deoxyribozymes: new players in the ancient game of biocatalysis." Curr Opin Struct Biol 9(3): 315-23. biotin Solid phase streptavidin DNAzyme will only cleave in the presence of the cofactor (otherwise self-destructs) Pb++ and Cu++ have been described Collect freed large fragment PCR with large biotinylated left primer that reconstructs cleavage site (not part of the random region) 30 Some DNAzyme activities Compare protein enzymes, Typically 6000 on this scale (100/sec) Emilsson, G. M. and R. R. Breaker (2002). Deoxyribozymes: new activities and new applications. Cell Mol Life Sci 59(4): 596-607. over spontaneous reaction 31 Combine an aptamer and a ribozyme Allosteric ribozyme Catalytic activity can be controlled by ligand binding! Positive or negative. Modular Molecular switches, biosensors 32 Isolation of aptamer-ribozyme combinations That respond to ligand binding. Randomize the “communication module” Selection of an allosterically activated ribozyme Iterations Selection of an allosterically inhibited ribozyme Soukup, G.A. and Breaker, R.R. 1999. Engineering precision RNA molecular switches. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96: 3584-3589. 33 The same induction communication module can be used with several different allosteric aptamer modules FMN responsive Soukup, G.A. and Breaker, R.R. 1999. Engineering precision RNA molecular switches. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96: 3584-3589. Theo responsive ATP responsive 34 Reading 2 Frauendorf, C. and Jaschke, A. 2001. Detection of small organic analytes by fluorescing molecular switches. Bioorg Med Chem 9: 2521-2524. A theophylline-dependent ribozyme A molecular beacon that respond to nucleic acid hybridization 35 Frauendorf, C. and Jaschke, A. 2001. Detection of small organic analytes by fluorescing molecular switches. Bioorg Med Chem 9: 2521-2524. Separate substrate molecule, fluorescently tagged quencher 36 + Nearby quenching group 37 H theophylline 5X effect caffeine Not so sensitive (0.3 mM) 38 An increasing number of DNAzyme activities are being isolated: Ligase Polymerase DNase And activities using co-enzymes, as protein enzymes do: E.g., co-enzyme A 39 Winkler, W., Nahvi, A., and Breaker, R.R. 2002. Thiamine derivatives bind messenger RNAs directly to regulate bacterial gene expression. Nature 419: 952-956. Back to Nature: Aptamers play a role in regulation of gene expression Thiamine: Inhibits its own synthesis (in bacteria) Translation takes place 5” end of thiM mRNA Translation initiation is inhibited Shine-Delgarno sequence ribosome binding site to initiate translation 40 41 finis 42 Winkler, W., Nahvi, A., and Breaker, R.R. 2002. Thiamine derivatives bind messenger RNAs directly to regulate bacterial gene expression. Nature 419: 952-956. Shine-Delgarno (ribosome binding site) 43 Winkler, W., Nahvi, A., and Breaker, R.R. 2002. Thiamine derivatives bind messenger RNAs directly to regulate bacterial gene expression. Nature 419: 952-956. 44 Winkler, W., Nahvi, A., and Breaker, R.R. 2002. Thiamine derivatives bind messenger RNAs directly to regulate bacterial gene expression. Nature 419: 952-956.