1 research outputs found
Selective Small Molecule Recognition of RNA Base Pairs
Many
types of RNAs exist in the human transcriptome, yet only the
bacterial ribosome has been exploited as a small molecule drug target.
Aside from rRNA, other cellular RNAs such as noncoding RNAs have primarily
secondary structure and limited tertiary structure. Within these secondary
structures of noncanonically paired and unpaired regions, more than
50% are base paired, with most efforts to target these structures
focused on looped regions. A void exists in the availability of small
molecules capable of targeting RNA base pairs. Using chemoinformatics,
an RNA-focused library enriched for nitrogen-containing heterocycles
was developed and tested for binding RNA base pairs, leading to the
identification of six selective and previously unknown binders. While
all binders were derivatives of benzimidazoles, those with expanded
aromatic polycycles bound selectively to AU pairs, while those with
flexible urea side chains bound selectively to GC pairs. Two
of the three selective GC pair binders can distinguish between
two different orientations, 5′GG/3′CC and 5′GC/3′CG
pairs. Furthermore, all six molecules showed >50-fold selectivity
for RNA over DNA. These studies provide foundational knowledge to
better exploit RNA as targets for small molecule chemical probes or
lead therapeutics by using modules that target RNA base pairs