13 research outputs found

    Palladacyclic Conjugate Group Promotes Hybridization of Short Oligonucleotides

    Get PDF
    Short oligonucleotides with cyclopalladated benzylamine moieties at their 5-termini have been prepared to test the possibility of conferring palladacyclic anticancer agents sequence-selectivity by conjugation with a guiding oligonucleotide. Hybridization of these oligonucleotides with natural counterparts was studied by UV and CD (circular dichroism) melting experiments in the absence and presence of a competing ligand (2-mercaptoethanol). Cyclopalladated benzylamine proved to be strongly stabilizing relative to unmetalated benzylamine and modestly stabilizing relative to an extra A center dot T base pair. The stabilization was largely abolished in the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol, suggesting direct coordination of Pd(II) to a nucleobase of the complementary strand. In all cases, fidelity of Watson-Crick base pairing between the two strands was retained. Hybridization of the cyclopalladated oligonucleotides was characterized by relatively large negative enthalpy and entropy, consistent with stabilizing Pd(II) coordination partially offset by the entropic penalty of imposing conformational constraints on the flexible diethylene glycol linker between the oligonucleotide and the palladacyclic moiety

    Sequence dependence of Pd(II)-mediated base pairing by palladacyclic nucleobase surrogates

    Get PDF
    A C-nucleoside derivative of phenylpyridine or the respective palladacycle was incorporated at either 3â€Č- or 5â€Č-terminus of a short oligodeoxynucleotide. Hybridization properties of these modified oligonucleotides were studied in a fluorescence-based competition assay in addition to conventional UV melting temperature analysis and compared with those of a previously prepared analogue featuring the modified nucleoside in the middle of the sequence. With the unpalladated phenylpyridine oligonucleotides, UV melting temperature qualitatively correlated with the ability to displace a strand from a double helix in the competition assay, decreasing in the order 5â€Č > 3â€Č > middle. Corresponding results on the palladacyclic oligonucleotides were more difficult to interpret but both UV melting and competition experiments revealed a decrease in the duplex stability upon palladation in most cases. On the other hand, dependence of the UV melting temperature on the identity of the canonical nucleobase opposite to the modified nucleobase analogue was much more pronounced with the palladacyclic duplexes than with their unpalladated counterparts. Furthermore, UV melting profiles of the palladacyclic duplexes featured an additional transition at a temperature exceeding the melting temperature of the unmodified part of the duplex. Taken together, these results lend support to the idea ofPd(II)-mediated base pairs that are highly stable but incompatible with the geometry of a double helix.Graphical abstractHybridization properties of oligonucleotides incorporating a phenylpyridine C-nucleoside or its palladacyclic derivative were studied by a fluorescence-based competition assay in addition to conventional melting temperature measurements. Position of the modification had a major impact on duplex stability even when the canonical base opposite to the modified base remained unchanged..</div

    Programmable and Multifunctional DNA-Based Materials for Biomedical Applications

    Get PDF
    DNA encodes the genetic information; recently, it has also become a key player in material science. Given the specific Watson–Crick base‐pairing interactions between only four types of nucleotides, well‐designed DNA self‐assembly can be programmable and predictable. Stem‐loops, sticky ends, Holliday junctions, DNA tiles, and lattices are typical motifs for forming DNA‐based structures. The oligonucleotides experience thermal annealing in a near‐neutral buffer containing a divalent cation (usually Mg2+) to produce a variety of DNA nanostructures. These structures not only show beautiful landscape, but can also be endowed with multifaceted functionalities. This Review begins with the fundamental characterization and evolutionary trajectory of DNA‐based artificial structures, but concentrates on their biomedical applications. The coverage spans from controlled drug delivery to high therapeutic profile and accurate diagnosis. A variety of DNA‐based materials, including aptamers, hydrogels, origamis, and tetrahedrons, are widely utilized in different biomedical fields. In addition, to achieve better performance and functionality, material hybridization is widely witnessed, and DNA nanostructure modification is also discussed. Although there are impressive advances and high expectations, the development of DNA‐based structures/technologies is still hindered by several commonly recognized challenges, such as nuclease instability, lack of pharmacokinetics data, and relatively high synthesis cost. </p

    Synthesis of an Alkyne-Modified Bleomycin Disaccharide Precursor, Conversion to a F-18-Labeled Radiotracer, and Preliminary in vivo-PET Imaging Studies

    Get PDF
    The bleomycins (BLMs) are known antitumor antibiotics composed of the tumoricidal and tumor seeking domains. The peptide structure of BLMs is responsible for the cytotoxicity by selective oxidative cleavage of DNA (and RNA), while the tumor cell selectivity and internalization resides in the disaccharide moiety (i.e. BLM disaccharide). This has prompted researchers to utilize BLM disaccharide and its derivatives as constituents for the selective recognition of tumor cells, which may find further applications as new tumor imaging tools or drug delivery vehicles. In the present study a high yielding synthesis of an alkyne modified BLM disaccharide precursor that may be used as a useful agent for the click conjugation, its conversion to a F-18-labeled radiotracer, and preliminary in vivo PET imaging studies of the tracer with breast cancer (MCF-7) xenograft mouse models are described

    Assembly of Bleomycin Saccharide-Decorated Spherical Nucleic Acids

    Get PDF
    Glyco-decorated spherical nucleic acids (SNAs) may be attractive delivery vehicles, emphasizing the sugar-specific effect on the outer sphere of the construct and at the same time hiding unfavorable distribution properties of the loaded oligonucleotides. As examples of such nanoparticles, tripodal sugar constituents of bleomycin were synthesized and conjugated with a fluorescence-labeled antisense oligonucleotide (AONARV7). Successive copper(I)-catalyzed azide-alkyne and strain-promoted alkyne-nitrone cycloadditions (SPANC) were utilized for the synthesis. Then, the glyco-AONARV7 conjugates were hybridized with complementary strands of a C60-based molecular spherical nucleic acid (i.e., a hybridization-mediated carrier). The formation and stability of these assembled glyco-decorated SNAs were evaluated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), UV melting profile analysis, and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. Association constants were extracted from time-resolved fluorescence data. Preliminary cellular uptake experiments of the glyco-AONARV7 conjugates (120 nM solutions) and of the corresponding glyco-decorated SNAs (10 nM solutions) with human prostate cancer cells (PC3) showed an efficient uptake in each case. A marked variation in intracellular distribution was observed.</p

    Palladacyclic Conjugate Group Promotes Hybridization of Short Oligonucleotides

    No full text
    Short oligonucleotides with cyclopalladated benzylamine moieties at their 5&prime;-termini have been prepared to test the possibility of conferring palladacyclic anticancer agents sequence-selectivity by conjugation with a guiding oligonucleotide. Hybridization of these oligonucleotides with natural counterparts was studied by UV and CD (circular dichroism) melting experiments in the absence and presence of a competing ligand (2-mercaptoethanol). Cyclopalladated benzylamine proved to be strongly stabilizing relative to unmetalated benzylamine and modestly stabilizing relative to an extra A&bull;T base pair. The stabilization was largely abolished in the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol, suggesting direct coordination of Pd(II) to a nucleobase of the complementary strand. In all cases, fidelity of Watson-Crick base pairing between the two strands was retained. Hybridization of the cyclopalladated oligonucleotides was characterized by relatively large negative enthalpy and entropy, consistent with stabilizing Pd(II) coordination partially offset by the entropic penalty of imposing conformational constraints on the flexible diethylene glycol linker between the oligonucleotide and the palladacyclic moiety

    Efficient routes toward the synthesis of the D-rhamno-trisaccharide related to the A-band polysaccharide of Pseudomonas aeruginosa

    No full text
    The present work describes efficient avenues for the synthesis of the trisaccharide repeating unit [α-D-Rhap-(1→3)-α-D-Rhap-(1→3)-α-D-Rhap] associated with the A-band polysaccharide of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. One of the key steps involved 6-O-deoxygenation of either partially or fully acylated 4,6-O-benzylidene-1-thiomannopyranoside by radical-mediated redox rearrangement in high yields and regioselectivity. The D-rhamno-thioglycosides so obtained allowed efficient access to the trisaccharide target via stepwise glycosylation as well as a one-pot glycosylation protocol. In a different approach, a 4,6-O-benzylidene D-manno-trisaccharide derivative was synthesized, which upon global 6-O-deoxygenation followed by deprotection generated the target D-rhamno-trisaccharide. The application of the reported regioselective radical-mediated deoxygenation on 4,6-O-benzylidene D-manno thioglycoside (hitherto unexplored) has potential for ramification in the field of synthesis of oligosaccharides based on 6-deoxy hexoses

    Antiplasmodial Activity of [(Aryl)arylsulfanylmethyl]Pyridine▿ †‡

    No full text
    A series of [(aryl)arylsufanylmethyl]pyridines (AASMP) have been synthesized. These compounds inhibited hemozoin formation, formed complexes (KD = 12 to 20 ÎŒM) with free heme (ferriprotoporphyrin IX) at a pH close to the pH of the parasite food vacuole, and exhibited antimalarial activity in vitro. The inhibition of hemozoin formation may develop oxidative stress in Plasmodium falciparum due to the accumulation of free heme. Interestingly, AASMP developed oxidative stress in the parasite, as evident from the decreased level of glutathione and increased formation of lipid peroxide, H2O2, and hydroxyl radical (·OH) in P. falciparum. AASMP also caused mitochondrial dysfunction by decreasing mitochondrial potential (Διm) in malaria parasite, as measured by both flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy. Furthermore, the generation of ·OH may be mainly responsible for the antimalarial effect of AASMP since ·OH scavengers such as mannitol, as well as spin trap α-phenyl-n-tertbutylnitrone, significantly protected P. falciparum from AASMP-mediated growth inhibition. Cytotoxicity testing of the active compounds showed selective activity against malaria parasite with selectivity indices greater than 100. AASMP also exhibited profound antimalarial activity in vivo against chloroquine resistant P. yoelii. Thus, AASMP represents a novel class of antimalarial

    ZrOCl 2

    No full text

    Assembly of Bleomycin Saccharide-Decorated Spherical Nucleic Acids

    Get PDF
    Glyco-decorated spherical nucleic acids (SNAs) may be attractive delivery vehicles, emphasizing the sugar-specific effect on the outer sphere of the construct and at the same time hiding unfavorable distribution properties of the loaded oligonucleotides. As examples of such nanoparticles, tripodal sugar constituents of bleomycin were synthesized and conjugated with a fluorescence-labeled antisense oligonucleotide (AONARV7). Successive copper(I)-catalyzed azide-alkyne and strain-promoted alkyne-nitrone cycloadditions (SPANC) were utilized for the synthesis. Then, the glyco-AONARV7 conjugates were hybridized with complementary strands of a C60-based molecular spherical nucleic acid (i.e., a hybridization-mediated carrier). The formation and stability of these assembled glyco-decorated SNAs were evaluated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), UV melting profile analysis, and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. Association constants were extracted from time-resolved fluorescence data. Preliminary cellular uptake experiments of the glyco-AONARV7 conjugates (120 nM solutions) and of the corresponding glycodecorated SNAs (10 nM solutions) with human prostate cancer cells (PC3) showed an efficient uptake in each case. A marked variation in intracellular distribution was observed.Peer reviewe
    corecore