20 research outputs found
Biophysical and Biological Characterization of Hairpin and Molecular Beacon RNase H Active Antisense Oligonucleotides
Antisense
oligonucleotides (ASOs) are single stranded, backbone
modified nucleic acids, which mediate cleavage of complementary RNA
by directing RNase H cleavage in cell culture and in animals. It has
generally been accepted that the single stranded state in conjunction
with the phosphorothioate modified backbone is necessary for cellular
uptake and transport to the active compartment. Herein, we examine
the effect of using hairpin structured ASOs to (1) determine if an
ASO agent requires a single stranded conformation for efficient RNA
knock down, (2) use a fluorophore-quencher labeled ASO to evaluate
which moieties the ASO interacts with in cells and examine if cellular
distribution can be determined with such probes, and (3) evaluate
if self-structured ASOs can improve allele selective silencing between
closely related huntingtin alleles. We show that hairpin shaped ASOs
can efficiently down-regulate RNA <i>in vitro</i>, but potency
correlates strongly negatively with increasing stability of the hairpin
structure. Furthermore, self-structured ASOs can efficiently reduce
huntingtin mRNA in the central nervous system of mice
A Constrained Tricyclic Nucleic Acid Analogue of α‑l‑LNA: Investigating the Effects of Dual Conformational Restriction on Duplex Thermal Stability
A constrained tricyclic analogue
of α-l-LNA (<b>2</b>), which contains dual modes
of conformational restriction
about the ribose sugar moiety, has been synthesized and characterized
by X-ray crystallography. Thermal denaturation experiments of oligonucleotide
sequences containing this tricyclic α-l-LNA analogue
(α-l-TriNA 2, <b>5</b>) indicate that this modification
is moderately stabilizing when paired with complementary DNA and RNA,
but less stabilizing than both α-l-LNA (<b>2</b>) and α-l-TriNA 1 (<b>4</b>)
A Constrained Tricyclic Nucleic Acid Analogue of α‑l‑LNA: Investigating the Effects of Dual Conformational Restriction on Duplex Thermal Stability
A constrained tricyclic analogue
of α-l-LNA (<b>2</b>), which contains dual modes
of conformational restriction
about the ribose sugar moiety, has been synthesized and characterized
by X-ray crystallography. Thermal denaturation experiments of oligonucleotide
sequences containing this tricyclic α-l-LNA analogue
(α-l-TriNA 2, <b>5</b>) indicate that this modification
is moderately stabilizing when paired with complementary DNA and RNA,
but less stabilizing than both α-l-LNA (<b>2</b>) and α-l-TriNA 1 (<b>4</b>)
A Constrained Tricyclic Nucleic Acid Analogue of α‑l‑LNA: Investigating the Effects of Dual Conformational Restriction on Duplex Thermal Stability
A constrained tricyclic analogue
of α-l-LNA (<b>2</b>), which contains dual modes
of conformational restriction
about the ribose sugar moiety, has been synthesized and characterized
by X-ray crystallography. Thermal denaturation experiments of oligonucleotide
sequences containing this tricyclic α-l-LNA analogue
(α-l-TriNA 2, <b>5</b>) indicate that this modification
is moderately stabilizing when paired with complementary DNA and RNA,
but less stabilizing than both α-l-LNA (<b>2</b>) and α-l-TriNA 1 (<b>4</b>)
C5-Alkynyl-Functionalized α‑L‑LNA: Synthesis, Thermal Denaturation Experiments and Enzymatic Stability
Major efforts are currently being
devoted to improving the binding
affinity, target specificity, and enzymatic stability of oligonucleotides
used for nucleic acid targeting applications in molecular biology,
biotechnology, and medicinal chemistry. One of the most popular strategies
toward this end has been to introduce additional modifications to
the sugar ring of affinity-inducing conformationally restricted nucleotide
building blocks such as locked nucleic acid (LNA). In the preceding
article in this issue, we introduced a different strategy toward this
end, i.e., C5-functionalization of LNA uridines. In the present article,
we extend this strategy to α-L-LNA: i.e., one of the most interesting
diastereomers of LNA. α-L-LNA uridine monomers that are conjugated
to small C5-alkynyl substituents induce significant improvements in
target affinity, binding specificity, and enzymatic stability relative
to conventional α-L-LNA. The results from the back-to-back articles
therefore suggest that C5-functionalization of pyrimidines is a general
and synthetically straightforward approach to modulate biophysical
properties of oligonucleotides modified with LNA or other conformationally
restricted monomers
Ground of sufficient level of gold-value backlogs of the state
У статті розглядаються основні цілі і завдання управління золотиовалютними резервами держави. Визначено основні методи оцінки ефективності системи управління та достатності золотовалютних резервів.Primary purposes and tasks of management of the state золотиовалютними backlogs are examined in the article. The basic methods of estimation of efficiency of control system and sufficientness of gold-value backlogs are certain
Synthesis and Antisense Properties of Fluoro Cyclohexenyl Nucleic Acid (F-CeNA), a Nuclease Stable Mimic of 2′-Fluoro RNA
We report the design and synthesis of 2′-fluoro
cyclohexenyl
nucleic acid (F-CeNA) pyrimidine phosphoramidites and the synthesis
and biophysical, structural, and biological evaluation of modified
oligonucleotides. The synthesis of the nucleoside phosphoramidites
was accomplished in multigram quantities starting from commercially
available methyl-d-mannose pyranoside. Installation of the
fluorine atom was accomplished using nonafluorobutanesulfonyl fluoride,
and the cyclohexenyl ring system was assembled by means of a palladium-catalyzed
Ferrier rearrangement. Installation of the nucleobase was carried
out under Mitsunobu conditions followed by standard protecting group
manipulations to provide the desired pyrimidine phosphoramidites.
Biophysical evaluation indicated that F-CeNA shows behavior similar
to that of a 2′-modified nucleotide, and duplexes with RNA
showed slightly lower duplex thermostability as compared to that of
the more rigid 3′-fluoro hexitol nucleic acid (FHNA). However,
F-CeNA modified oligonucleotides were significantly more stable against
digestion by snake venom phosphodiesterases (SVPD) as compared to
unmodified DNA, 2′-fluoro RNA (FRNA), 2′-methoxyethyl
RNA (MOE), and FHNA modified oligonucleotides. Examination of crystal
structures of a modified DNA heptamer duplex d(GCG)-T*-d(GCG):d(CGCACGC)
by X-ray crystallography indicated that the cyclohexenyl ring system
exhibits both the <sup>3</sup>H<sub>2</sub> and <sup>2</sup>H<sub>3</sub> conformations, similar to the C3′-endo/C2′-endo
conformation equilibrium seen in natural furanose nucleosides. In
the <sup>2</sup>H<sub>3</sub> conformation, the equatorial fluorine
engages in a relatively close contact with C8 (2.94 Å) of the
3′-adjacent dG nucleotide that may represent a pseudo hydrogen
bond. In contrast, the cyclohexenyl ring of F-CeNA was found to exist
exclusively in the <sup>3</sup>H<sub>2</sub> (C3′-endo like)
conformation in the crystal structure of the modified A-form DNA decamer
duplex [d(GCGTA)-T*-d(ACGC)]<sub>2.</sub> In an animal experiment,
a 16-mer F-CeNA gapmer ASO showed similar RNA affinity but significantly
improved activity compared to that of a sequence matched MOE ASO,
thus establishing F-CeNA as a useful modification for antisense applications
Synthesis and Biophysical Properties of C5-Functionalized LNA (Locked Nucleic Acid)
Oligonucleotides modified with conformationally
restricted nucleotides
such as locked nucleic acid (LNA) monomers are used extensively in
molecular biology and medicinal chemistry to modulate gene expression
at the RNA level. Major efforts have been devoted to the design of
LNA derivatives that induce even higher binding affinity and specificity,
greater enzymatic stability, and more desirable pharmacokinetic profiles.
Most of this work has focused on modifications of LNA’s oxymethylene
bridge. Here, we describe an alternative approach for modulation of
the properties of LNA: i.e., through functionalization of LNA nucleobases.
Twelve structurally diverse C5-functionalized LNA uridine (U) phosphoramidites
were synthesized and incorporated into oligodeoxyribonucleotides (ONs),
which were then characterized with respect to thermal denaturation,
enzymatic stability, and fluorescence properties. ONs modified with
monomers that are conjugated to small alkynes display significantly
improved target affinity, binding specificity, and protection against
3′-exonucleases relative to regular LNA. In contrast, ONs modified
with monomers that are conjugated to bulky hydrophobic alkynes display
lower target affinity yet much greater 3′-exonuclease resistance.
ONs modified with C5-fluorophore-functionalized LNA-U monomers enable
fluorescent discrimination of targets with single nucleotide polymorphisms
(SNPs). In concert, these properties render C5-functionalized LNA
as a promising class of building blocks for RNA-targeting applications
and nucleic acid diagnostics
Efficient Synthesis and Biological Evaluation of 5′-GalNAc Conjugated Antisense Oligonucleotides
Conjugation of triantennary <i>N</i>-acetyl galactosamine
(GalNAc) to oligonucleotide therapeutics results in marked improvement
in potency for reducing gene targets expressed in hepatocytes. In
this report we describe a robust and efficient solution-phase conjugation
strategy to attach triantennary GalNAc clusters (mol. wt. ∼2000)
activated as PFP (pentafluorophenyl) esters onto 5′-hexylamino
modified antisense oligonucleotides (5′-HA ASOs, mol. wt. ∼8000
Da). The conjugation reaction is efficient and was used to prepare
GalNAc conjugated ASOs from milligram to multigram scale. The solution
phase method avoids loading of GalNAc clusters onto solid-support
for automated synthesis and will facilitate evaluation of GalNAc clusters
for structure activity relationship (SAR) studies. Furthermore, we
show that transfer of the GalNAc cluster from the 3′-end of
an ASO to the 5′-end results in improved potency in cells and
animals
Allele-Specific Suppression of Mutant Huntingtin Using Antisense Oligonucleotides: Providing a Therapeutic Option for All Huntington Disease Patients
<div><p>Huntington disease (HD) is an inherited, fatal neurodegenerative disorder caused by a CAG repeat expansion in the huntingtin gene. The mutant protein causes neuronal dysfunction and degeneration resulting in motor dysfunction, cognitive decline, and psychiatric disturbances. Currently, there is no disease altering treatment, and symptomatic therapy has limited benefit. The pathogenesis of HD is complicated and multiple pathways are compromised. Addressing the problem at its genetic root by suppressing mutant huntingtin expression is a promising therapeutic strategy for HD. We have developed and evaluated antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) targeting single nucleotide polymorphisms that are significantly enriched on HD alleles (HD-SNPs). We describe our structure-activity relationship studies for ASO design and find that adjusting the SNP position within the gap, chemical modifications of the wings, and shortening the unmodified gap are critical for potent, specific, and well tolerated silencing of mutant huntingtin. Finally, we show that using two distinct ASO drugs targeting the two allelic variants of an HD-SNP could provide a therapeutic option for all persons with HD; allele-specifically for roughly half, and non-specifically for the remainder.</p></div