2′-Azido RNA, a
Versatile Tool for Chemical
Biology: Synthesis, X-ray Structure, siRNA Applications, Click Labeling
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Abstract
Chemical modification can significantly enrich the structural
and
functional repertoire of ribonucleic acids and endow them with new
outstanding properties. Here, we report the syntheses of novel 2′-azido
cytidine and 2′-azido guanosine building blocks and demonstrate
their efficient site-specific incorporation into RNA by mastering
the synthetic challenge of using phosphoramidite chemistry in the
presence of azido groups. Our study includes the detailed characterization
of 2′-azido nucleoside containing RNA using UV-melting profile
analysis and CD and NMR spectroscopy. Importantly, the X-ray crystallographic
analysis of 2′-azido uridine and 2′-azido adenosine
modified RNAs reveals crucial structural details of this modification
within an A-form double helical environment. The 2′-azido group
supports the C3′-<i>endo</i> ribose conformation
and shows distinct water-bridged hydrogen bonding patterns in the
minor groove. Additionally, siRNA induced silencing of the brain acid
soluble protein (BASP1) encoding gene in chicken fibroblasts demonstrated
that 2′-azido modifications are well tolerated in the guide
strand, even directly at the cleavage site. Furthermore, the 2′-azido
modifications are compatible with 2′-fluoro and/or 2′-<i>O</i>-methyl modifications to achieve siRNAs of rich modification
patterns and tunable properties, such as increased nuclease resistance
or additional chemical reactivity. The latter was demonstrated by
the utilization of the 2′-azido groups for bioorthogonal Click
reactions that allows efficient fluorescent labeling of the RNA. In
summary, the present comprehensive investigation on site-specifically
modified 2′-azido RNA including all four nucleosides provides
a basic rationale behind the physico- and biochemical properties of
this flexible and thus far neglected type of RNA modification