The use of chemically synthesized short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) is currently the method of choice to manipulate gene expression in mammalian cell culture, yet improvements of siRNA design is expectably required for successful application in vivo. Several studies have aimed at improving siRNA performance through the introduction of chemical modifications but a direct comparison of these results is difficult. We have directly compared the effect of 21 types of chemical modifications on siRNA activity and toxicity in a total of 2160 siRNA duplexes. We demonstrate that siRNA activity is primarily enhanced by favouring the incorporation of the intended antisense strand during RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) loading by modulation of siRNA thermodynamic asymmetry and engineering of siRNA 3′-overhangs. Collectively, our results provide unique insights into the tolerance for chemical modifications and provide a simple guide to successful chemical modification of siRNAs with improved activity, stability and low toxicity.
The amyloid- hypothesis of Alzheimer's Disease (AD) focuses on accumulation of amyloid- peptide (A) as the main culprit for the myriad physiological changes seen during development and progression of AD including desynchronization of neuronal action potentials, consequent development of aberrant brain rhythms relevant for cognition, and final emergence of cognitive deficits.The aim of this study was to elucidate the cellular and synaptic mechanisms underlying the A-induced degradation of gamma oscillations in AD, to identify aggregation state(s) of A that mediate the peptides neurotoxicity, and to test ways to prevent the neurotoxic A effect.We show that A 1-42 in physiological concentrations acutely degrades mouse hippocampal gamma oscillations in a concentration-and time-dependent manner. The underlying cause is an A-induced desynchronization of action potential generation in pyramidal cells and a shift of the excitatory/inhibitory equilibrium in the hippocampal network. Using purified preparations containing different aggregation states of A, as well as a designed ligand and a BRICHOS chaperone domain, we provide evidence that the severity of A neurotoxicity increases with increasing concentration of fibrillar over monomeric A forms, and that A-induced degradation of gamma oscillations and excitatory/inhibitory equilibrium is prevented by compounds that interfere with A aggregation.Our study provides correlative evidence for a link between A-induced effects on synaptic currents and AD-relevant neuronal network oscillations, identifies the responsible aggregation state of A and proofs that strategies preventing peptide aggregation are able to prevent the deleterious action of A on the excitatory/inhibitory equilibrium and on the gamma rhythm.
The 2'-deoxy-2'-N,4'-C-ethylene-bridged thymidine (aza-ENA-T) has been synthesized using a key cyclization step involving 2'-ara-trifluoromethylsufonyl-4'-cyanomethylene 11 to give a pair of 3',5'-bis-OBn-protected diastereomerically pure aza-ENA-Ts (12a and 12b) with the fused piperidino skeleton in the chair conformation, whereas the pentofuranosyl moiety is locked in the North-type conformation (7 degrees < P < 27 degrees, 44 degrees < phi m < 52 degrees). The origin of the chirality of two diastereomerically pure aza-ENA-Ts was found to be due to the endocyclic chiral 2'-nitrogen, which has axial N-H in 12b and equatorial N-H in 12a. The latter is thermodynamically preferred, while the former is kinetically preferred with Ea = 25.4 kcal mol-1, which is thus far the highest observed inversion barrier at pyramidal N-H in the bicyclic amines. The 5'-O-DMTr-aza-ENA-T-3'-phosphoramidite was employed for solid-phase synthesis to give four different singly modified 15-mer antisense oligonucleotides (AONs). Their AON/RNA duplexes showed a Tm increase of 2.5-4 degrees C per modification, depending upon the modification site in the AON. The relative rates of the RNase H1 cleavage of the aza-ENA-T-modified AON/RNA heteroduplexes were very comparable to that of the native counterpart, but the RNA cleavage sites of the modified AON/RNA were found to be very different. The aza-ENA-T modifications also made the AONs very resistant to 3' degradation (stable over 48 h) in the blood serum compared to the unmodified AON (fully degraded in 4 h). Thus, the aza-ENA-T modification in the AON fulfilled three important antisense criteria, compared to the native: (i) improved RNA target affinity, (ii) comparable RNase H cleavage rate, and (iii) higher blood serum stability.
[structures: see text] The synthesis of novel 1',2'-aminomethylene bridged (6-aza-2-oxabicyclo[3.2.0]heptane) "azetidine" pyrimidine nucleosides and their transformations to the corresponding phosphoramidite building blocks (20, 39, and 42) for automated solid-phase oligonucleotide synthesis is reported. The novel bicyclonucleoside "azetidine" monomers were synthesized by two different strategies starting from the known sugar intermediate 6-O-benzyl-1,2:3,4-bis-O-isopropylidene-D-psicofuranose. Conformational analysis performed by molecular modeling (ab initio and MD simulations) and NMR showed that the azetidine-fused furanose sugar is locked in a North-East conformation with pseudorotational phase angle (P) in the range of 44.5-53.8 degrees and sugar puckering amplitude (phi(m)) of 29.3-32.6 degrees for the azetidine-modified T, U, C, and 5-Me-C nucleosides. Thermal denaturation studies of azetidine-modified oligo-DNA/RNA heteroduplexes show that the azetidine-fused nucleosides display improved binding affinities when compared to that of previously synthesized North-East sugar constrained oxetane fused analogues.
The 2-(4-tolylsulfonyl)ethoxymethyl (TEM) as a new 2'-OH protecting group is reported for solid-supported RNA synthesis using phosphoramidite chemistry. The usefulness of the 2'-O-TEM group is exemplified by the synthesis of 12 different oligo-RNAs of various sizes (14-38 nucleotides long). The stepwise coupling yield varied from 97-99% with an optimized coupling time of 120 s. The synthesis of all four pure phosphoramidite building blocks is also described. Two new reliable parameters, delta(C2')-delta(C3') and delta(H2')-delta(H3'), have been suggested for the characterization of isomeric 2'-O-TEM and 3'-O-TEM as well as other isomeric mono 2'/3'-protected ribonucleoside derivatives. The most striking feature of this strategy is that the crude RNA prepared using our 2'-O-TEM strategy is sufficiently pure (>90%) for molecular biology research without any additional purification step, thereby making oligo-RNAs easily available at a relatively low cost, saving both time and lab resources.
The DNA probes (ODNs) containing a 2'-N-(pyren-1-yl)-group on the conformationally locked nucleosides [2'-N-(pyren-1-yl)carbonyl-azetidine thymidine, Aze-pyr (X), and 2'-N-(pyren-1-yl)carbonyl-aza-ENA thymidine, Aza-ENA-pyr (Y)], show that they can bind to complementary RNA more strongly than to the DNA. The Aze-pyr (X) containing ODNs with the complementary DNA and RNA duplexes showed an increase in the fluorescence intensity (measured at lambda em approximately 376 nm) depending upon the nearest neighbor at the 3'-end to X [dA ( approximately 12-20-fold) > dG ( approximately 9-20-fold) > dT ( approximately 2.5-20-fold) > dC ( approximately 6-13-fold)]. They give high fluorescence quantum yields (Phi F = 0.13-0.89) as compared to those of the single-stranded ODNs. The Aza-ENA-pyr (Y)-modified ODNs, on the other hand, showed an enhancement of the fluorescence intensity only with the complementary DNA (1.4-3.9-fold, Phi F = 0.16-0.47); a very small increase in fluorescence is also observed with the complementary RNA (1.1-1.7-fold, Phi F = 0.17-0.22), depending both upon the site of the Y modification introduced as well as on the chemical nature of the nucleobase adjacent to the modification site into the ODN. The fluorescence properties, thermal denaturation experiments, absorption, and circular dichroism (CD) studies with the X- and Y-modified ODNs in the form of matched homo- and heteroduplexes consistently suggested (i) that the orientation of the pyrene moiety is outside the helix of the nucleic acid duplexes containing a dT-d/rA base pair at the 3'-end of the modification site for both X and Y types of modifications, and (ii) that the microenvironment around the pyrene moiety in the ODN/DNA and ODN/RNA duplexes is dictated by the chemical nature of the conformational constraint in the sugar moiety, as well as by the nature of neighboring nucleobases. The pyrene fluorescence emission in both X and Y types of the conformationally restricted nucleotides is found to be sensitive to a mismatched base present in the target RNA: (i) The X-modified ODN showed a decrease ( approximately 37-fold) in the fluorescence intensity (measured at lambda em approximately 376 nm) upon duplex formation with RNA containing a G nucleobase mismatch (dT-rG pair instead of dT-rA) opposite to the modification site. (ii) In contrast, the Y-modified ODN in the heteroduplex resulted in a approximately 3-fold increase in the fluorescence intensity upon dT-rG mismatch, instead of matched dT-rA pair, in the RNA strand. Our data corroborate that the pyrene moiety is intercalated in the X-modified mismatched ODN/RNA (G mismatch) heteroduplex as compared to that of the Y-modified ODN/RNA (G mismatch) heteroduplex, in which it is located outside the helix.
In order to understand how the chemical nature of the conformational constraint of the sugar moiety in ON/RNA(DNA) dictates the duplex structure and reactivity, we have determined molecular structures and dynamics of the conformationally constrained 1',2'-azetidine- and 1',2'-oxetane-fused thymidines, as well as their 2',4'-fused thymine (T) counterparts such as LNA-T, 2'-amino LNA-T, ENA-T, and aza-ENA-T by NMR, ab initio (HF/6-31G** and B3LYP/6-31++G**), and molecular dynamics simulations (2 ns in the explicit aqueous medium). It has been found that, depending upon whether the modification leads to a bicyclic 1',2'-fused or a tricyclic 2',4'-fused system, they fall into two distinct categories characterized by their respective internal dynamics of the glycosidic and the backbone torsions as well as by characteristic North-East type sugar conformation (P = 37 degrees +/- 27 degrees , phi(m) = 25 degrees +/- 18 degrees ) of the 1',2'-fused systems, and (ii) pure North type (P = 19 degrees +/- 8 degrees , phi(m) = 48 degrees +/- 4 degrees ) for the 2',4'-fused nucleosides. Each group has different conformational hyperspace accessible, despite the overall similarity of the North-type conformational constraints imposed by the 1',2'- or 2',4'-linked modification. The comparison of pK(a)s of the 1-thyminyl aglycon as well as that of endocyclic sugar-nitrogen obtained by theoretical and experimental measurements showed that the nature of the sugar conformational constraints steer the physicochemical property (pK(a)) of the constituent 1-thyminyl moiety, which in turn can play a part in tuning the strength of hydrogen bonding in the basepairing.
Improving oligonucleotide delivery is critical for the further development of oligonucleotide-based therapeutics. Covalent attachment of reporter molecules is one of the most promising approaches toward efficient oligonucleotide-based therapies. An efficient methods for the attachment of a variety of reporter groups is Cu(I)-catalyzed Huisgen azide−alkyne 1,3dipolar cycloaddition. However, the majority of potential oligonucleotide (ON) therapeutics in clinical trials are carrying phosphorothioate (PS) linkages, and this robust conjugation method is not yet established for these ONs due to a general concern of Cu−S interaction. Here, we developed a method allowing for efficient conjugation of peptides to PS oligonucleotides. The method utilizes solid supported oligonucleotides that can be readily transformed into "clickable ONs" by simple linker conjugation and further reacted with an azido containing moiety (e.g., a peptide) using the CuBr × Me 2 S complex as a superior catalyst in that reaction. This study opens the way for further development of PS oligonucleotide-conjugates by means of efficient Cu(I)-catalyzed Huisgen azide−alkyne 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition.
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