Mimicking the action of enzymes by simpler and more robust man-made catalysts has long inspired bioorganic chemists. During the past decade, mimics for RNA-cleaving enzymes, ribonucleases, or, more precisely, mimics of ribozymes that cleave RNA in sequence-selective rather than base-selective manner, have received special attention. These artificial ribonucleases are typically oligonucleotides (or their structural analogs) that bear a catalytically active conjugate group and catalyze sequence-selective hydrolysis of RNA phosphodiester bonds.
2'-O-Methyl oligoribonucleotides bearing a 3'-[2,6-dioxo-3,7-diaza-10-(1,5,9-triazacyclododec-3-yl)decyl phospate conjugate group have been shown to cleave in slight excess of Zn(2+) ions complementary oligoribonucleotides at the 5'-side of the last base-paired nucleotide. The cleavage obeys first-order kinetics and exhibits turnover. The acceleration compared to the monomeric Zn(2+) 1,5,9-triazacyclododecane chelate is more than 100-fold. In addition, 2'-O-methyl oligoribonucleotides having the 1,5,9-triazacyclododec-3-yl group tethered to the anomeric carbon of an intrachain 2-deoxy-beta-d-erythro-pentofuranosyl group via a 2-oxo-3-azahexyl, 2,6-dioxo-3,7-diazadecyl, or 2,9-dioxo-3,10-diazatridecyl linker have been studied as cleaving agents. These cleave as zinc chelates a tri- and pentaadenyl bulge opposite to the conjugate group approximately 50 times as fast as the monomeric chelate and show turnover. The cleavage rate is rather insensitive to the length of linker. Interestingly, a triuridyl bulge remains virtually intact in striking contrast to a triadenyl bulge. Evidently binding of the zinc chelate to a uracil base prevents its catalytic action. Replacement of Zn(2+) with Cu(2+) or Ni(2+) retards the cleaving activity of all the cleaving agents tested.
An improved synthesis for 3-(3-aminopropyl)- and 3-(3-mercaptopropyl)-1,5,9-triazacyclododecane has been developed and alternative methods for their conjugation to oligonucleotides have been described. Accordingly, the 3-aminopropyl azacrown and its N-(3-aminopropanoyl)-3-aminopropyl analogue have been tethered to the 3'-terminus of a 2'-O-methyloligoribonucleotide by aminolytic cleavage of the thioester linker utilized for the chain assembly. Studies on a monomeric model compound verify that the reaction proceeds solely by the attack of the primary amino group. 5'-Conjugation has been achieved by introducing a 2-benzylthio-2-oxoethyl group to the 5'-terminus as a phosphoramidite reagent and cleaving the thioester bond with the 3-aminopropyl azacrown. For intrachain conjugation, a phosphoramidite reagent derived from 1-deoxy-1-(2-benzylthio-2-oxoethyl)-beta-d-erythro-pentofuranose has been inserted in a desired position within the chain and subjected to on-support aminolysis with the 3-aminopropyl azacrown or its N-(3-aminopropanoyl)-3-aminopropyl and N-(6-aminohexanoyl)-3-aminopropyl analogues. The 3-mercaptopropyl-derivatized azacrown has been tetherd by a disulfide bond to a 3'-(3-mercaptoalkyl)phosphate-tailed oligonucleotide. The 3'- and intrachain-tethered conjugates have been shown to cleave as their Zn(II) chelate complementary oligoribonucleotide sequences.
Functionalized 2'-O-methyl oligoribonucleotides bearing two 3-(3-hydroxypropyl)-1,5,9-triazacyclododecane ligands attached via a phosphodiester linkage to a single non-nucleosidic building block have been prepared on a solid-support by conventional phosphoramidite chemistry. The branching units employed for the purpose include 2,2-bis(3-hydroxypropylaminocarbonyl)propane-1,3-diol, 2-hydroxyethyl 3'-O-(2-hydroxyethyl)-beta-D-ribofuranoside, and 2-hydroxyethyl 2'-O-(2-hydroxyethyl)-beta-D-ribofuranoside. Each of these has been introduced as a phosphoramidite reagent either into the penultimate 3'-terminal site or in the middle of the oligonucleotide chain. The dinuclear Zn2+ complexes of these conjugates have been shown to exhibit enhanced catalytic activity over their monofunctionalized counterpart, the 3'-terminal conjugate derived from 2-hydroxyethyl 3'-O-(2-hydroxyethyl)-beta-D-ribofuranoside being the most efficient cleaving agent. This conjugate cleaves an oligoribonucleotide target at a single phosphodiester bond and shows turnover and 1000-fold cleaving activity compared to the free monomeric Zn2+ chelate of 1,5,9-triazacyclododecane.
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