Literature DB >> 25939889

Pursuing DNA catalysts for protein modification.

Scott K Silverman1.   

Abstract

Catalysis is a fundamental chemical concept, and many kinds of catalysts have considerable practical value. Developing entirely new catalysts is an exciting challenge. Rational design and screening have provided many new small-molecule catalysts, and directed evolution has been used to optimize or redefine the function of many protein enzymes. However, these approaches have inherent limitations that prompt the pursuit of different kinds of catalysts using other experimental methods. Nature evolved RNA enzymes, or ribozymes, for key catalytic roles that in modern biology are limited to phosphodiester cleavage/ligation and amide bond formation. Artificial DNA enzymes, or deoxyribozymes, have great promise for a broad range of catalytic activities. They can be identified from unbiased (random) sequence populations as long as the appropriate in vitro selection strategies can be implemented for their identification. Notably, in vitro selection is different in key conceptual and practical ways from rational design, screening, and directed evolution. This Account describes the development by in vitro selection of DNA catalysts for many different kinds of covalent modification reactions of peptide and protein substrates, inspired in part by our earlier work with DNA-catalyzed RNA ligation reactions. In one set of studies, we have sought DNA-catalyzed peptide backbone cleavage, with the long-term goal of artificial DNA-based proteases. We originally anticipated that amide hydrolysis should be readily achieved, but in vitro selection instead surprisingly led to deoxyribozymes for DNA phosphodiester hydrolysis; this was unexpected because uncatalyzed amide bond hydrolysis is 10(5)-fold faster. After developing a suitable selection approach that actively avoids DNA hydrolysis, we were able to identify deoxyribozymes for hydrolysis of esters and aromatic amides (anilides). Aliphatic amide cleavage remains an ongoing focus, including via inclusion of chemically modified DNA nucleotides in the catalyst, which we have recently found to enable this cleavage reaction. In numerous other efforts, we have investigated DNA-catalyzed peptide side chain modification reactions. Key successes include nucleopeptide formation (attachment of oligonucleotides to peptide side chains) and phosphatase and kinase activities (removal and attachment of phosphoryl groups to side chains). Through all of these efforts, we have learned the importance of careful selection design, including the frequent need to develop specific "capture" reactions that enable the selection process to provide only those DNA sequences that have the desired catalytic functions. We have established strategies for identifying deoxyribozymes that accept discrete peptide and protein substrates, and we have obtained data to inform the key choice of random region length at the outset of selection experiments. Finally, we have demonstrated the viability of modular deoxyribozymes that include a small-molecule-binding aptamer domain, although the value of such modularity is found to be minimal, with implications for many selection endeavors. Advances such as those summarized in this Account reveal that DNA has considerable catalytic abilities for biochemically relevant reactions, specifically including covalent protein modifications. Moreover, DNA has substantially different, and in many ways better, characteristics than do small molecules or proteins for a catalyst that is obtained "from scratch" without demanding any existing information on catalyst structure or mechanism. Therefore, prospects are very strong for continued development and eventual practical applications of deoxyribozymes for peptide and protein modification.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25939889      PMCID: PMC4439366          DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.5b00090

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  58 in total

1.  Crystal structure of an 82-nucleotide RNA-DNA complex formed by the 10-23 DNA enzyme.

Authors:  J Nowakowski; P J Shim; G S Prasad; C D Stout; G F Joyce
Journal:  Nat Struct Biol       Date:  1999-02

2.  A deoxyribozyme that forms a three-helix-junction complex with its RNA substrates and has general RNA branch-forming activity.

Authors:  Rebecca L Coppins; Scott K Silverman
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2005-03-09       Impact factor: 15.419

Review 3.  Forty years of in vitro evolution.

Authors:  Gerald F Joyce
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 15.336

4.  DNA-catalyzed formation of nucleopeptide linkages.

Authors:  P I Pradeepkumar; Claudia Höbartner; Dana A Baum; Scott K Silverman
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 15.336

5.  Engineering a selective small-molecule substrate binding site into a deoxyribozyme.

Authors:  Claudia Höbartner; Scott K Silverman
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 15.336

6.  Expanding the toolbox of organic chemists: directed evolution of P450 monooxygenases as catalysts in regio- and stereoselective oxidative hydroxylation.

Authors:  Gheorghe-Doru Roiban; Manfred T Reetz
Journal:  Chem Commun (Camb)       Date:  2015-02-11       Impact factor: 6.222

7.  Merely two mutations switch a DNA-hydrolyzing deoxyribozyme from heterobimetallic (Zn2+/Mn2+) to monometallic (Zn2+-only) behavior.

Authors:  Ying Xiao; Emily C Allen; Scott K Silverman
Journal:  Chem Commun (Camb)       Date:  2010-12-01       Impact factor: 6.222

8.  Site-specific labeling of RNA at internal ribose hydroxyl groups: terbium-assisted deoxyribozymes at work.

Authors:  Lea Büttner; Fatemeh Javadi-Zarnaghi; Claudia Höbartner
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2014-05-23       Impact factor: 15.419

9.  Systematic evaluation of the dependence of deoxyribozyme catalysis on random region length.

Authors:  Tania E Velez; Jaydeep Singh; Ying Xiao; Emily C Allen; On Yi Wong; Madhavaiah Chandra; Sarah C Kwon; Scott K Silverman
Journal:  ACS Comb Sci       Date:  2012-11-05       Impact factor: 3.784

10.  DNA-catalyzed sequence-specific hydrolysis of DNA.

Authors:  Madhavaiah Chandra; Amit Sachdeva; Scott K Silverman
Journal:  Nat Chem Biol       Date:  2009-08-16       Impact factor: 15.040

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  24 in total

1.  DNA-catalyzed glycosylation using aryl glycoside donors.

Authors:  Anthony R Hesser; Benjamin M Brandsen; Shannon M Walsh; Puzhou Wang; Scott K Silverman
Journal:  Chem Commun (Camb)       Date:  2016-06-29       Impact factor: 6.222

Review 2.  Metal-Dependent DNAzymes for the Quantitative Detection of Metal Ions in Living Cells: Recent Progress, Current Challenges, and Latest Results on FRET Ratiometric Sensors.

Authors:  Kevin Hwang; Quanbing Mou; Ryan J Lake; Mengyi Xiong; Brandalynn Holland; Yi Lu
Journal:  Inorg Chem       Date:  2019-07-31       Impact factor: 5.165

Review 3.  Catalytic DNA: Scope, Applications, and Biochemistry of Deoxyribozymes.

Authors:  Scott K Silverman
Journal:  Trends Biochem Sci       Date:  2016-05-25       Impact factor: 13.807

4.  DNA-Catalyzed Amide Hydrolysis.

Authors:  Cong Zhou; Joshua L Avins; Paul C Klauser; Benjamin M Brandsen; Yujeong Lee; Scott K Silverman
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2016-02-15       Impact factor: 15.419

5.  DNA-Catalyzed DNA Cleavage by a Radical Pathway with Well-Defined Products.

Authors:  Yujeong Lee; Paul C Klauser; Benjamin M Brandsen; Cong Zhou; Xinyi Li; Scott K Silverman
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2016-12-27       Impact factor: 15.419

6.  Phosphoserine Lyase Deoxyribozymes: DNA-Catalyzed Formation of Dehydroalanine Residues in Peptides.

Authors:  Jagadeeswaran Chandrasekar; Adam C Wylder; Scott K Silverman
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2015-07-27       Impact factor: 15.419

7.  Assessing histidine tags for recruiting deoxyribozymes to catalyze peptide and protein modification reactions.

Authors:  Chih-Chi Chu; Scott K Silverman
Journal:  Org Biomol Chem       Date:  2016-05-18       Impact factor: 3.876

8.  DNA Oligonucleotide 3'-Phosphorylation by a DNA Enzyme.

Authors:  Alison J Camden; Shannon M Walsh; Sarah H Suk; Scott K Silverman
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2016-04-26       Impact factor: 3.162

9.  Identification of Sequence-Selective Tyrosine Kinase Deoxyribozymes.

Authors:  Shannon M Walsh; Stephanie N Konecki; Scott K Silverman
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2015-09-25       Impact factor: 2.395

10.  DNAzymes for amine and peptide lysine acylation.

Authors:  Tianjiong Yao; Jack J Przybyla; Peter Yeh; Austin M Woodard; Hannah J Nilsson; Benjamin M Brandsen; Scott K Silverman
Journal:  Org Biomol Chem       Date:  2021-01-06       Impact factor: 3.876

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