| Literature DB >> 31755629 |
Wei Ren1,2,3, Po-Jung Jimmy Huang3, Meilin He1, Mingsheng Lyu2,4, Shujun Wang2,4, Changhai Wang1, Juewen Liu3.
Abstract
In 1994, the first DNAzyme named GR5 was reported, which specifically requires Pb2+ for its RNA cleavage activity. Three years later, the 8-17 DNAzyme was isolated. The 8-17 DNAzyme and the related 17E DNAzyme are also most active with Pb2+ , although other divalent metals can work as well. GR5 and 17E have the same substrate sequence, and their catalytic loops in the enzyme strands also have a few similar and conserved nucleotides. Considering these, we hypothesized that 17E might be a special form of GR5. To test this hypothesis, we performed systematic rational evolution experiments to gradually mutate GR5 toward 17E. By using the activity ratio in the presence of Pb2+ and Mg2+ for defining these two DNAzymes, the critical nucleotide was identified to be T12 in 17E for metal specificity. In addition, G9 in GR5 is a position not found in most 17E or 8-17 DNAzymes, and G9 needs to be added to rescue GR5 activity if T12 becomes a cytosine. This study highlights the links between these two classic and widely used DNAzymes, and offers new insight into the sequence-activity relationship related to metal selectivity.Entities:
Keywords: DNAzymes; RNA cleavage; biosensors; metal ions; rational evolution
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31755629 DOI: 10.1002/cbic.201900664
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chembiochem ISSN: 1439-4227 Impact factor: 3.164