| Literature DB >> 36229679 |
Niklas Freund1, Alexander I Taylor2,3, Sebastian Arangundy-Franklin1, Nithya Subramanian1, Sew-Yeu Peak-Chew1, Amy M Whitaker4,5, Bret D Freudenthal4, Mikhail Abramov6, Piet Herdewijn6, Philipp Holliger7.
Abstract
Steric exclusion is a key element of enzyme substrate specificity, including in polymerases. Such substrate specificity restricts the enzymatic synthesis of 2'-modified nucleic acids, which are of interest in nucleic-acid-based drug development. Here we describe the discovery of a two-residue, nascent-strand, steric control 'gate' in an archaeal DNA polymerase. We show that engineering of the gate to reduce steric bulk in the context of a previously described RNA polymerase activity unlocks the synthesis of 2'-modified RNA oligomers, specifically the efficient synthesis of both defined and random-sequence 2'-O-methyl-RNA (2'OMe-RNA) and 2'-O-(2-methoxyethyl)-RNA (MOE-RNA) oligomers up to 750 nt. This enabled the discovery of RNA endonuclease catalysts entirely composed of 2'OMe-RNA (2'OMezymes) for the allele-specific cleavage of oncogenic KRAS (G12D) and β-catenin CTNNB1 (S33Y) mRNAs, and the elaboration of mixed 2'OMe-/MOE-RNA aptamers with high affinity for vascular endothelial growth factor. Our results open up these 2'-modified RNAs-used in several approved nucleic acid therapeutics-for enzymatic synthesis and a wider exploration in directed evolution and nanotechnology.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36229679 DOI: 10.1038/s41557-022-01050-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.274