Recognition of the four Watson-Crick base pairs in the DNA minor groove by synthetic ligands

The design of synthetic ligands that read the information stored in the DNA double helix has been a long-standing goal at the interface of chemistry and biology. Cell-permeable small molecules that target predetermined DNA sequences offer a potential approach for the regulation of gene expression. O...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 1998-01, Vol.391 (6666), p.468-471
Hauptverfasser: Dervan, Peter B, White, Sarah, Szewczyk, Jason W, Turner, James M, Baird, Eldon E
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The design of synthetic ligands that read the information stored in the DNA double helix has been a long-standing goal at the interface of chemistry and biology. Cell-permeable small molecules that target predetermined DNA sequences offer a potential approach for the regulation of gene expression. Oligodeoxynucleotides that recognize the major groove of double-helical DNA via triple-helix formation bind to a broad range of sequences with high affinity and specificity,. Although oligonucleotides and their analogues have been shown to interfere with gene expression,, the triple-helix approach is limited to recognition of purines and suffers from poor cellular uptake. The subsequent development of pairing rules for minor-groove binding polyamides containing pyrrole (Py) and imidazole (Im) amino acids offers a second code to control sequence specificity. An Im/Py pair distinguishes G·C from C·G and both of these from A·T/T·A base pairs. A Py/Py pair specifies A,T from G,C but does not distinguish A·T from T·A. To break this degeneracy, we have added a new aromatic amino acid, 3-hydroxypyrrole (Hp), to the repertoire to test for pairings that discriminate A·T from T·A. We find that replacement of a single hydrogen atom with a hydroxy group in a Hp/Py pairing regulates affinity and specificity by an order of magnitude. By incorporation of this third amino acid, hydroxypyrrole-imidazole-pyrrole polyamides form four ring-pairings (Im/Py, Py/Im, Hp/Py and Py/Hp) which distinguish all four Watson-Crick base pairs in the minor groove of DNA.
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/35106