In Vitro Selection and Biochemical Characterization of Trivalent Metal Ion Dependent RNA-cleaving DNAzymes

In Vitro Selection and Biochemical Characterization of Trivalent Metal Ion Dependent RNA-cleaving DNAzymes
Author: Mahsa Vazin
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2016
Genre:
ISBN:

DNAzymes are DNA sequences with catalytic activity. So far, all known DNAzymes have been isolated using the high-throughput in vitro selection method. DNAzymes have been used for analytical, biomedical, and nanotechnology applications. All known DNAzymes require metal ions for activity. Therefore, a particularly interesting direction is the isolation of DNAzymes that function only in the presence of specific metal ion cofactors. Metal-specific DNAzymes can be used for developing metal ion biosensors and also provide insights into the interaction between metal ions and DNA. Since the first DNAzyme was reported in 1994, most metal dependent-DNAzymes have been isolated using divalent metal ions, such as Pb2+, Zn2+, Hg2+, UO22+, Cu2+ and Cd2+. Recently, a few monovalent metal dependent DNAzymes were also reported. However, relatively little is known about trivalent metal ions. Compared to DNAzymes using monovalent metal ions, those using divalent metal ions are usually more efficient. Therefore, we suspect that trivalent metal ions may result in even more efficient DNAzymes. At the same time, trivalent metal ions are also very important for technological applications. Hence, the main goal of this thesis is to select and characterize DNAzymes using trivalent metal ions as cofactors, in the hope of developing biosensors for this category of metal ions. There are three types of trivalent metal ions used in this work, including trivalent lanthanide ions (Ce3+, Yb3+ and Lu3+), Group 3A metal ions (Al3+, Ga3+, In3+ and Tl3+), and Cr3+. Different selection strategies were employed to fulfill each metal ion criteria. Among the various types of DNAzymes, this thesis is focused on those cleaving RNA. In each chapter, the conditions and processes of the in vitro selection with the target metal ion are described and the results are discussed. Biochemical studies of the selected DNAzymes are also presented. The first chapter of this thesis gives a general introduction to DNA and DNAzymes, as well as some of their applications. In chapter two, the in vitro selection with Ce3+ was described, which resulted in the reselection of the Ce13d DNAzyme. Ce13d was previously reported in a Ce4+-dependent selection carried out by another member of the Liu lab. This DNAzyme appears to be an optimal sequence for Ce3+, but it is also highly active with all the trivalent lanthanides, Y3+, and to a lesser extent with Pb2+. Interestingly, by changing the cleavage junction from the normal phosphodiester to phosphorothioate (PS), the enzyme has a decreased activity with lanthanide but shows a high activity with all thiophilic metals. Since Ce13d is an interesting DNAzyme, a carful biochemical study of the enzyme was performed. In chapter three, in order to find more specific DNAzymes that distinguish each lanthanide, two new in vitro selections were conducted with Yb3+ and Lu3+, respectively. The new Lu12 DNAzyme was selected. Lu12 is more active with smaller lanthanides and has the lowest activity with the largest lanthanide, Lu3+. Lu12 was extensively studied and some interesting characters of the enzymes were found, such as a pH-rate slope of 2, using pro-Sp for metal binding at the cleavage site, and acceptance of a diverse range of cleavage junctions. Such properties were never previously reported for any known RNA-cleaving DNAzymes. In chapter four, efforts toward the isolation of DNAzymes specific for the group 3A metal ions using in vitro selection were described. Four independent selections were carried out with Ga3+, In3+, Al3+ and Tl3+; however, no specific DNAzymes were identified. The failure in the selection with this group of metal ions was probably due to the very low pKa of these metal ions in aqueous solution, and also their inability to tightly bind to phosphate group of the DNA molecule. The Tl3+-dependent selection was also repeated with PS-modified library, but the selection still did not work, because Tl3+ can desulfurize the substrate back to the normal PO substrate. While no new DNAzymes were isolated in this work, this study has enhanced our understanding of the interaction between Group 3A metals with DNA, and this information is useful for future in vitro selection works using these metals. In chapter five, the cleavage of the previously selected DNAzyme, Ce13d, by Cr3+ was studied, initially. This preliminary study gives us information about the condition for the efficient activity of Cr3+. Then, two new Cr3+-dependent selections were conducted to isolate a specific DNAzyme. To discourage a Ce13d type of sequence, a blocking DNA and a smaller N35 library were tested separately. However, the Cr3+ selections resulted in obtaining a non-specific cleaving DNAzyme as the major product, and accompanied with a small fraction of 17E, suggesting the Ce13d as an optimal sequence for Cr3+. Cr3+ is a highly important metal and is also an environmental contaminant. This study suggests the possibility of using DNAzyme for Cr3+ detection.

In Vitro Selection of New Deoxyribozymes as Metal Biosensors

In Vitro Selection of New Deoxyribozymes as Metal Biosensors
Author: Po-Jung Huang
Publisher:
Total Pages: 180
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN:

In vitro selection of metal-specific DNAzymes has been shown to be a powerful method to obtain biosensors for metal ion detection. With 14 independent in vitro selection experiments using each of the trivalent lanthanide as the metal cofactor, five DNAzymes with distinct activity patterns cross the lanthanide series were identified and characterized. In addition, these DNAzyme beacon sensors were developed by using fluorophore/quencher modified pairs. Each of these DNAzymes showed low nM lanthanide detection limit with minimal interference from other metals. A sensor array was prepared to achieve pattern-recognition-based detection using linear discriminant analysis (LDA), where most of the 14 lanthanides can be well separated. In addition, a selection using a phosphorothioate modified DNA library was carried out and a new DNAzyme with high sensitivity and specificity for Cd2+ was obtained.

In Vitro Selection of Functional DNA for Molecular Catalysis, Conjugation, and Sensing

In Vitro Selection of Functional DNA for Molecular Catalysis, Conjugation, and Sensing
Author: Kun Liu
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2021
Genre:
ISBN:

As the central theme of this thesis research, in vitro selection has been performed to isolate functional DNAzymes and DNA aptamers for molecular catalysis and sensing. Not only details of the in vitro selection and characterization of functional DNAzymes and aptamers, but also their applications for the catalytic conjugation of biological macromolecules, immobilization of redox functionalities on surfaces, and ultrasensitive detection of total copper in industrial samples are presented. Copper is known to bind DNA on both negatively charged phosphate backbone and nucleobases; through in vitro selection, it has been demonstrated that these interactions can be coordinated in a DNAzyme to catalyze alkyne-azide cycloaddition reaction with ultralow concentrations of either Cu(I) or Cu(II) as a cofactor. The selected DNAzyme, namely, CLICK-17, catalyzes the reaction with high efficiency under both in cis (single turn-over) and in trans (multi turn-over) conditions. After characterization and kinetics studies, three applications of CLICK-17 have been explored: (1) As a biocompatible coupling reagent for labelling azide-functionalized biological macromolecules; (2) As a highly efficient co-catalyst for the immobilization of electrochemical reporters onto azide-terminated self-assembled monolayers (SAMs); (3) As a superior transducer for the construction of an electrochemical biosensor for copper. The isolation of DNA aptamers binding to small molecules is challenging, due to their lack of chemical functionalities to interact with DNA strands. Ferrocene is a particularly refractory target, as a mater of fact. Conventional in vitro selection method (ferrocene immobilized on a supporting bead) and capture selection method (DNA library immobilized on a supporting bead) in isolating aptamers binding to a water-soluble ferrocene derivative have been compared. A ferrocene binding aptamer with moderate binding affinity was isolated with capture selection method. In summary, this research achieved the in vitro selection of a DNAzyme that is useful for developing different types of applications, and a DNA aptamer that can potentially deepen our understanding of molecular recognition between a DNA aptamer and its target.

Ribozymes

Ribozymes
Author: Sabine Müller
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 81
Release: 2021-07-09
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3527814531

Ribozymes Provides comprehensive coverage of a core field in the molecular biosciences, bringing together decades of knowledge from the world’s top professionals in the field Timely and unique in its breadth of content, this all-encompassing and authoritative reference on ribozymes documents the great diversity of nucleic acid-based catalysis. It integrates the knowledge gained over the past 35 years in the field and features contributions from virtually every leading expert on the subject. Ribozymes is organized into six major parts. It starts by describing general principles and strategies of nucleic acid catalysis. It then introduces naturally occurring ribozymes and includes the search for new catalytic motifs or novel genomic locations of known motifs. Next, it covers the development and design of engineered ribozymes, before moving on to DNAzymes as a close relative of ribozymes. The next part examines the use of ribozymes for medicinal and environmental diagnostics, as well as for therapeutic tools. It finishes with a look at the tools and methods in ribozyme research, including the techniques and assays for structural and functional characterization of nucleic acid catalysts. The first reference to tie together all aspects of the multi-faceted field of ribozymes Features more than 30 comprehensive chapters in two volumes Covers the chemical principles of RNA catalysis; naturally occurring ribozymes, engineered ribozymes; DNAzymes; ribozymes as tools in diagnostics and therapy, and tools and methods to study ribozymes Includes first-hand accounts of concepts, techniques, and applications by a team of top international experts from leading academic institutions Dedicates half of its content to methods and practical applications, ranging from bioanalytical tools to medical diagnostics to therapeutics Ribozymes is an unmatched resource for all biochemists, biotechnologists, molecular biologists, and bioengineers interested in the topic.