Intramolecular G-quartet Motifs Confer Nuclease Resistance to a Potent Anti-HIV Oligonucleotide (∗)

Autor: Bishop, Jeffrey S., Guy-Caffey, Judith K., Ojwang, Joshua O., Smith, Sean R., Hogan, Michael E., Cossum, Paul A., Rando, Robert F., Chaudhary, Nilabh
Zdroj: Journal of Biological Chemistry; March 1996, Vol. 271 Issue: 10 p5698-5703, 6p
Abstrakt: We have identified a potentially therapeutic anti-human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 oligonucleotide composed entirely of deoxyguanosines and thymidines (T30177, also known as AR177: 5′-g∗tggtgggtgggtggg∗t-3′, where asterisk indicates phosphorothioate linkage). In acute assay systems using human T-cells, T30177 and its total phosphodiester homologue T30175 inhibited HIV-1-induced syncytium production by 50% at 0.15 and 0.3 μM, respectively. Under physiological conditions, the sequence and composition of the 17-mer favors the formation of a compact, intramolecularly folded structure dominated by two stacked guanine quartet motifs that are connected by three loops of TGs. The molecule is stabilized by the coordination of a potassium ion between the two stacked quartets. We now show that these guanine quartet-containing oligonucleotides are highly resistant to serum nucleases, with t½of 5 h and >4 days for T30175 and T30177, respectively. Both oligonucleotides were internalized efficiently by cells, with intracellular concentrations reaching 5-10-fold above the extracellular levels after 24 h of incubation. In contrast, single-base mutated variants or random sequence control oligonucleotides that could not form the compactly folded structure had markedly reduced half-lives (t½from ~3 to 7 min), low cellular uptake, and no sequence-specific anti-HIV-1 activity. These data suggest that the tertiary structure of an oligonucleotide is a key determinant of its nuclease resistance, cellular uptake kinetics, and biological efficacy.
Databáze: Supplemental Index