1. Formation of Stable DNA Loops by Incorporation of Nonpolar, Non-Hydrogen-Bonding Nucleoside Isosteres
- Author
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Barbara A. Schweitzer, Charles J. Sheils, Xiao-Feng Ren, and Eric T. Kool
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Base pair ,Chemistry ,Oligonucleotide ,Isostere ,Stereochemistry ,Stacking ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,Tetraloop ,Catalysis ,Article ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Non-covalent interactions ,Nucleotide ,DNA - Abstract
Hairpin loops are ubiquitous structures found in folded RNA and DNA sequences in nature. Recent reports have noted special stability for certain loop sequences. For example, RNA tetranucleotide loops (tetraloops) having the sequence GNRA and UUCG are more stable than other tetraloops and are highly conserved in nature.[1, 2] DNA tetraloops having the sequence GAAA, in certain contexts, are unusually stable in duplex DNA;[3] in triplex structures the loop sequence CTTTG has been reported to be especially stable as well.[4] In most or all of these cases, structural study has either implicated or identified intraloop hydrogen bonds between bases and/or phosphates as important structural features. It has long been recognized. however, that hydrogen bonds in aqueous solution are weak. In this regard a detailed study of hydrogen bonding in the GAAA tetraloop in RNA concluded that single hydrogen bonds contribute relatively little to the overall stability.[5] While less well understood, base stacking is also known to be at least as important a contribution to nucleic acid stability as hydrogen bonding.[6–8] Studies of loop structures in RNA and DNA have not generally addressed the relative importance of base stacking and hydrogen bonding in stabilizing such loops. We have undertaken a program to design and synthesize non-hydrogen-bonding nucleoside analogues to be used as probes of the biological noncovalent interactions of oligonucleotides and nucleic acids in general.[9] We now describe the incorporation of three such isosteres into DNA loops, and we have found that such substitutions can lead to significant stabilization of double- and triple-helical folded structures in DNA. Nucleosides 1 (F), 2 (B), and 3 (D) were designed to act as nearly perfect isosteres for the natural nucleosides thymidine (T) and deoxyadenosine (A) (Fig. 1). However, in contrast to the natural nucleosides, analogues 1–3 have little or no hydrogen bonding capability.[9] Compounds 1–3 are considerably more hydrophobic and less polar than the natural structures, and evidence from dangling-base studies in our laboratory indicate that they are more efficient at base stacking as well.[9b, 10] To test the effects of their properties on folded DNA structures, we incorporated 1–3 at loop positions into DNA hairpin-forming sequences and evaluated the thermal and thermodynamic stabilities of the folded structures. Fig. 1 Structural formulas and space-filling models of nonpolar nucleoside isosteres 1 (F), 2 (B), and 3 (D). Also shown are the structures of the natural nucleosides thymidine and deoxyadenosine. Nucleosides 1–3 were synthesized by using previously described methods.[9] The primary products of coupling of the bases of 1 and 2 with the α-chlorodeoxyribose toluoyl ester synthon are α-anomers,[11] which were converted to β-anomers by acid-catalyzed epimerization.[11b] Compounds 1–3 were unknown previous to our reports, although two other substituted indole nucleoside derivatives have recently been described.[12] The coupling of 1–3 in oligodeoxynucleotides using standard phosphoramidite chemistry was efficient, with stepwise yields of >95 % (trityl cation monitoring). For comparison we also synthesized analogous sequences containing the corresponding natural nucleosides at the same positions (see Tables 1 and and22). Table 1 Effects of natural and nonnatural nucleosides in tetranucleotide loops on the stability of double-stranded DNA hairpin structures at pH 7.0[a]. Table 2 Effects of varying the first and last nucleotides in the loop on the stability of triplexes formed between 21-nucleotide pyrimidine DNAs and complementary 8-nucleotide purine DNA strands at pH 7.0[a]. We first studied the effects of 1 (F), 2 (B), and 3 (D) in a duplex DNA hairpin loop, by using two self-complementary sequences of eight base pairs bridged by a tetranucleotide loop consisting of four identical residues. Previous studies of this sequence by Breslauer et al.[13] showed that, of sequences containing A4, C4, G4, and T4 loops, the most stable was the T4 case, and the least stable, the A4 case. We studied the properties of sequences containing F4, B4, and D4 loops, and we synthesized the natural T4 and A4 analogues for comparison. Table 1 shows data obtained for the duplex hairpin sequences. Buffer conditions were pH 7.0 (10 mm phosphate) with 100 mm NaCl. All five sequences gave melting transitions that were independent of concentration, confirming the expected hairpin structure as opposed to intermolecular complexes. The data show that the modified hairpin sequences containing 1 (F) and 2 (B) are significantly more stable than the T4 analogue. The melting temperature (Tm) for the modified F4 sequence, which contains difluorotoluene nucleosides, is 78.5 °C, or 10.8 °C higher than that of the T4 loop structure, which is the most stable tetraloop containing four identical natural nucleosides.[13] The four hairpin structures with natural nucleosides (A4, T4, C4, G4) have Tm values lying in a narrow range between 62 and 68°C.[13] Free energy values obtained by curve fitting show that the modified loop containing 1 is thermodynamically more stable than the most stable natural loop (the T4 loop) (Table 1). Similarly, the B4 hairpin sequence, with trimethylphenyl nucleosides, is almost as stable as the sequence with the F4 loop. Interestingly, just as the pyrimidine isosteres give more stable loops than a natural pyrimidine, we find that the purine analogue 3 is more stabilizing than its deoxyadenosine counterpart (ΔTm = 4.5 K). As was reported by Breslauer et a1.,[13] we find that the T4 loop is more stabilizing than the A4 loop. Moreover, we find that the nonnatural pyrimidine isosteres 1 and 2 are more stabilizing than the purine isostere 3. This difference in the natural hairpin structures has been attributed to cross-loop hydrogen bonding. Since in the nonnatural cases this difference cannot be due to hydrogen bonding, it seems likely that steric differences in the pyrimidine and purine analogues may play an important role both in the natural and nonnatural cases. Because the nonpolar thymidine isostere 1 was found to be the better stabilizing of the two analogues and because it is the best isosteric substitution, we tested it in a triple helix bridging loop. Such folded triplex-forming oligonucleotides are finding increasing use as ligands for single-stranded nucleic acids.[14] The stability of the loops in such a complex depends largely on the nature of the first and last bases in the loop.[4] The nucleoside 1 was therefore placed at these positions in a pentanucleotide loop bridging the pyrimidine strands in an eight-base triplex. For comparison we synthesized the natural T5-bridged triplex (see Table 2). We examined both 5′- and 3′-type loop orientations [4] at pH 7.0 with 100 mm NaCl and 10 mm MgCl2. The nonpolar nucleoside 1 gives complexes that are both thermally and thermodynamically more stable than structures containing the natural nucleosides (Table 2). For example, the hydrophobic nucleoside F gives complexes that are 4.8–5.4 K more thermostable than the T,T-substituted oligonucleotides, and free energies are 1.8–2.2 kcal mol−1 more favorable. Previous studies carried out with natural bases in this loop[4] have shown that the T,T case is intermediate in stability; the C,C loop is the least stable and the G,G loop the most stable. The G,G loop was found to be more stable than the T,T analogue by 1.5 kcal mol−1. [4] Thus our F,F loop is more stable than all four cases doubly substituted with the natural bases. Previous studies have described the use of simple nonnucleotide linkers as loop replacements in nucleic acids.[15] Such loops are often less stabilizing than natural nucleotide loops; this may be due both to the greater rigidity of nucleotide loops relative to the highly flexible nonnucleotide linkers and to favorable base stacking interactions in natural loops, which are missing in simple linkers. The nucleoside analogues in this study are designed to stabilize nucleic acid helices as a result of both rigidity and base stacking. In contrast to natural DNAs, loops containing nucleosides 1–3 have the added advantage of being resistant to degradation by nucleases (data not shown). In addition, such nonpolar nucleosides have been shown to pair with low affinity and low specificity with natural sequences [9b] and thus would not interfere with the expected pairing in biological systems. The present results on the incorporation of hydrophobic nucleoside analogues in oligonucleotide loops show that in general these compounds are significantly stabilizing. Because they do not undergo measurable hydrogen bonding interaction,[9b] it would seem that the best explanation for this behavior is superior base stacking propensity. This suggests a general strategy for stabilizing nucleic acid complexes containing loops: the use of arenes instead of natural bases, especially at positions adjacent to the helix, where stacking interactions are expected to make the greatest contributions. Although the present compounds cannot form stabilizing cross-loop hydrogen bonds, they may have favorable hydrophobic or van der Waals interactions. Detailed structural and physical studies will be necessary to investigate the specific origins of this stability.
- Published
- 2010