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Inhibition of in vitro and ex vivo translation by a transplatin-modified oligo(2'-O-methylribonucleotide) directed against the HIV-1 gag-pol frameshift signal

Authors :
Laure Bidou
Sandrine Chabas
Jean-Jacques Toulmé
Marc Leng
Karine Aupeix-Scheidler
Jean-Pierre Rousset
Source :
Scopus-Elsevier

Abstract

A 2'-O-methylribooligonucleotide containing a G1.U.G3 triad modified by trans-diamminedichloro-platinum(II) was targeted to the RNA region responsible for the gag-pol frameshifting during translation of the HIV-1 mRNA. The binding of the platinated oligonucleotide to its target RNA induced a rearrangement of the (G1, G3)-intrastrand crosslink, leading to the formation of an intermolecular oligonucleotide-RNA G-A crosslink. This resulted in the selective arrest of translation of a luciferase gene placed downstream of the HIV-1 frameshift signal both in a cell-free extract (rabbit reticulocyte lysate) and in RNA-transfected cells. A specific inhibition of luciferase activity was still observed when the oligonucleotide-RNA complex was not pre-formed prior to either translation or transfection. Moreover, a selective inhibition was also observed when the oligonucleotide and the plasmid DNA encoding the luciferase and bearing the RNA gag- pol frameshifting signal were co-transfected in NIH 3T3 cultured cells. Therefore the intra-strand--interstrand conversion of the platinum crosslink kinetically competes with the translation machinery and blocks the polypeptide elongation. These transplatin-modified oligonucleotides which operate within a live cell on a 'real-time' basis and do not need an external triggering signal constitute a promising new class of selective reactive probes.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scopus-Elsevier
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4ea000e7a9ac6cbe6d693dfdede010ce