Summary information and primary citation
- PDB-id
-
5v2h;
DSSR-derived features in text and
JSON formats
- Class
- RNA
- Method
- X-ray (1.08 Å)
- Summary
- RNA octamer containing glycol nucleic acid, sgnt
- Reference
-
Schlegel MK, Foster DJ, Kel'in AV, Zlatev I, Bisbe A,
Jayaraman M, Lackey JG, Rajeev KG, Charisse K, Harp J,
Pallan PS, Maier MA, Egli M, Manoharan M (2017):
"Chirality
Dependent Potency Enhancement and Structural Impact of
Glycol Nucleic Acid Modification on siRNA." J.
Am. Chem. Soc., 139, 8537-8546.
doi: 10.1021/jacs.7b02694.
- Abstract
- Here we report the investigation of glycol nucleic acid
(GNA), an acyclic nucleic acid analogue, as a modification
of siRNA duplexes. We evaluated the impact of (S)- or
(R)-GNA nucleotide incorporation on RNA duplex structure by
determining three individual crystal structures. These
structures indicate that the (S)-nucleotide backbone adopts
a conformation that has little impact on the overall duplex
structure, while the (R)-nucleotide disrupts the phosphate
backbone and hydrogen bonding of an adjacent base pair. In
addition, the GNA-T nucleobase adopts a rotated
conformation in which the 5-methyl group points into the
minor groove, rather than the major groove as in a normal
Watson-Crick base pair. This observation of reverse
Watson-Crick base pairing is further supported by thermal
melting analysis of GNA-C and GNA-G containing duplexes
where it was demonstrated that a higher thermal stability
was associated with isoguanine and isocytosine base
pairing, respectively, over the canonical nucleobases.
Furthermore, it was also shown that GNA nucleotide or
dinucleotide incorporation increases resistance against
snake venom phosphodiesterase. Consistent with the
structural data, modification of an siRNA with (S)-GNA
resulted in greater in vitro potencies over identical
sequences containing (R)-GNA. A walk of (S)-GNA along the
guide and passenger strands of a GalNAc conjugate duplex
targeting mouse transthyretin (TTR) indicated that GNA is
well tolerated in the seed region of both strands in vitro,
resulting in an approximate 2-fold improvement in potency.
Finally, these conjugate duplexes modified with GNA were
capable of maintaining in vivo potency when subcutaneously
injected into mice.