TARGET-PROMOTED DNA ALKYLATION
New technique may be applicable to many other reagents
and targets
in addition to DNA
A university of maryland team
has discovered a new way to alkylate single-stranded
DNAs in a sequence-specific
manner [Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA,
100,
15452 (2003)]. The approach "should be readily
generalized to many
types of reagents and targets," the researchers note.
To design the alkylating agent,
chemistry professor
Steven
E. Rokita and postdoctoral associate Qibing
Zhou (now assistant professor of organic chemistry
at Virginia
Commonwealth University, Richmond) simply added a group
for generating
a quinone methide to a single-stranded DNA ligand.
A quinone methide is a highly reactive
functionality
capable of alkylating nearby structures, but with an
even stronger
tendency to react intramolecularly to form a self-adduct. In the
self-adduct form, the quinone methide is inactive. However, the
intramolecular reaction is reversible, so the reagent
always remains
ready to revert to its highly reactive form.
The DNA ligand to which the quinone
methide is attached
is capable of binding sequence-specifically to a DNA
target strand.
Binding is incomplete because the presence of the
self-adduct makes
some bases on the DNA ligand inaccessible to complementary bases
on the DNA target.
After partial binding of the two strands occurs,
the self-adduct equilibrates back to its reactive quinone methide
form. When the quinone methide re-forms, conformational
restrictions
that initially inhibited complete interstrand base
pairing are lifted,
full binding of the two DNA strands occurs, and the
reactive quinone
methide can then alkylate a base on the complementary
target strand.
The approach complements two current
strategies used
to alkylate DNA or other target structures selectively.
Right now,
one can use an affinity reagent with
an attached reactive alkylating group to bring the reactive group
to a target, or, if the target happens to be an enzyme, one can
use a mechanism-based inhibitor to alkylate it. A mechanism-based
inhibitor is a substrate analog that binds at an enzyme's active
site. The reactivity of a latent reactive group on the inhibitor
is triggered specifically when the enzyme tries to process
the analog as if it were a regular substrate.
The problem with affinity reagents is that they've
tended to exhibit insufficient specificity or they have
been plagued
by too many competitive interactions when people have
tried to get
them to work in vivo. And the problem with
mechanism-based inhibitors
is that they can only be used for targets with
catalytic activity--making
them largely inapplicable to DNA, for example, which rarely acts
as a catalyst.
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LYING
IN WAIT In
the technique developed by Rokita and Zhou, a DNA
ligand with
an attached reactive quinone methide forms an
unreactive self-adduct,
which can bind sequence-selectively but only partially to
a DNA target. The self-adduct then equilibrates back to its
reactive form, full ligand-target binding occurs, and the
quinone methide alkylates the target
strand.
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THE
TARGET-PROMOTED alkylation
system designed
by Zhou and Rokita could sidestep some of these
problems and could
be useful for specific types of applications, such as experiments
in which one would like to alkylate and thereby disable or label
a specific gene sequence. This type of on-site activation system
is not unique; antitumor drugs such as CC-1065, the duocarmycins,
and bizelesin seem to have "thought" of it first. Such drugs work
by becoming chemically activated at noncatalytic
targets, a mechanism
that has been demonstrated by groups such as those of chemistry
professors Dale L.
Boger of Scripps Research Institute and Laurence
H. Hurley of the University of Arizona.
The problem is that drugs that become active only
when in contact with specific DNA have predetermined and limited
sequence specificity. "They'll react at DNA of a short
given sequence,
whether it's a cancer cell or noncancer cell," Rokita says. "We
have here the chance of taking a general concept--the reversible
self-adduct--and targeting it for most any sequence."
Chemistry professor Maria
Tomasz of Hunter College of the City University of New York
agrees that "the new process has potentially considerably greater
sequence selectivity" than drugs like CC-1065 and the
duocarmycins.
"I can see a potential applicability in that it could lead to an
improvement over the antisense approach for control of
gene expression,
at least in vitro."
Also asked to comment, chemistry
professor Kent
S. Gates of the University of Missouri, Columbia, agrees that
"the work reveals concepts that might be utilized for the design
of new agents that deliver potent electrophiles to a variety of
protein or nucleic acid targets inside the cell."
Rokita notes that "our system is a
general process.
Although I'm showing it in DNA, it's a concept one might be able
to use for a lot of reagents," not just DNA-quinone
methide adducts.
"Design of such a reagent needs only to include
formation of a reversible
self-adduct that is capable of enhanced target recognition after
reformation of its reactive group," he says.
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