1 Class 27_11 last updated 12/14/11 12:30 PM Limitations of siRNA silencing in mammalian cells Transient nature of the response (~3 days) Transfection problems (cell type, refractoriness) Can be cell type specific Non-renewable nature of siRNAs ($$) 2 Potential determinants of efficient siRNA-directed gene silencing siRNA Incorporation into the RNA-inducing silencing complex (RISC); stability in RISC. Base-pairing with mRNA. Cleavage of mRNA. mRNA Base-pairing with siRNA. The position of the siRNA-binding target region. Secondary and tertiary structures in mRNA. Binding of mRNA-associated proteins. The rate of mRNA translation. The number of polysomes that are associated with translating mRNA. The abundance and half-life of mRNA. The subcellular location of mRNA. Delivery Transfection (lipofection, electroporation, hydrodynamic injection (mouse)) Virus infection of shDNA, esp. lentivirus (e.g., retrovirus like HIV that can integrate into non-dividing cells) 3 Some applications: Target oncogene Ras V12 (G12V) – silenced mutant ras without silencing the WT allele. Reduced the oncogenic phenotype (soft agar growth, tumor formation in nude mice) T-lymphocytes infected with anti-CCR5 RNA lower levels of this HIV receptor, and lower levels of infection (5-7X) Target an enzyme in mouse ES cells with a hairpin vector, Isolate a knockdown, make a mouse. Mouse shows same knockdown phenotype in its cells. So can target the whole mammalian organism, Just inject a GFP silencer gene into single cell embryos of a GFP mouse: Can find a chimeric GFP mouse with reduced GFP Progeny carry it in the germ line, Get a complete knockdown mouse, without ES cells (easier) Cells transformed with tsSV40LTag, which inactivates p53 at 32o but not at 39o. Infect with Hu shRNA lentivirus shRNA library, select cells that grow at 39o. Knocked down genes = those necessary for p53-induced growth arrest. NATURE 428. 2004. p. 431 32o Control 39o Control 39o p16K.D. 39o 39o LTag=large T antigen p53K.D. p533+p16K,K.D. Identified shRNAs 4 5 Systemic RNAi: worms, plants, mammals In plants, get permanent post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS, transcriptional level) Worms: effect can last though several generations Amplified by reverse transcriptase Influx/efflux via a specific transmembrane protein (in worms) Raisons d’etre? Infection, many viruses go through a DS RNA phase. Repeat element silencing? (1 million Alus, + others half the human genome) Transcribed in either direction, so could form DS RNA, then RNAi inhibits action of SS ‘mRNA” Discovery of RNA interference using double-stranded RNA 6 Nature (1998) 391: 806 Discovered RNAi as they tracked down the effective agent in antisense experiments (DS RNA contaminating their SS antisense preparations had all the inhibitory activity) Paper characterized by nice controls and variations: Several genes, whole animal phenotype, protein product (GFP), RNA level (in situs) Phenotype of null mutant is specifically mimicked. Introns and promoter sequences ineffective. DS RNA from a different sequence + SS antisense RNA vs. the target: ineffective DS RNA linked (chimeric molecule) to a single stranded portion vs, the target: ineffective Transport of DS RNA between cells and amplification implied. 7 In situ hybridizations No probe No RNA injected SS antisense RNA DS RNA Transcript disappears (RNA degraded) 8 Transgenerational Inheritance of an Acquired Small RNA-Based Antiviral Response in C. elegans. Oded Rechavi , Gregory Minevich, Oliver Hobert Cell 147, 1248, Dec. 11, 2011 Nucleic acid aptamers Aptamers: molecules that bind other molecules with good affinity and specificity Usually these are proteins . . . . But they can also be RNA or DNA. That is, single stranded RNA or DNA molecules can and will fold up into secondary and tertiary structures depending on their sequence. DNA can be synthesized as very large numbers of different (random sequences) Aptamers can be selected from among these molecules based on their ability to bind an immobilized ligand. The tiny fraction found by chance to be able to bind to your favorite ligand can by amplified by PCR (along with background molecules). Re-iteration of the procedure will enrich for the aptamer until they dominate the population. At this point they can be cloned and sequenced. RNA molecules can be selected by synthesizing them from a randomized DNA population using the T7 promoter appended to each DNA molecule. This enrichment procedure is just the SELEX method described earlier for finding the RNA substrate for RNA binding proteins. In this case it’s the same procedure, looked from the opposite point of view: not what RNA will the protein bind best, but what RNA binds the protein best. 9 Who’s binding whom? Protein: thrombin (blood protease) thrombin-binding RNA aptamer 10 11 SELEX: Systematic Evolution of Ligands by Exponential Enrichment E.g.: Have a random 40-mer synthesized, centered between 2 arbitrary 20-mers (PCR sites) 20-mer Random 40 20-mer 440 = 1024 Practical limit = 1015 = ~ 2 nmoles = ~ 50 ug DNA 1015 is a large number. Very large e.g., 500,000 times as many as all the unique 40-mers found in the human genome. These 1015 sequences are called “sequence space” being examined here. Each DNA molecule of these 1015 (or RNA molecule copied from them) can fold into a particular 3-D structure. We know little as yet about these structures. But we can select the molecules that bind to our target by: AFFINITY CHROMATOGRAPHY Previously discussed SELEX in terms of finding the substrate sequence(s) for an RNA binding protein. Here: select an RNA sequence that can bind any particular target of interest (protein, small molecule). 12 SELEX: Systematic Evolution of Ligands by Exponential Enrichment . . . for RNA (or DNA) DNA (1015) RNA RNA Essential elements: 1) Synthesis of randomized DNA sequences 2) In vitro T7-mediated RNA synthesis from DNA 3) Affinity chromatography 4) RT-PCR Ligand is immobilized here. Small molecule or large molecule DNA, add T7 promoter to one pcr primer RNA RNA e.g., the soluble form of the immobilized affinity column material 13 Some examples of aptamer targets Small molecules Zn+2 ATP adenosine cyclic AMP GDP FMN (and an RNA aptamer is found naturally in E.coli) cocaine dopamine amino acids (arginine) porphyrin biotin organic dyes (cibacron blue, malachite green) neutral disaccharides (cellobiose, and cellulose) oligopeptides aminoglycoside antibiotics (tobramycin) Proteins thrombin HIV tat HIV rev Factor IX (clotting factor) VEGF PDGF ricin large glycoproteins such as CD4 anthrax spores (?) 14 Table 3 Therapeutic Aptamers in Clinical Use or Clinical Development (Ph1 or 2) as of June 2009 Therapeutic Target Disease Indication Route/Method Administra tion Macugen™ (Pegaptanib) VEGF Macular degeneration Intravitreal ARC1779 von Willebrand factor REG1 Compound ID Thrombotic microangiopathy; Adjunct to carotid endarterectomy Intravenous infusion Factor IXa Coronary artery bypass; Percutaneous coronary intervention Intravenous bolus AS1411 Nucleolin Acute myeologenous leukemia; Renal cell carcinoma Intravenous infusion E10030 PDGF-b Macular degeneration Intravitreal ARC1905 Complement factor 5 Macular degeneration Intravitreal NU172 Thrombin Coronary artery bypass Intravenous infusion Tobramycin (aminoglycosde antibiotic) RNA aptamer Base flap shuts door Electrostatic surface map: red= - blue = + 15 Hermann, T. and Patel, D.J. 2000. Adaptive recognition by nucleic acid aptamers. Science 287: 820-825. One anti-Rev aptamer: binds peptide in alpha-helical conformation Another anti-Rev aptamer: binds peptide in an extended conformation MS2 protein as beta sheet bound via protruding A.A. side chains 16 Therapeutic use of an aptamer that binds to and inhibits clotting factor IX Reading: Rusconi, C.P., Scardino, E., Layzer, J., Pitoc, G.A., Ortel, T.L., Monroe, D., and Sullenger, B.A. 2002. RNA aptamers as reversible antagonists of coagulation factor IXa. Nature 419: 90-94. Factor IX acts together with Factor VIIIa to cleave Factor X, thus activating it in a step in the blood coagulation cascade leading to a clot. Thus inhibition of Factor IX results in inhibition of clot formation. Desirable during an angioplasty, for example. The usual anti-coagulant used in angioplasty is heparin, which has some toxicity and is difficult to control. Inverted T at 3’ end (3’-3’) slows exonucleolytic degradation ( R-3’O-P-O-3’-R-T ) 17 Anti-Factor IX RNA aptamer isolated by SELEX 18 Kd for Factor IX = 0.6 nM F_IXa + F_VIIIa cleaves F_X 4 nM aptamer inhibits this activity +aptamer-PEG, Clotting time increase +aptamer+PEGylation mutant version -aptamer == 1 Conjugate to polyethyleneglycol to increase bloodstream lifetime PEG = polyethyleneglycol polymer, appended to decrease clearance rate. 19 An antidote to stop the anti-clotting action if a patient begins to bleed. Would be an improvement over heparin. Just use the complementary strand (partial) as an antidote. The 2 strands find each other in the bloodstream! aptamer antidote complex Antidote 5-2 design = the open squares In human plasma +Oligomer 5-2 Anti-coagulant activity 16-fold excess antidote duplexed free aptamer Scrambled antidote Ratio of anti- to aptamer Other antidotes Anti-coagulant activity Anti-coagulant activity Anti-coagulant activity Antithrombin aptamer antidote tested in human serum 20 Need 10X antidote Ratio antidote/aptamer Antidote acts fast (10 min) Time (min) Antidote lasts a long time Time (hr) 21 Macugen: an RNA aptamer that binds VEGF and is marketed for adult macular degeneration (wet type) From the label: R Where R is and contains a PEG chain of ~ 900 ethylene glycol units. Inverted ribo-T 3’-3’ to protect 3’ end The chemical name for pegaptanib sodium is as follows: RNA, ((2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro)C-Gm-Gm-A-A-(2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro)U-(2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro)C-Am-Gm-(2'-deoxy-2′fluoro)U-Gm-Am-Am-(2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro)U-Gm-(2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro)C-(2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro)U-(2'-deoxy-2'fluoro)U-Am-(2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro)U-Am-(2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro)C-Am-(2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro)U-(2'-deoxy-2'fluoro)C-(2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro)C-Gm-(3'→3')-dT), 5'-ester with α,α'-[4,12-dioxo-6-[[[5(phosphoonoxy)pentyl]amino]carbonyl]-3,13-dioxa-5,11-diaza-1,15-pentadecanediyl]bis[ωmethoxypoly(oxy-1,2-ethanediyl)], sodium salt. The molecular formula for pegaptanib sodium is C294H342F13N107Na28O188P28[C2H4O]n (where n is approximately 900) and the molecular weight is approximately 50 kilodaltons. Macugen is formulated to have an osmolality of 280-360 mOsm/Kg, and a pH of 6–7. VEGF = vascular endothelial growth factor 22 BioTechniques 51:413-416 (December 2011) doi 10.2144/000113786 Before selection for binding to immobilized thrombin After selection Biacore analysis of thrombin binding 23 Ribozymes = RNA enzymes 1982 Tom Cech: Tetrahymena rRNA intron is self-spliced out (requires guanosine [GR] + Mg++) Altman and Pace: Ribonuclease P is an RNP: RNA component alone can process the 5’ ends of tRNAs Mitochondrial group I introns (GR –catalyzed) also can self-splice Then group II introns in mitochondria (lariat-formers) Mutations (100’s) revealed required attributes: internal guide sequence GR-binding site secondary structure Conserved base analysis (100’s) confirms structure X-ray diffraction: a few 3-D structures 24 (natural ribozymes) Free guanosine lariat No lariat + lariat + + 25 Hammerhead ribozyme (RNase) can cleave in cis (“hammer head” is upside down) Synthetic variation: cleaves in trans You are in charge of what it will cleave (you fill in the N’s) Point of cleavage 26 You can use SELEX to isolate new artificial ribozymes Tang, J. and Breaker, R.R. 2000. Structural diversity of self-cleaving ribozymes. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 97: 5784-5789. 1015 DNA molecules with T7 promoter Keep molecules under non-permissive conditions so they stay intact (without Mg++) Proposed cleavage zone RT -> cDNA: Cleavage zone is rebuilt by being part of the primer. Now add Mg++ Selecting for cleavage anywhere in the zone Isolate those successfully cleaved by size on gels Proposed cleavage zone i.e., al 16 dinucleotides present as possible cleavage sites 27 New synthetic ribozymes, and DNAzymes Start with 1015 DNA molecules again Select for enzyme activity: E.g., cleaves itself off a solid support in the presence of Mg++ Many different activities have been selected. Most have to do with nucleic acid transformations; RNase, ligase, kinase, etc. But not all (C-C bond formation possible). Generally much slower than protein enzymes. Most work has been on RNases (usually associated with the word “ribozymes”) 28 Combine an aptamer and a ribozyme Allosteric ribozyme Catalytic activity can be controlled by ligand binding ! Positive or negative. Modular Molecular switches, biosensors Selection of an allosterically activated ribozyme Isolation of aptamer-ribozyme combinations that respond to ligand binding. Randomize the “communication module” FMN=flavin mononucleptide Iterations Select with decreasing activation times for better and better binders. And: Selection of an allosterically inhibited ribozyme Soukup, G.A. and Breaker, R.R. 1999. Engineering precision RNA molecular switches. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96: 3584-3589. Catalytic 29 domain (ribozyme) Using an allosteric ribozyme to create a chemical sensor Reading Frauendorf, C. and Jaschke, A. 2001. Detection of small organic analytes by fluorescing molecular switches. Bioorg Med Chem 9: 2521-2524. Start with a theophylline-dependent ribozyme: Analogy: A molecular “beacon” that respond to nucleic acid hybridization fluorophore quencher 30 31 + Too short to maintain a stable duplex structure with SWI 58 Separate substrate molecule (in trans), fluorescently tagged Nearby quenching group kept close by hybridization 32 H theophylline 5X over background caffeine good specificity But not so sensitive (0.3 mM) 33 Some DNAzyme activities Compare protein enzymes, Typically 6000 on this scale (100/sec) Emilsson, G. M. and R. R. Breaker (2002). Deoxyribozymes: new activities and new applications. Cell Mol Life Sci 59(4): 596-607. over spontaneous reaction 34 Wash; Photorelease DNA aptamer (+fluorescent tag) Nonspecific Bind complexes to avidin beads Biotinylate bound proteins Capture again on avidin beads Gold, L. et al., Aptamer-Based Multiplexed Proteomic Technology for Biomarker Discovery PLoS ONE, 2010, 5, e15004 SomaLogic, Inc. Release DNA aptamers with high pH and collect Identify and quantify release aptamer DNA on a microarray using 35 Some prominent aptamer companies: Archemix (Boston) RNA aptamers Somalogic (Colorado) DNA aptamers Noxxon (Germany) “spiegelmers” 36 • Got this far • Material beyond this point will not be covered on the final exam. 37 Engineering cottonseed for use in human nutrition by tissue-specific reduction of toxic gossypol. Ganesan Sunilkumar*, LeAnne M. Campbell*, Lorraine Puckhaber†, Robert D. Stipanovic†, and Keerti S. Rathore. PNAS (2006) 103: 18054 Cotton: 20 million cotton farmers, in Asia and Africa. For every 1 kg of fiber, plant 1.65 kg seed = 21% oil, 23% protein. BUT: Seed contains the terpenoid gossypol: Which protects the plant from infections, But which is: cardiotoxic and hepatotoxic Oil is OK, but protein is contaminated with gossypol 44 million metric tons of cottonseed produced each year 9.4 million tons of protein Enough to satisfy the protein requirement of 500 million people. Terpenoid-negative cotton mutants are susceptible to infection and so are not commercially viable. 38 Delta-cadinene synthase Target the mRNA specifying the first step in gossypol synthesis 39 Recombinant plasmid T1 grows in the bacteria Agrobacterium tumefaciens which can be used as a vector for plant transfection dCS = delta-cadinene synthase shRNA neo gene terminator alphaglobulin promoter a-globulin promoter is active only in seeds The T-DNA region of the binary vector pAGP-iHP-dCS. Arrows indicate the primers used in the PCR analyses. RB-right T-DNA border tOCS:octopine synthase terminator dCS: 604-bp d-cadinene synthase sequence pAGP: cotton a-globulin promoter (seed specific) pNOS: nopaline synthase promoter nptII:neomycin phosphotransferase II tNOS: nopaline synthase terminator LB: left T-DNA border. 40 NEO-RESISTANT TRANSFECTANT PLANTS Ten seeds from two transgenic plants from F1 of selfed matings 0.1 ug/mg PCR for transgene Note transgene-null segregants have normal gossypol levels 41 HPLC (high performance liquid chromatography) Null segregant Spots on seed indicate terpenoid glands 42 RT-PCR assay for the mRNA for the enzyme delta-cadinene synthase: Low to undetectable levels in the siRNA knocked-down plants PCR of DNA for transgene 43 Gossypol (G) and other terpenoids are NOT reduced in the leaves of transgenic plants (so resistance to infections should be normal). The same is true other aerial parts of the plant an for roots. 44 Low gossypol level analyzed through two generations of one homozygous plant were stable at 0.19 ug/mg +/- 0.013 (SEM, 50 seeds). WHO limit for human consumption is 0.6 ug/mg. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Other plants could be similarly targeted: Lathyrus sativus, a hardy tropical/subtropical legume plant (neurotoxin = betaN-oxalylamino-L-alanine) Fava beans, cassava beans: toxins = cyanogenic and contains fava glycosides (toxic to people with low levels of the enzymes glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenease (G6PD), which is common). fava bean cassava bean