In vitro Selection of Chemically Modified DNAzymes

Abstract DNAzymes are in vitro selected DNA oligonucleotides with catalytic activities. RNA cleavage is one of the most extensively studied DNAzyme reactions. To expand the chemical functionality of DNA, various chemical modifications have been made during and after selection. In this review, we sum...

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Main Authors: Prof. Po‐Jung Jimmy Huang, Prof. Juewen Liu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley-VCH 2020-10-01
Series:ChemistryOpen
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/open.202000134
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spelling doaj-e69f15c5ba0f408083456781a361fa382021-04-02T12:49:52ZengWiley-VCHChemistryOpen2191-13632020-10-019101046105910.1002/open.202000134In vitro Selection of Chemically Modified DNAzymesProf. Po‐Jung Jimmy Huang0Prof. Juewen Liu1Department of Chemistry, Waterloo Institute for Nanotechnology University of Waterloo Waterloo Ontario, N2L 3G1 CanadaDepartment of Chemistry, Waterloo Institute for Nanotechnology University of Waterloo Waterloo Ontario, N2L 3G1 CanadaAbstract DNAzymes are in vitro selected DNA oligonucleotides with catalytic activities. RNA cleavage is one of the most extensively studied DNAzyme reactions. To expand the chemical functionality of DNA, various chemical modifications have been made during and after selection. In this review, we summarize examples of RNA‐cleaving DNAzymes and focus on those modifications introduced during in vitro selection. By incorporating various modified nucleotides via polymerase chain reaction (PCR) or primer extension, a few DNAzymes were obtained that can be specifically activated by metal ions such as Zn2+ and Hg2+. In addition, some modifications were introduced to mimic RNase A that can cleave RNA substrates in the absence of divalent metal ions. In addition, single modifications at the fixed regions of DNA libraries, especially at the cleavage junctions, have been tested, and examples of DNAzymes with phosphorothioate and histidine‐glycine modified tertiary amine were successfully obtained specific for Cu2+, Cd2+, Zn2+, and Ni2+. Labeling fluorophore/quencher pair right next to the cleavage junction was also used to obtain signaling DNAzymes for detecting various metal ions and cells. Furthermore, we reviewed work on the cleavage of 2′‐5′ linked RNA and L‐RNA substrates. Finally, applications of these modified DNAzymes as biosensors, RNases, and biochemical probes are briefly described with a few future research opportunities outlined at the end.https://doi.org/10.1002/open.202000134aptamersbiosensorsDNAzymesdeoxyribozymesSELEX
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Prof. Po‐Jung Jimmy Huang
Prof. Juewen Liu
spellingShingle Prof. Po‐Jung Jimmy Huang
Prof. Juewen Liu
In vitro Selection of Chemically Modified DNAzymes
ChemistryOpen
aptamers
biosensors
DNAzymes
deoxyribozymes
SELEX
author_facet Prof. Po‐Jung Jimmy Huang
Prof. Juewen Liu
author_sort Prof. Po‐Jung Jimmy Huang
title In vitro Selection of Chemically Modified DNAzymes
title_short In vitro Selection of Chemically Modified DNAzymes
title_full In vitro Selection of Chemically Modified DNAzymes
title_fullStr In vitro Selection of Chemically Modified DNAzymes
title_full_unstemmed In vitro Selection of Chemically Modified DNAzymes
title_sort in vitro selection of chemically modified dnazymes
publisher Wiley-VCH
series ChemistryOpen
issn 2191-1363
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract DNAzymes are in vitro selected DNA oligonucleotides with catalytic activities. RNA cleavage is one of the most extensively studied DNAzyme reactions. To expand the chemical functionality of DNA, various chemical modifications have been made during and after selection. In this review, we summarize examples of RNA‐cleaving DNAzymes and focus on those modifications introduced during in vitro selection. By incorporating various modified nucleotides via polymerase chain reaction (PCR) or primer extension, a few DNAzymes were obtained that can be specifically activated by metal ions such as Zn2+ and Hg2+. In addition, some modifications were introduced to mimic RNase A that can cleave RNA substrates in the absence of divalent metal ions. In addition, single modifications at the fixed regions of DNA libraries, especially at the cleavage junctions, have been tested, and examples of DNAzymes with phosphorothioate and histidine‐glycine modified tertiary amine were successfully obtained specific for Cu2+, Cd2+, Zn2+, and Ni2+. Labeling fluorophore/quencher pair right next to the cleavage junction was also used to obtain signaling DNAzymes for detecting various metal ions and cells. Furthermore, we reviewed work on the cleavage of 2′‐5′ linked RNA and L‐RNA substrates. Finally, applications of these modified DNAzymes as biosensors, RNases, and biochemical probes are briefly described with a few future research opportunities outlined at the end.
topic aptamers
biosensors
DNAzymes
deoxyribozymes
SELEX
url https://doi.org/10.1002/open.202000134
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