DNAmoreDB - A Database of Deoxyribozymes

Published on 2012 in Nucleic Acids Res. volume 40 issue 4.

PubMed ID: 22021383

DOI:10.1093/nar/gkr860

Abstract:

We recently reported that a DNA catalyst (deoxyribozyme) can site-specifically hydrolyze DNA on the minutes time scale. Sequence specificity is provided by Watson-Crick base pairing between the DNA substrate and two oligonucleotide binding arms that flank the 40-nt catalytic region of the deoxyribozyme. The DNA catalyst from our recent in vitro selection effort, 10MD5, can cleave a single-stranded DNA substrate sequence with the aid of Zn 2+ and Mn 2+ cofactors, as long as the substrate cleavage site encompasses the four particular nucleotides ATG^T. Thus, 10MD5 can cleave only 1 out of every 256 (4 4 ) arbitrarily chosen DNA sites, which is rather poor substrate sequence tolerance. In this study, we demonstrated substantially broader generality of deoxyribozymes for site-specific DNA hydrolysis. New selection experiments were performed, revealing the optimality of presenting only one or two unpaired DNA substrate nucleotides to the N 40 DNA catalytic region. Comprehensive selections were then performed, including in some cases a key selection pressure to cleave the substrate at a predetermined site. These efforts led to identification of numerous new DNA-hydrolyzing deoxyribozymes, many of which require merely two particular nucleotide identities at the cleavage site (e.g. T^G), while retaining Watson-Crick sequence generality beyond those nucleotides along with useful cleavage rates. These findings establish experimentally that broadly sequence-tolerant and site-specific deoxyribozymes are readily identified for hydrolysis of single-stranded DNA.



DNAzymes linked to this article:

Name Isolated sequence Length Reaction
17PA19 TAAGGTGCCTCCATTTTCCGTTTAGGAACTGCCCGGTGTG      40 DNA cleavage
13PB2 TATGACACTTATTATAAATATGCTAGTAACGGATAGGTTG      40 DNA cleavage
7VH6 ACTTAGGAAGCCACGTCTATAACCGCGGGGGTGTGGGACG      40 DNA cleavage
8VJ17 CCCCATGAGCCATTGTGGGTTCTACTTATGCTGTACTGAA      40 DNA cleavage
6YR11 CCCCCTGCGCCAGTGAGGGCTCTACTTATGCTGTACGCAA      40 DNA cleavage
6YR25 CCCCCAGACCCATTGAGGGTTTTACTTACGCTGTTCCGAA      40 DNA cleavage
7VK55 CCCACCTCTGCCGCTGAGGTCCGTTAAATGTACTATCGCG      40 DNA cleavage
8VL51 TGCCAGGCTAGTTTGAATCAGGAAAAAGAACACAATTCTC      40 DNA cleavage
17PA1 TAGTGCTTGTATTCAGAACGCAATTCTTCTGAGCCGCCTA      40 DNA cleavage
11PC1 CAGCGTCGCCAATTCGTACCTTCGATATTGAATCTCTCTG      40 DNA cleavage
13PD1 TATACCGGGCAACTATTGCCTCGTCATCGCTATTTTCTGCG      41 DNA cleavage
13PD34 TAACCCGGATCATATCTCGTCATGGTCATCTATTTTTGCC      40 DNA cleavage
11PC5 CAGTGTCGCCCACGCGTAATTAGCTTGTGGAATATTTCCG      40 DNA cleavage
13PD2 TAACCCGGGTGCTAGCCTCGTCATGGCCATAGTTTTTGCC      40 DNA cleavage
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