Guo Peixuan
Department of Pathobiology and Purdue Cancer Center, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA.
J Nanosci Nanotechnol. 2005 Dec;5(12):1964-82. doi: 10.1166/jnn.2005.446.
Biological macromolecules including DNA, RNA, and proteins, have intrinsic features that make them potential building blocks for the bottom-up fabrication of nanodevices. RNA is unique in nanoscale fabrication due to its amazing diversity of function and structure. RNA molecules can be designed and manipulated with a level of simplicity characteristic of DNA while possessing versatility in structure and function similar to that of proteins. RNA molecules typically contain a large variety of single stranded loops suitable for inter- and intra-molecular interaction. These loops can serve as mounting dovetails obviating the need for external linking dowels in fabrication and assembly. The self-assembly of nanoparticles from RNA involves cooperative interaction of individual RNA molecules that spontaneously assemble in a predefined manner to form a larger two- or three-dimensional structure. Within the realm of self-assembly there are two main categories, namely template and non-template. Template assembly involves interaction of RNA molecules under the influence of specific external sequence, forces, or spatial constraints such as RNA transcription, hybridization, replication, annealing, molding, or replicas. In contrast, non-template assembly involves formation of a larger structure by individual components without the influence of external forces. Examples of non-template assembly are ligation, chemical conjugation, covalent linkage, and loop/loop interaction of RNA, especially the formation of RNA multimeric complexes. The best characterized RNA multiplier and the first to be described in RNA nanotechnological application is the motor pRNA of bacteriophage phi29 which form dimers, trimers, and hexamers, via hand-in-hand interaction. phi29 pRNA can be redesigned to form a variety of structures and shapes including twins, tetramers, rods, triangles, and 3D arrays several microns in size via interaction of programmed helical regions and loops. 3D RNA array formation requires a defined nucleotide number for twisting and a palindromic sequence. Such arrays are unusually stable and resistant to a wide range of temperatures, salt concentrations, and pH. Both the therapeutic siRNA or ribozyme and a receptor-binding RNA aptamer or other ligands have been engineered into individual pRNAs. Individual chimeric RNA building blocks harboring siRNA or other therapeutic molecules have been fabricated subsequently into a trimer through hand-in-hand interaction of the engineered right and left interlocking RNA loops. The incubation of these particles containing the receptor-binding aptamer or other ligands results in the binding and co-entry of trivalent therapeutic particles into cells. Such particles were subsequently shown to modulate the apoptosis of cancer cells in both cell cultures and animal trials. The use of such antigen-free 20-40 nm particles holds promise for the repeated long-term treatment of chronic diseases. Other potentially useful RNA molecules that form multimers include HIV RNA that contain kissing loop to form dimers, tecto-RNA that forms a "jigsaw puzzle," and the Drosophila bicoid mRNA that forms multimers via "hand-by-arm" interactions. Applications of RNA molecules involving replication, molding, embossing, and other related techniques, have recently been described that allow the utilization of a variety of materials to enhance diversity and resolution of nanomaterials. It should eventually be possible to adapt RNA to facilitate construction of ordered, patterned, or pre-programmed arrays or superstructures. Given the potential for 3D fabrication, the chance to produce reversible self-assembly, and the ability of self-repair, editing and replication, RNA self-assembly will play an increasingly significant role in integrated biological nanofabrication. A random 100-nucleotide RNA library may exist in 1.6 x 10(60) varieties with multifarious structure to serve as a vital system for efficient fabrication, with a complexity and diversity far exceeding that of any current nanoscale system. This review covers the basic concepts of RNA structure and function, certain methods for the study of RNA structure, the approaches for engineering or fabricating RNA into nanoparticles or arrays, and special features of RNA molecules that form multimers. The most recent development in exploration of RNA nanoparticles for pathogen detection, drug/gene delivery, and therapeutic application is also introduced in this review.
包括DNA、RNA和蛋白质在内的生物大分子具有内在特性,使其成为自下而上制造纳米器件的潜在构建模块。RNA在纳米尺度制造中独具特色,因其功能和结构具有惊人的多样性。RNA分子可以像DNA一样以简单的方式进行设计和操作,同时拥有与蛋白质相似的结构和功能多样性。RNA分子通常包含大量适合分子间和分子内相互作用的单链环。这些环可作为安装燕尾槽,在制造和组装过程中无需外部连接销。RNA纳米颗粒的自组装涉及单个RNA分子的协同相互作用,这些分子以预定义的方式自发组装形成更大的二维或三维结构。在自组装领域主要有两类,即模板组装和非模板组装。模板组装涉及RNA分子在特定外部序列、力或空间限制(如RNA转录、杂交、复制、退火、成型或复制)影响下的相互作用。相比之下,非模板组装涉及单个组件在无外力影响下形成更大的结构。非模板组装的例子包括RNA的连接、化学偶联、共价连接和环/环相互作用,特别是RNA多聚体复合物的形成。最具特征的RNA多聚体且最早在RNA纳米技术应用中被描述的是噬菌体phi29的驱动pRNA,它通过手拉手相互作用形成二聚体、三聚体和六聚体。phi29 pRNA可以重新设计,通过编程螺旋区域和环的相互作用形成各种结构和形状,包括双体、四聚体、棒状、三角形以及尺寸达几微米的三维阵列。三维RNA阵列的形成需要特定数量的核苷酸用于扭曲以及一个回文序列。这样的阵列异常稳定,能抵抗广泛的温度、盐浓度和pH值。治疗性小干扰RNA(siRNA)或核酶以及受体结合RNA适体或其他配体都已被设计到单个pRNA中。随后,通过工程化的左右互锁RNA环的手拉手相互作用,将携带siRNA或其他治疗分子的单个嵌合RNA构建模块制造成三聚体。这些含有受体结合适体或其他配体的颗粒的孵育导致三价治疗颗粒与细胞结合并共同进入细胞。随后在细胞培养和动物试验中均显示此类颗粒可调节癌细胞的凋亡。使用这种无抗原的20 - 40纳米颗粒有望用于慢性疾病的重复长期治疗。其他形成多聚体的潜在有用RNA分子包括含有接吻环形成二聚体的HIV RNA、形成“拼图”的tecto - RNA以及通过“臂对臂”相互作用形成多聚体的果蝇双尾mRNA。最近描述了涉及复制、成型、压花和其他相关技术的RNA分子应用,这些应用允许利用多种材料来增强纳米材料的多样性和分辨率。最终应该能够使RNA便于构建有序、图案化或预编程的阵列或超结构。鉴于三维制造的潜力、产生可逆自组装的机会以及自我修复、编辑和复制的能力,RNA自组装将在集成生物纳米制造中发挥越来越重要的作用。一个随机的100个核苷酸的RNA文库可能存在1.6×10⁶⁰种具有多种结构的变体,作为高效制造的重要系统,其复杂性和多样性远远超过任何当前的纳米尺度系统。本综述涵盖了RNA结构和功能的基本概念、研究RNA结构的某些方法、将RNA工程化或制造成纳米颗粒或阵列的方法以及形成多聚体的RNA分子的特殊特征。本综述还介绍了用于病原体检测、药物/基因递送和治疗应用的RNA纳米颗粒探索的最新进展。