Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801, USA.
Chemistry. 2011 Dec 2;17(49):13732-42. doi: 10.1002/chem.201100352. Epub 2011 Nov 3.
Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) has been used to study the global folding of an uranyl (UO(2)(2+))-specific 39E DNAzyme in the presence of Mg(2+), Zn(2+), Pb(2+), or UO(2)(2+). At pH 5.5 and physiological ionic strength (100 mM Na(+)), two of the three stems in this DNAzyme folded into a compact structure in the presence of Mg(2+) or Zn(2+). However, no folding occurred in the presence of Pb(2+) or UO(2)(2+); this is analogous to the "lock-and-key" catalysis mode first observed in the Pb(2+)-specific 8-17 DNAzyme. However, Mg(2+) and Zn(2+) exert different effects on the 8-17 and 39E DNAzymes. Whereas Mg(2+) or Zn(2+)-dependent folding promoted 8-17 DNAzyme activity, the 39E DNAzyme folding induced by Mg(2+) or Zn(2+) inhibited UO(2)(2+)-specific activity. Group IIA series of metal ions (Mg(2+), Ca(2+), Sr(2+)) also caused global folding of the 39E DNAzyme, for which the apparent binding affinity between these metal ions and the DNAzyme decreases as the ionic radius of the metal ions increases. Because the ionic radius of Sr(2+) (1.12 Å) is comparable to that of Pb(2+) (1.20 Å), but contrary to Pb(2+), Sr(2+) induces the DNAzyme to fold under identical conditions, ionic size alone cannot account for the unique folding behaviors induced by Pb(2+) and UO(2)(2+). Under low ionic strength (30 mM Na(+)), all four metal ions (Mg(2+), Zn(2+), Pb(2+), and UO(2)(2+)), caused 39E DNAzyme folding, suggesting that metal ions can neutralize the negative charge of DNA-backbone phosphates in addition to playing specific catalytic roles. Mg(2+) at low (<2 mM) concentration promoted UO(2)(2+)-specific activity, whereas Mg(2+) at high (>2 mM) concentration inhibited the UO(2)(2+)-specific activity. Therefore, the lock-and-key mode of DNAzymes depends on ionic strength, and the 39E DNAzyme is in the lock-and-key mode only at ionic strengths of 100 mM or greater.
荧光共振能量转移(FRET)已被用于研究在镁(Mg(2+))、锌(Zn(2+))、铅(Pb(2+))或铀(UO(2)(2+))存在下,一种铀(UO(2)(2+))特异性 39E DNA 酶的整体折叠。在 pH 5.5 和生理离子强度(100 mM Na(+))下,该 DNA 酶的三个茎中的两个在镁(Mg(2+))或锌(Zn(2+))存在下折叠成紧凑结构。然而,在 Pb(2+)或 UO(2)(2+)存在下没有折叠发生;这类似于在 Pb(2+)特异性 8-17 DNA 酶中首次观察到的“锁钥”催化模式。然而,Mg(2+)和 Zn(2+)对 8-17 和 39E DNA 酶产生不同的影响。虽然 Mg(2+)或 Zn(2+)-依赖性折叠促进 8-17 DNA 酶的活性,但由 Mg(2+)或 Zn(2+)诱导的 39E DNA 酶折叠抑制了 UO(2)(2+)特异性活性。IIA 族金属离子(Mg(2+)、Ca(2+)、Sr(2+))也引起 39E DNA 酶的整体折叠,这些金属离子与 DNA 酶之间的表观结合亲和力随着金属离子的离子半径增加而降低。因为 Sr(2+)(1.12 Å)的离子半径与 Pb(2+)(1.20 Å)相当,但与 Pb(2+)相反,Sr(2+)在相同条件下诱导 DNA 酶折叠,因此离子大小不能单独解释 Pb(2+)和 UO(2)(2+)诱导的独特折叠行为。在低盐度(30 mM Na(+))下,所有四种金属离子(Mg(2+)、Zn(2+)、Pb(2+)和 UO(2)(2+))均引起 39E DNA 酶折叠,表明金属离子除了发挥特定的催化作用外,还可以中和 DNA 骨架磷酸的负电荷。低浓度(<2 mM)的 Mg(2+)促进 UO(2)(2+)特异性活性,而高浓度(>2 mM)的 Mg(2+)抑制 UO(2)(2+)特异性活性。因此,DNA 酶的锁钥模式取决于离子强度,只有在离子强度为 100 mM 或更高时,39E DNA 酶才处于锁钥模式。