首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
检索        


In vitro selection of a sodium-specific DNAzyme and its application in intracellular sensing
Authors:Seyed-Fakhreddin Torabi  Peiwen Wu  Claire E McGhee  Lu Chen  Kevin Hwang  Nan Zheng  Jianjun Cheng  Yi Lu
Institution:Departments of aBiochemistry.;bChemistry, and;cMaterials Science and Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, Urbana, IL, 61801
Abstract:Over the past two decades, enormous progress has been made in designing fluorescent sensors or probes for divalent metal ions. In contrast, the development of fluorescent sensors for monovalent metal ions, such as sodium (Na+), has remained underdeveloped, even though Na+ is one the most abundant metal ions in biological systems and plays a critical role in many biological processes. Here, we report the in vitro selection of the first (to our knowledge) Na+-specific, RNA-cleaving deoxyribozyme (DNAzyme) with a fast catalytic rate observed rate constant (kobs) ∼0.1 min−1], and the transformation of this DNAzyme into a fluorescent sensor for Na+ by labeling the enzyme strand with a quencher at the 3′ end, and the DNA substrate strand with a fluorophore and a quencher at the 5′ and 3′ ends, respectively. The presence of Na+ catalyzed cleavage of the substrate strand at an internal ribonucleotide adenosine (rA) site, resulting in release of the fluorophore from its quenchers and thus a significant increase in fluorescence signal. The sensor displays a remarkable selectivity (>10,000-fold) for Na+ over competing metal ions and has a detection limit of 135 µM (3.1 ppm). Furthermore, we demonstrate that this DNAzyme-based sensor can readily enter cells with the aid of α-helical cationic polypeptides. Finally, by protecting the cleavage site of the Na+-specific DNAzyme with a photolabile o-nitrobenzyl group, we achieved controlled activation of the sensor after DNAzyme delivery into cells. Together, these results demonstrate that such a DNAzyme-based sensor provides a promising platform for detection and quantification of Na+ in living cells.Metal ions play crucial roles in a variety of biochemical processes. As a result, the concentrations of cellular metal ions have to be highly regulated in different parts of cells, as both deficiency and surplus of metal ions can disrupt normal functions (14). To better understand the functions of metal ions in biology, it is important to detect metal ions selectively in living cells; such an endeavor will not only result in better understanding of cellular processes but also novel ways to reprogram these processes to achieve novel functions for biotechnological applications.Among the metal ions in cells, sodium (Na+) serves particularly important functions, as changes in its concentrations influence the cellular processes of numerous living organisms and cells (58), such as epithelial and other excitable cells (9). As one of the most abundant metal ions in intracellular fluid (10), Na+ affects cellular processes by triggering the activation of many signal transduction pathways, as well as influencing the actions of hormones (11). Therefore, it is important to carefully monitor the concentrations of Na+ in cells. Toward this goal, instrumental analyses by atomic absorption spectroscopy (12), X-ray fluorescence microscopy (13), and 23Na NMR (14) have been used to detect the concentration of intracellular Na+. However, it is difficult to use these methods to obtain real-time dynamics of Na+ distribution in living cells. Fluorescent sensors provide an excellent choice to overcome this difficulty, as they can provide sensitive detection with high spatial and temporal resolution. However, despite significant efforts in developing fluorescent metal ion sensors, such as those based on either genetically encoded probes or small molecular sensors, most fluorescent sensors reported so far can detect divalent metal ions such as Ca2+, Zn2+, Cu2+, and Fe2+ (1521). Among the limited number of Na+ sensors, such as sodium-binding benzofuran isophthalate (22), Sodium Green (23), CoroNa Green/Red (24, 25), and Asante NaTRIUM Green-1/2 (26), most of them are not selective for Na+ over K+ (2225, 27, 28) or have a low binding affinity for Na+ (with a Kd higher than 100 mM) (25, 2731). Furthermore, the presence of organic solvents is frequently required to achieve the desired sensitivity and selectivity for many of the Na+ probes (3234), making it difficult to study Na+ under physiological conditions. Therefore, it is still a major challenge to design fluorescent sensors with strong affinity for Na+ and high selectivity over other monovalent and multivalent metal ions that work under physiological conditions.To meet this challenge, our group and others have taken advantage of an emerging class of metalloenzymes called DNAzymes (deoxyribozymes or catalytic DNA) and turned them into metal ion probes. DNAzymes were first discovered in 1994 through a combinatorial process called in vitro selection (35). Since then, many DNAzymes have been isolated via this selection process. Among them, RNA-cleaving DNAzymes are of particular interest for metal ion sensing, due to their fast reaction rate and because the cleavage, which is catalyzed by a metal ion cofactor, can easily be converted into a detectable signal (3638). Unlike the rational design of either small-molecule or genetically encoded protein sensors, DNAzymes with desired sensitivity and specificity for a metal ion of interest can be selected from a large library of DNA molecules, containing up to 1015 different sequences (35, 39). A major advantage of DNAzymes as metal ion sensors is that metal-selective DNAzymes can be obtained without prior knowledge of necessary metal ion binding sites or specific metal–DNA interaction (40, 41). In addition, through the in vitro selection process, metal ion binding affinity and selectivity can be improved by tuning the stringency of selection pressure and introducing negative selection against competing metal ions (39, 40). Finally, DNA is easily synthesized with a variety of useful modifications and its biocompatibility makes DNAzyme-based sensors excellent tools for live-cell imaging of metal ions. As a result, several metal-specific DNAzymes have been isolated and converted into sensors for their respective metal ion cofactors, including Pb2+ (35, 42, 43), Cu2+ (44, 45), Zn2+ (46), UO22+ (47), and Hg2+ (48). They have recently been delivered into cells for monitoring UO22+ (41, 49), Pb2+ (50), Zn2+ (51), and histidine (52) in living cells.However, in contrast to the previously reported DNAzymes with divalent metal ion selectivity, no DNAzymes have been reported to have high selectivity toward a specific monovalent metal ion. Although DNAzymes that are independent of divalent metal ions have been obtained (5355), including those using modified nucleosides with protein-like functionalities (i.e., guanidinium and imidazole) (5658), no DNAzyme has been found to be selective for a specific monovalent metal ion over other monovalent metal ions. For example, the DNAzyme with the highest reported selectivity for Na+ still binds Na+ over K+ with only 1.3-fold selectivity (54). More importantly, those DNAzymes require very high concentrations of monovalent ions (molar ranges) to function and display very slow catalytic rates (e.g., 10−3 min−1) (5355). The poor selectivity, sensitivity, and slow catalytic rate render these DNAzymes unsuitable for cellular detection of Na+, due to interference from other monovalent ions such as K+ (which is present in concentrations about 10-fold higher than Na+), and the need to image the Na+ rapidly.In this study, we report the in vitro selection and characterization of an RNA-cleaving DNAzyme with exceptionally high selectivity (>10,000-fold) for Na+ over other competing metal ions, with a dynamic range covering the physiological Na+ concentration range (0.135–50 mM) and a fast catalytic rate (kobs, ∼0.1 min−1). This Na+-specific DNAzyme was transformed into a DNAzyme-based fluorescent sensor for imaging intracellular Na+ in living cells, by adopting an efficient DNAzyme delivery method using a cationic polypeptide, together with a photocaging strategy to allow controllable activation of the probe inside cells.
Keywords:deoxyribozyme  in vitro selection  sodium  fluorescent sensor  intracellular imaging
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号