4.4 Article

Enzymatic Construction of Artificial Base Pairs: The Effect of Metal Shielding

Journal

CHEMBIOCHEM
Volume 21, Issue 23, Pages 3398-3409

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cbic.202000402

Keywords

DNA; expanded genetic alphabet; metal base pairs; nucleotides; polymerases; synthesis

Funding

  1. doctoral school MTCI University of Paris Descartes
  2. Institut Pasteur
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SFB 858]
  4. Westfalische Wilhelms-Universitat Munster

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Th formation of metal base pairs is a versatile method for the introduction of metal cations into nucleic acids that has been used in numerous applications including the construction of metal nanowires, development of energy, charge-transfer devices and expansion of the genetic alphabet. As an alternative, enzymatic construction of metal base pairs is an alluring strategy that grants access to longer sequences and offers the possibility of using such unnatural base pairs (UBPs) in SELEX experiments for the identification of functional nucleic acids. This method remains rather underexplored, and a better understanding of the key parameters in the design of efficient nucleotides is required. We have investigated the effect of methylation of the imidazole nucleoside (dIm(nMe)TP) on the efficiency of the enzymatic construction of metal base pairs. The presence of methyl substituents ondImTPfacilitates the polymerase-driven formation ofdIm(4Me)-Ag-I-dImanddIm(2Me)TP-Cr-III-dImbase pairs. Steric factors rather than the basicity of the imidazole nucleobase appear to govern the enzymatic formation of such metal base pairs. We also demonstrate the compatibility of other metal cations rarely considered in the construction of artificial metal bases by enzymatic DNA synthesis under both primer extension reaction and PCR conditions. These findings open up new directions for the design of nucleotide analogues for the development of metal base pairs.

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