4.8 Article

Metal-dependent global folding and activity of the 8-17 DNAzyme studied by fluorescence resonance energy transfer

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 129, Issue 21, Pages 6896-6902

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja0712625

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The 8-17 DNAzyme is a DNA metalloenzyme catalyzing RNA transesterification in the presence of divalent metal ions, with activity following the order Pb2+ > Zn2+ > Mg2+. Since the DNAzyme has been used as a metal ion sensor, its metal-induced global folding was studied by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) by labeling the three stems of the DNAzyme with the Cy3/Cy5 FRET pair two stems at a time in order to gain deeper insight into the role of different metal ions in its structure and function. FRET results indicated that, in the presence of Zn2+ and Mg2+, the DNAzyme folds into a compact structure, stem III approaching a configuration defined by stems I and II without changing the angle between stems I and II. Correlations between metal-induced folding and activity were also studied. For Zn2+ and Mg2+, the metal ion with higher affinity for the DNAzyme in global folding (K-d(Zn) = 52.6 mu M and K-d(Mg) = 1.36 mM) also displays higher affinity in activity (K-d(Zn) = 1.15 mM and K-d(Mg) = 53 mM) under the same conditions. Global folding was saturated at much lower concentrations of Zn2+ and Mg2+ than the cleavage activities, indicating the global folding of the DNAzyme occurs before the cleavage activity for those metal ions. Surprisingly, no Pb2+-dependent global folding was observed. These results suggest that for Pb2+ global folding of the DNAzyme may not be a necessary step in its function, which may contribute to the DNAzyme having the highest activity in the presence of Pb2+.

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