Parallel Clamps and Polypurine Hairpins (PPRH) for Gene Silencing and Triplex-Affinity Capture: Design, Synthesis, and Use

Publication date

2021-07-08T10:32:28Z

2021-07-08T10:32:28Z

2019-03-26

2021-07-08T10:32:28Z

Abstract

Nucleic acid triplexes are formed when a DNA or RNA oligonucleotide binds to a polypurine-polypyrimidine-rich sequence. Triplexes have wide therapeutic applications such as gene silencing or site-specific mutagenesis. In addition, protocols based on triplex-affinity capture have been used for detecting nucleic acids in biosensing platforms. In this article, the design, synthesis, and use of parallel clamps and polypurine-reversed hairpins (PPRH) to bind to target polypyrimidine targets are described. The combination of the polypurine Watson-Crick strand with the triplex-forming strand in a single molecule produces highly stable triplexes allowing targeting of single- and double-stranded nucleic acid sequences. On the other hand, PPRHs are easily prepared and work at nanomolar range, like siRNAs, and at a lower concentration than that needed for antisense ODNs or TFOs. However, the stability of PPRHs is higher than that of siRNAs. In addition, PPRHs circumvent off-target effects and are non-immunogenic.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1002/cpnc.78

Current protocols in nucleic acid chemistry, 2019, vol. 77, num. 1, p. e78

https://doi.org/10.1002/cpnc.78

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(c) John Wiley & Sons, 2019

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