Highly efficient strand invasion by peptide nucleic acid bearing optically pure lysine residues in its backbone.

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Abstract

Chiral PNA monomers (PNA = peptide nucleic acid), in which nucleobases are attached to N-(aminoethyl)-D-lysine, were introduced to PNAs bearing pseudo-complementary nucleobases (2,6-diaminopurine and 2-thiouracil). When these highly cationic PNAs targeted double-stranded DNA, they invaded there much more efficiently than conventional pseudo-complementary PNAs composed of achiral PNA monomers. Although introduction of N-(aminoethyl)-D-lysine backbone was effective for promotion of strand invasion, L-isomer never promote it. Simple incorporation of lysine groups to the termini of PNA was also ineffective, indicating that introduction of positive charges into PNA backbone is important. Even highly G-C rich sequence, which conventional pseudo-complementary PNAs never invade, was successfully targeted based on this strategy.

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Yamamoto, Y., Yoshida, J., Tedeschi, T., Corradini, R., Sforza, S., & Komiyama, M. (2006). Highly efficient strand invasion by peptide nucleic acid bearing optically pure lysine residues in its backbone. Nucleic Acids Symposium Series (2004), (50), 109–110. https://doi.org/10.1093/nass/nrl054

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