Novel bimodular DNA aptamers with guanosine quadruplexes inhibit phylogenetically diverse HIV-1 reverse transcriptases

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Abstract

DNA aptamers RT5, RT6 and RT47 form a group of related sequences that inhibit HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT). The essential inhibitory structure is identified here as bimodular, with a 5′ stem-loop module physically connected to a 3′-guanosine quadruplex module. The stem-loop tolerates considerable sequence plasticity. Connections between the guanosine triplets in the quadruplex could be simplified to a single nucleotide or a nonnucleic acid linker, such as hexaethylene glycol. All 12 quadruplex guanosines are required in an aptamer retaining most of the original loop sequence from RT6; only 11 are required for aptamer R1T (single T residue in intra-quadruplex loops). Circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy gave ellipticity minima and maxima at 240nm and 264 nm, indicating a parallel arrangement of the quadruplex strands. The simplified aptamers displayed increased overall stability. An aptamer carrying the original intra-quadruplex loops from RT6 inhibited RT in K + buffers but not in Na + buffers and displayed significant CD spectral broadening in Na + buffers, while R1T inhibited RT in both buffers and displayed less broadening in Na + buffers. The bimodular ssDNA aptamers inhibited RT from diverse primate lentiviruses with low nM IC 50 values. These data provide insight into the requirements for broad-spectrum RT inhibition by nucleic acid aptamers. © 2008 The Author(s).

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Michalowski, D., Chitima-Matsiga, R., Held, D. M., & Burke, D. H. (2008). Novel bimodular DNA aptamers with guanosine quadruplexes inhibit phylogenetically diverse HIV-1 reverse transcriptases. Nucleic Acids Research, 36(22), 7124–7135. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkn891

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