Light-controlled artificial transmembrane signal transduction for ‘ON/OFF’-switchable transphosphorylation of an RNA model substrate

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Abstract

Inspired by nature, it is of significant importance to design and construct biomimetic signaling systems to mimic natural signal transduction. Herein, we report an azobenzene/α-cyclodextrin (α-CD)-based signal transduction system with three functional modules: a light-responsive headgroup, lipid-anchored group, pro-catalyst tailgroup. The transducer can be inserted into the vesicular membrane to trigger the transmembrane translocation of molecules under the activation of light, forming a ribonuclease-like effector site and leading to the transphosphorylation of the RNA model substrate inside the vesicles. Moreover, the transphosphorylation process can be reversibly turned ‘ON/OFF’ over multiple cycles by the activation and deactivation of the pro-catalyst. This artificial photo-controlled signal transduction successfully constructs a signal responsive catalysis system across the membrane to utilize light to reversibly control the internal transphosphorylation process of an RNA model substrate, which might provide a new strategy for future design to utilize exogenous signals for implementing endogenous enzyme manipulation and gene regulation.

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APA

Hou, J., Guo, J., Yan, T., Liu, S., Zang, M., Wang, L., … Liu, J. (2023). Light-controlled artificial transmembrane signal transduction for ‘ON/OFF’-switchable transphosphorylation of an RNA model substrate. Chemical Science, 14(22), 6039–6044. https://doi.org/10.1039/d2sc06701c

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