American Chemical Society
Browse
sb1c00481_si_001.pdf (1.69 MB)

Evolution of Functionally Enhanced α‑l‑Threofuranosyl Nucleic Acid Aptamers

Download (1.69 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2021-11-05, 19:11 authored by Cailen M. McCloskey, Qingfeng Li, Eric J. Yik, Nicholas Chim, Arlene K. Ngor, Esau Medina, Ivan Grubisic, Lance Co Ting Keh, Ryan Poplin, John C. Chaput
Synthetic genetic polymers (xeno-nucleic acids, XNAs) have the potential to transition aptamers from laboratory tools to therapeutic agents, but additional functionality is needed to compete with antibodies. Here, we describe the evolution of a biologically stable artificial genetic system composed of α-l-threofuranosyl nucleic acid (TNA) that facilitates the production of backbone- and base-modified aptamers termed “threomers” that function as high quality protein capture reagents. Threomers were discovered against two prototypical protein targets implicated in human diseases through a combination of in vitro selection and next-generation sequencing using uracil nucleotides that are uniformly equipped with aromatic side chains commonly found in the paratope of antibody–antigen crystal structures. Kinetic measurements reveal that the side chain modifications are critical for generating threomers with slow off-rate binding kinetics. These findings expand the chemical space of evolvable non-natural genetic systems to include functional groups that enhance protein target binding by mimicking the structural properties of traditional antibodies.

History