posted on 2024-07-16, 15:08authored byNina Lin, Yu Ouyang, Yunlong Qin, Ola Karmi, Yang Sung Sohn, Songqin Liu, Rachel Nechushtai, Yuanjian Zhang, Itamar Willner, Zhixin Zhou
The primer-guided entropy-driven high-throughput evolution
of the
DNA-based constitutional dynamic network, CDN, is introduced. The
entropy gain associated with the process provides a catalytic principle
for the amplified emergence of the CDN. The concept is applied to
develop a programmable, spatially localized DNA circuit for effective in vitro and in vivo theranostic, gene-regulated
treatment of cancer cells. The localized circuit consists of a DNA
tetrahedron core modified at its corners with four tethers that include
encoded base sequences exhibiting the capacity to emerge and assemble
into a [2 × 2] CDN. Two of the tethers are caged by a pair of
siRNA subunits, blocking the circuit into a mute, dynamically inactive
configuration. In the presence of miRNA-21 as primer, the siRNA subunits
are displaced, resulting in amplified release of the siRNAs silencing
the HIF-1α mRNA and fast dynamic reconfiguration of the tethers
into a CDN. The resulting CDN is, however, engineered to be dynamically
reconfigured by miRNA-155 into an equilibrated mixture enriched with
a DNAzyme component, catalyzing the cleavage of EGR-1 mRNA. The DNA
tetrahedron nanostructure stimulates enhanced permeation into cancer
cells. The miRNA-triggered entropy-driven reconfiguration of the spatially
localized circuit leads to the programmable, cooperative bis-gene-silencing
of HIF-1α and EGR-1 mRNAs, resulting in the effective and selective
apoptosis of breast cancer cells and effective inhibition of tumors
in tumor bearing mice.