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CLICK-17, a DNA enzyme that harnesses ultra-low concentrations of either Cu+ or Cu2+ to catalyze the azide-alkyne ‘click’ reaction in water
Author(s) -
Kun Liu,
Prince Kumar Lat,
HuaZhong Yu,
Dipankar Sen
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkaa502
Subject(s) - click chemistry , azide , alkyne , dna , cycloaddition , combinatorial chemistry , nucleic acid , redox , catalysis , enzyme , substrate (aquarium) , chemistry , stereochemistry , biochemistry , biology , organic chemistry , ecology
To enable the optimal, biocompatible and non-destructive application of the highly useful copper (Cu+)-mediated alkyne-azide 'click' cycloaddition in water, we have isolated and characterized a 79-nucleotide DNA enzyme or DNAzyme, 'CLICK-17', that harnesses as low as sub-micromolar Cu+; or, surprisingly, Cu2+ (without added reductants such as ascorbate) to catalyze conjugation between a variety of alkyne and azide substrates, including small molecules, proteins and nucleic acids. CLICK-17's Cu+ catalysis is orders of magnitude faster than that of either Cu+ alone or of Cu+ complexed to PERMUT-17, a sequence-permuted DNA isomer of CLICK-17. With the less toxic Cu2+, CLICK-17 attains rates comparable to Cu+, under conditions where both Cu2+ alone and Cu2+ complexed with a classic accelerating ligand, THPTA, are wholly inactive. Cyclic voltammetry shows that CLICK-17, unlike PERMUT-17, powerfully perturbs the Cu(II)/Cu(I) redox potential. CLICK-17 thus provides a unique, DNA-derived ligand environment for catalytic copper within its active site. As a bona fide Cu2+-driven enzyme, with potential for being evolved to accept only designated substrates, CLICK-17 and future variants promise the fast, safe, and substrate-specific catalysis of 'click' bioconjugations, potentially on the surfaces of living cells.

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