Aptamers are short DNA- or RNA-based oligonucleotides selected from large combinatorial pools of sequences for their capacity to efficiently recognize targets ranging from small molecules to proteins or nucleic acid structures. Like antibodies, they exhibit high specificity and affinity for target binding. As a result, they may display effective interference in biological processes, which renders them not only valuable diagnostic tools, but also promising therapeutic agents. In fact, one aptamer that inhibits human VEGF already received approval for the treatment of age-related macular degeneration, while several others are undergoing clinical trials. Aptamers display a large number of structural arrangements, which accounts for their binding efficiency and selectivity for unrelated targets. Among several architectures, the G-quadruplex (G-4) is adopted by several aptamers, the most popular of which shows inhibitory properties against thrombin, a pharmacologically relevant protein. G-4 structures consist of planar arrays of four guanines, each guanine pairing with two neighbours by Hoogsteen bonding. Recent work shows that G-4 arrangement is highly polymorphic and therefore represents a large family of stable structures with a common overall fold, but with well differentiated recognition elements that allow prominent diversity to be explored. Conformational plasticity consents fine tuning of target recognition as obtained by aptamer selection. Here, we will review the present knowledge on aptamers based on the G-4 structures and assess their diagnostic and therapeutic potential as biotech drugs for the detection and treatment of severe pathologies including vascular, cancer and viral diseases.
The catalytic steps through which DNA topoisomerases produce their biological effects and the interference of drug molecules with the enzyme–DNA cleavage complex have been thoroughly investigated both from the biophysical and the biochemical point of view. This provides the basic structural insight on how this family of essential enzymes works in living systems and how their functions can be impaired by natural and synthetic compounds. Besides other factors, the physiological environment is known to affect substantially the biological properties of topoisomerases, a key role being played by metal ion cofactors, especially divalent ions (Mg2+), that are crucial to bestow and modulate catalytic activity by exploiting distinctive chemical features such as ionic size, hardness and characteristics of the coordination sphere including coordination number and geometry. Indeed, metal ions mediate fundamental aspects of the topoisomerase-driven transphosphorylation process by affecting the kinetics of the forward and the reverse steps and by modifying the enzyme conformation and flexibility. Of particular interest in type IA and type II enzymes are ionic interactions involving the Toprim fold, a protein domain conserved through evolution that contains a number of acidic residues essential for catalysis. A general two-metal ion mechanism is widely accepted to account for the biophysical and biochemical data thus far available.
We have developed novel G-quadruplex (G-4) ligand/alkylating hybrid structures, tethering the naphthalene diimide moiety to quaternary ammonium salts of Mannich bases, as quinone-methide precursors, activatable by mild thermal digestion (40 degrees C). The bis-substituted naphthalene diimides were efficiently synthesized, and their reactivity as activatable bis-alkylating agents was investigated in the presence of thiols and amines in aqueous buffered solutions. The electrophilic intermediate, quinone-methide, involved in the alkylation process was trapped, in the presence of ethyl vinyl ether, in a hetero Diels-Alder [4 + 2] cycloaddition reaction, yielding a substituted 2-ethoxychroman. The DNA recognition and alkylation properties of these new derivatives were investigated by gel electrophoresis, circular dichroism, and enzymatic assays. The alkylation process occurred preferentially on the G-4 structure in comparison to other DNA conformations. By dissecting reversible recognition and alkylation events, we found that the reversible process is a prerequisite to DNA alkylation, which in turn reinforces the G-quadruplex structural rearrangement.
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