Individual RNA aptamers are often used to modulate the function of their target proteins, and multi-valent aptamers have been constructed to enhance their activity. To expand the utility of aptamers in manipulating and controlling biological processes, here we advance a general method for the design and construction of composite aptamers. The resulting molecular constructs resemble proteins in that they can form specific interactions with three or more different partners and be readily integrated into existing protein regulatory networks. As the first embodiment of this method, we created a tetra-valent aptamer that simultaneously binds to two molecules of the Drosophila protein B52 and two copies of streptavidin, thus mimicking the function of an antibody in immunochemical assays. We demonstrated that the performance of this ‘aptabody’ rivals that of a monoclonal antibody against B52 in these assays. While this study was performed in vitro and the composite aptamer we made was intended to mimic an existing protein, the same method can be used to accommodate arbitrary combinations of individual aptamers in composite molecular contexts, and these constructs can be delivered into living cells, where they are able to utilize existing cellular infrastructure for their production and processing.
Superresolution imaging has revealed subcellular structures and protein interactions in many organisms. However, superresolution microscopy with lateral resolution better than 100 nm has not been achieved in photosynthetic cells due to the interference of a high-autofluorescence background. Here, we developed a photobleaching method to effectively reduce the autofluorescence of cyanobacterial and plant cells. We achieved lateral resolution of ~10 nm with stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (STORM) in the sphere-shaped cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus and the flowering plant Arabidopsis thaliana. During the cell cycle of Prochlorococcus, we characterized the three-dimensional (3D) organization of the cell division protein FtsZ, which forms a ring structure at the division site and is important for cytokinesis of bacteria and chloroplasts. Although the FtsZ ring assembly process in rod-shaped bacteria has been studied extensively, it has rarely been studied in sphere-shaped bacteria. Similarly to rod-shaped bacteria, our results with Prochlorococcus also showed the assembly of FtsZ clusters into incomplete rings and then complete rings during cell division. Differently from rod-shaped bacteria, the FtsZ ring diameter was not found to decrease during Prochlorococcus cell division. We also discovered a novel double-Z-ring structure, which may be the Z rings of two daughter cells in a predivisional mother cell. Our results showed a quantitative picture of the in vivo Z ring organization of sphere-shaped bacteria.
Estrogen receptor a (ERa) is a well-validated drug target for a majority of breast cancers. But the target sites on this receptor are far from exhaustively defined. Almost all ER antagonists in clinical use function by binding to the ligand-binding pocket to occlude agonist access. Resistance to this type of drugs may develop over time, not caused by the change of ERa itself, but by changes in ER associated proteins. This observation is fueling the development of reagents that downregulate ER activity through novel binding sites. However, it is challenging to find general ER antagonists that act independently from other known ER ligands. In this report, we describe the utility of RNA aptamers in the search for new drug target sites on ERa. We have identified three high affinity aptamers and characterized one of them in detail. This aptamer interacted with ERa in a way not affected by the presence or absence of either the steroidal ligands or the estrogen response DNA elements, and effectively inhibited ER-mediated transcriptional activation in a breast cancer cell line. Serving as a novel drug lead, it may also be used to guide the rational chemical synthesis of small molecule drugs or to perform screens of small molecule libraries for those that are able to displace the aptamer from its binding site.
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