Abstract
The polypurine tract (PPT) is highly conserved among the known human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 strains, and is a possible target for triplex formation. We show the effects of triple-helix formation by assays of primer extension inhibition in vitro, using a two-strand-system (FTFOs) targeted to the PPT of HIV-1. The two-stranded composition of a triple-helix is thermodynamically and kinetically superior to the three-strand-system. The FTFOs inhibited the RT activity in a sequence-specific manner, i.e., the triplex actually formed at the PPT and blocked the RT. The FTFOs containing the phosphorothioate groups at the antisense sequences showed greater 3'-exonuclease resistance. In the observation of the FITC-DsDGloopT5-37 with MOLT-4 cells by a confocal laser scanning microscope, diffuse fluorescence was apparently observed in the cytoplasm and nucleus. However, weak fluorescence was observed within the cytoplasm and nucleus of MOLT-4 cells treated with the antisense phosphorothioate oligonucleotides (S-ODN-gag-AUG). In HIV-1 infected MOLT-4 cells, the FTFOs containing the phosphorothioate groups at the antisense sequence sites and guanosine rich parts within the third Hoogsteen base pairing sequence inhibit the replication of HIV-1 more effectively than the antisense oligonucleotides, indicating sequence-specific inhibition of HIV-1 replication.
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