Abstract

Nucleic acid aptamer selection is a powerful strategy for the development of regulatory agents for molecular intervention. Accordingly, aptamers have proven their diligence in the intervention with serine protease activities, which play important roles in physiology and pathophysiology. Nonetheless, there are only a few studies on the molecular basis underlying aptamer-protease interactions and the associated mechanisms of inhibition. In the present study, we use site-directed mutagenesis to delineate the binding sites of two 2´-fluoropyrimidine RNA aptamers (upanap-12 and upanap-126) with therapeutic potential, both binding to the serine protease urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA). We determine the subsequent impact of aptamer binding on the well-established molecular interactions (plasmin, PAI-1, uPAR, and LRP-1A) controlling uPA activities. One of the aptamers (upanap-126) binds to the area around the C-terminal α-helix in pro-uPA, while the other aptamer (upanap-12) binds to both the β-hairpin of the growth factor domain and the kringle domain of uPA. Based on the mapping studies, combined with data from small-angle X-ray scattering analysis, we construct a model for the upanap-12:pro-uPA complex. The results suggest and highlight that the size and shape of an aptamer as well as the domain organization of a multi-domain protein such as uPA, may provide the basis for extensive sterical interference with protein ligand interactions considered distant from the aptamer binding site.

Highlights

  • The SELEX procedure allows the screening of large random-sequence oligonucleotide (RNA/DNA) libraries for sequences capable of binding to a protein target of interest [1, 2]

  • Alanine mutation was performed in various regions of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA), including in particular the area of the active site, the pro-uPA activation site and the uPAR binding site due to the inhibitory properties of the aptamers

  • To ensure that mutations did not affect the overall structure and function of the protease domain, we measured the catalytic activity of the mutants after activation by plasmin and did not observe any major differences compared with wild type pro-uPA (S2 Fig.)

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Summary

Introduction

The SELEX procedure (systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment) allows the screening of large random-sequence oligonucleotide (RNA/DNA) libraries for sequences capable of binding to a protein target of interest [1, 2]. The protein-binding sequences isolated are called aptamers. In many respects they resemble antibodies, i.e. they often bind their targets.

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