Abstract

DNA aptamers and DNA enzymes (DNAzymes or deoxyribozymes) are single-stranded DNA molecules with ligand-binding and catalytic capabilities, respectively. Allosteric DNA enzymes (aptazymes) are deoxyribozymes whose activity can be regulated by the binding state of an appended aptamer domain and have many potential uses in the fields of drug discovery and diagnostics. In this report, we describe a simple, yet potentially general, DNA aptazyme rational design strategy that requires no structural characterization of the constituent deoxyribozymes and aptamers. It is based on the concept originally developed in our laboratory for the design of structure-switching signaling aptamers that change structural states from a DNA–DNA duplex to a DNA–target complex upon target binding. In our new strategy, an antisense oligonucleotide is used to regulate the enzymatic activity of a linked aptamer–deoxyribozyme by annealing with a stretch of nucleotides on each side of the aptamer–DNAzyme junction. Structural reorganization of the aptamer domain upon target binding relieves the suppressive effect of this regulatory oligonucleotide on the attached DNA enzyme. Consequently, the target-binding event triggers the catalytic action of the aptazyme. We have demonstrated this concept using two RNA-cleaving deoxyribozymes, each adjoined to a DNA aptamer that binds ATP. These allosteric DNA enzymes exhibit the same ligand-binding specificity as the parental DNA aptamer and show up to 30-fold rate enhancement in the presence of ATP. The described methodology provides a convenient approach for rationally designing catalytic DNA-based biosensors.

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