RNA Control by Photoreversible Acylation.

J Am Chem Soc

Department of Chemistry , Stanford University, Stanford , California 94305 , United States.

Published: March 2018

External photocontrol over RNA function has emerged as a useful tool for studying nucleic acid biology. Most current methods rely on fully synthetic nucleic acids with photocaged nucleobases, limiting application to relatively short synthetic RNAs. Here we report a method to gain photocontrol over RNA by postsynthetic acylation of 2'-hydroxyls with photoprotecting groups. One-step introduction of these groups efficiently blocks hybridization, which is restored after light exposure. Polyacylation (termed cloaking) enables control over a hammerhead ribozyme, illustrating optical control of RNA catalytic function. Use of the new approach on a transcribed 237 nt RNA aptamer demonstrates the utility of this method to switch on RNA folding in a cellular context, and underlines the potential for application in biological studies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6486827PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.7b12408DOI Listing

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