Synthesis, Reverse Transcription, Replication, and Inter-Transcription of 2'-Modified Nucleic Acids with Evolved Thermophilic Polymerases: Efforts toward Multidimensional Expansion of the Central Dogma.

ACS Synth Biol

MOE International Joint Research Laboratory on Synthetic Biology and Medicines, School of Biology and Biological Engineering, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 510006, P. R. China.

Published: September 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Various xenobiotic nucleic acids (XNAs) have been developed as new genetic materials and show promise in synthetic biology, but their synthesis and replication face challenges.
  • Researchers engineered a mutant version of Taq DNA polymerase to enhance the efficiency of synthesizing long, fully 2'-OMe-modified DNA and other XNAs.
  • These engineered polymerases can replicate, transcribe, and reverse transcribe different nucleic acids, indicating that genetic information can be stored and transmitted among DNA, RNA, and XNAs, expanding our understanding of genetic functions.

Article Abstract

In the past decades, various xenobiotic nucleic acids (XNAs), including 2'-modified nucleic acids, have been developed as novel genetic materials and demonstrated great potential in synthetic biology and biotechnology. Enzymatic polymerization and replication of these artificial polymers are obviously the prerequisite to make full use of them, and DNA and RNA polymerases from different families have thus been extensively engineered for these purposes. However, the performance of engineered XNA polymerases is still far from satisfactory, especially in terms of the efficiency of synthesizing XNA with bigger lengths and the capability of directly replicating XNAs or transcribing one XNA to another. In this work, we tailored a mutant of Stoffel fragment of Taq DNA polymerase, SFM4-3, by engineering a key residue pair on the surfaces of fingers and thumb domains, and successfully obtained mutants with significantly enhanced efficiency for the synthesis of fully 2'-OMe-modified DNA with bigger lengths. Remarkably, we also found that these polymerase mutants are capable of synthesizing, reverse transcribing, and even replicating RNA and different fully 2'-modified XNAs, as well as transcribing one of these nucleic acids to another, with varied efficiencies. The application of these activities for producing DNA strands end-protected by XNA duplexes was then demonstrated. These results clearly suggest that the genetic information can be stored in and transmitted among DNA, RNA, and different 2'-modified XNAs with the assistance of polymerase mutants, and the central dogma of life can be expanded to higher dimensions via the development of XNAs together with engineering their polymerases.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acssynbio.3c00213DOI Listing

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