Fragment-based lead discovery on RNA has a long history: the first mention on Practical Fragments
was in 2009. Most often, various NMR methods have been used (see this example
from last year), though isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) is also
effective. However, both of these techniques generally require considerable
amounts of RNA. In a recent Biochemistry paper, J. Winston Arney and
Kevin Weeks describe using SPR, which could increase the
speed and ease of screening RNA.
Non-specific binding is a
significant problem in characterizing RNA ligands. RNA is negatively charged,
and many ligands are positively charged, leading to non-specific interactions.
In a typical SPR experiment, the target is bound to a surface and the analyte
is allowed to flow over the immobilized target; binding causes a change in
refractive index that can be detected. However, if the analyte interacts
non-specifically with the target, this will also be detected. For high affinity
ligands the non-specific interactions may be minimal at low concentrations, but for low-affinity
ligands such as fragments, it can be difficult to differentiate specific from
non-specific binding.
SPR experiments generally use a
reference cell, in which the analyte is allowed to flow over the surface in the
absence of target; this signal is then subtracted from the target channel.
Arney and Weeks decided to use a reference cell containing mutant RNA not
expected to bind to the ligand.
The researchers developed their
approach using two different riboswitches, each with known high-nanomolar
ligands. Immobilizing the riboswitches to the chip and flowing ligand led to
non-specific binding at concentrations of 100 µM or so. However, when the
reference cell contained a mutant riboswitch designed not to bind to the
ligands, this non-specific binding could easily be subtracted, leading to
simple single-site binding models.
Of course, creating a mutant RNA
assumes you already know where your ligand binds, which is not true if you are
looking for ligands to a new target. To increase the generality of their approach, the
researchers used a different riboswitch or a completely arbitrary RNA for the
reference. These also worked, though not quite as well as the targeted mutants.
Finally, the researchers tested a
dozen RNA-ligand pairs that had previously been rigorously characterized.
Importantly, these varied considerably in affinity, from 8 nM to 2 mM. Most of
them were also fragment-sized, with molecular weights as low as 119 Da. The
correlation between SPR dissociation constants and those reported in the literature was
excellent.
The technique does have
limitations. First, the RNA-bound surfaces do seem somewhat unstable over a
period of days. Also, larger RNAs present technical challenges, though the
researchers do state that they have been able to examine molecules as large as
300 nucleotides. Overall this looks like a nice approach
for measuring RNA-ligand affinities.
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