A solution of 1.5 umol SmBiT peptide (Val-Thr-Gly-Tyr-Arg-Leu-Phe-Glu-Glu-Ile-Leu-Gly-Gly-Ser-Gly-Gly-Lys(N3)-NH2) containing an azide group at the C-terminus (CPC Scientific, 1245 Reamwood Ave, Sunnyvale, CA, USA) in DMSO (0.5 ml) was added and the reaction mixture was stirred at room temperature for 5 h.

Abstract

The rapid RNase H1-dependent mislocalization of heterodimer proteins P54nrb and PSF to nucleoli is an early event in the pathway that explains the effects of most toxic phosphorothioate ASOs (PS-ASOs). Using a recently developed NanoLuciferace (NLuc)-based structural complementation reporter system which allows us to observe ASO/protein interactions in real time in live cells, we have determined that safe and toxic PS-ASOs associate with these proteins with kinetics and impact on subcellular localization that differ. Toxic PS-ASOs interact in a complex that includes RNase H1, P54nrb and PSF; but RNase H1/P54nrb complexes were observed in only the cells treated with toxic, but not safe PS-ASOs. In addition, experiments performed in vitro suggest that RNA is also a required component of the complex. The protein–protein interaction between P54nrb and RNase H1 requires the spacer region of RNAse H1, while the P54nrb core domains are required for association with RNase H1. In addition, we have determined that PS-ASOs bind P54nrb via RRM1 and RRM2, while they bind RNase H1 primarily via the hybrid binding domain, however catalytic domain interactions also contribute to overall affinity. These ASO–protein interactions are highly influenced by the chemistry of the PS-ASO binding environment, however little correlation between affinity for specific proteins and PS-ASO toxicity was observed.

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