@article{OkudaLenzSeitzetal.2023, author = {Okuda, Takumi and Lenz, Ann-Kathrin and Seitz, Florian and Vogel, J{\"o}rg and H{\"o}bartner, Claudia}, title = {A SAM analogue-utilizing ribozyme for site-specific RNA alkylation in living cells}, series = {Nature Chemistry}, journal = {Nature Chemistry}, doi = {10.1038/s41557-023-01320-z}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-328762}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Post-transcriptional RNA modification methods are in high demand for site-specific RNA labelling and analysis of RNA functions. In vitro-selected ribozymes are attractive tools for RNA research and have the potential to overcome some of the limitations of chemoenzymatic approaches with repurposed methyltransferases. Here we report an alkyltransferase ribozyme that uses a synthetic, stabilized S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) analogue and catalyses the transfer of a propargyl group to a specific adenosine in the target RNA. Almost quantitative conversion was achieved within 1 h under a wide range of reaction conditions in vitro, including physiological magnesium ion concentrations. A genetically encoded version of the SAM analogue-utilizing ribozyme (SAMURI) was expressed in HEK293T cells, and intracellular propargylation of the target adenosine was confirmed by specific fluorescent labelling. SAMURI is a general tool for the site-specific installation of the smallest tag for azide-alkyne click chemistry, which can be further functionalized with fluorophores, affinity tags or other functional probes.}, language = {en} } @article{BencurovaAkashDobsonetal.2023, author = {Bencurova, Elena and Akash, Aman and Dobson, Renwick C.J. and Dandekar, Thomas}, title = {DNA storage-from natural biology to synthetic biology}, series = {Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal}, volume = {21}, journal = {Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal}, issn = {2001-0370}, doi = {10.1016/j.csbj.2023.01.045}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-349971}, pages = {1227-1235}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Natural DNA storage allows cellular differentiation, evolution, the growth of our children and controls all our ecosystems. Here, we discuss the fundamental aspects of DNA storage and recent advances in this field, with special emphasis on natural processes and solutions that can be exploited. We point out new ways of efficient DNA and nucleotide storage that are inspired by nature. Within a few years DNA-based information storage may become an attractive and natural complementation to current electronic data storage systems. We discuss rapid and directed access (e.g. DNA elements such as promotors, enhancers), regulatory signals and modulation (e.g. lncRNA) as well as integrated high-density storage and processing modules (e.g. chromosomal territories). There is pragmatic DNA storage for use in biotechnology and human genetics. We examine DNA storage as an approach for synthetic biology (e.g. light-controlled nucleotide processing enzymes). The natural polymers of DNA and RNA offer much for direct storage operations (read-in, read-out, access control). The inbuilt parallelism (many molecules at many places working at the same time) is important for fast processing of information. Using biology concepts from chromosomal storage, nucleic acid processing as well as polymer material sciences such as electronical effects in enzymes, graphene, nanocellulose up to DNA macram{\´e} , DNA wires and DNA-based aptamer field effect transistors will open up new applications gradually replacing classical information storage methods in ever more areas over time (decades).}, language = {en} }