Publication | Closed Access
A Peptide Nucleic Acid Embedding a Pseudopeptide Nuclear Localization Sequence in the Backbone Behaves as a Peptide Mimic
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Citations
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References
2010
Year
Peptide EngineeringMolecular BiologyPeptide ScienceProtein SynthesisNucleic Acid ChemistryProtein FoldingBackbone BehavesModified PnaProteomicsBiochemistryDna ReplicationPeptide Nucleic AcidStructural BiologyBiomolecular EngineeringAmino AcidNatural SciencesPeptide LibraryNucleic Acid BiochemistryProtein EvolutionSynthetic BiologyPeptide SynthesisProtein EngineeringPeptide MimicMedicineSmall Molecules
Abstract In this paper, the synthesis of a short modified peptide nucleic acid (PNA), obtained by using several different L ‐amino acids as synthons, is shown. The synthesis was performed by a submonomeric strategy, obtaining a model trimeric PNA containing embedded amino acid derived side chains in its backbone that mimic the peptide sequence PKKKRKV, which is a nuclear localization signal (NLS) widely used for translocating cargo molecules into cell nuclei. Fluorescence experiments demonstrated that this modified PNA, and not a standard unmodified PNA having the same nucleobase sequence, was able to penetrate Rhabdomyosarcoma cellnuclei, exactly behaving as the NLS standard peptide.
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