Nuclease P1 Digestion for Bottom-Up RNA Sequencing of Modified siRNA Therapeutics.
Joshua D JonesKathleen T GrassmyerRobert T KennedyKristin D KoutmouTodd D MaloneyPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2023)
siRNA therapeutics provide a selective and powerful approach to reduce the expression of disease-causing genes. For regulatory approval, these modalities require sequence confirmation which is typically achieved by intact tandem mass spectrometry sequencing. However, this process produces highly complex spectra which are difficult to interpret and typically results in less than full sequence coverage. We sought to develop a bottom-up siRNA sequencing platform to ease sequencing data analysis and provide full sequence coverage. Analogous to bottom-up proteomics, this process requires chemical or enzymatic digestion to reduce the oligonucleotide length down to analyzable lengths, but siRNAs commonly contain modifications that inhibit the degradation process. We tested six digestion schemes for their feasibility to digest the 2' modified siRNAs and identified that nuclease P1 provides an effective digestion workflow. Using a partial digestion, nuclease P1 provides high 5' and 3' end sequence coverage with multiple overlapping digestion products. Additionally, this enzyme provides high-quality and highly reproducible RNA sequencing no matter the RNA phosphorothioate content, 2'-fluorination status, sequence, or length. Overall, we developed a robust enzymatic digestion scheme for bottom-up siRNA sequencing using nuclease P1, which can be implemented into existing sequence confirmation workflows.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- anaerobic digestion
- tandem mass spectrometry
- cancer therapy
- dna binding
- amino acid
- high throughput
- small molecule
- poor prognosis
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- healthcare
- hydrogen peroxide
- high resolution
- hyaluronic acid
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- drug delivery
- simultaneous determination
- molecular dynamics
- long non coding rna
- electronic health record
- visible light