Artificial Nucleases, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2004
Nucleic Acids and Molecular Biology Series, Vol. 13

Coordinator: Zenkova Marina A.

Language: English

316.49 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

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Artificial Nucleases
Publication date:
292 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Paperback

316.49 €

Subject to availability at the publisher.

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Artificial nucleases, (Nucleic acids & molecular biology, Vol. 13)
Publication date:
292 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Hardback
The development of agents capable of cleaving RNA and DNA has attracted considerable attention from researchers in the last few years, because of the immediate and very important applications they can find in the emerging fields of biotechnology and pharmacology. There are essentially two classes of these agents - nucleases that occur naturally inside cells and synthetically produced artificial nucleases. The first class includes protein enzyme nucle­ ases and catalytic RNA structured ribozymes that perform cleavage of the phosphodiester bonds in nucleic acids according to a hydrolytic pathway in the course of different biochemical processes in the cell. A different pathway is used by some antibiotics which cleave DNA via redox-based mechanisms resulting in oxidative damage of nucleotide units and breakage of the DNA backbone. The above molecules are indispensable tools for manipulating nucleic acids and processing RNA; DNA-cleaving antibiotics and cytotoxic ribonucleases have demonstrated utility as chemotherapeutic agents. The second class, artificial nucleases, are rationally designed to imitate the active centers of natural enzymes by simple structures possessing minimal sets of the most important characteristics that are essential for catalysis. A dif­ ferent approach, in vitro selection, was also used to create artificial RNA and DNA enzymes capable of cleaving RNA. Being less efficient and specific as compared to the natural enzymes, the primitive mimics are smaller and robust and can function in a broad range of conditions.
DNA Hydrolysis: Mechanism and Reactivity.- Active Site of Ribonuclease A.- Structural Considerations Concerning Cleavage of RNA.- Cleavage of RNA by Imidazole.- Principles of Nucleic Acid Cleavage by Metal Ions.- Allosterically Controlled Ribozymes as Artificial Ribonucleases.- Small Ribonuclease Mimics.- Copper-Containing Nuclease Mimics: Synthetic Models and Biochemical Applications.- RNA-Cleaving Oligonucleotide-Peptide Conjugates.- Sequence Selective Artificial Ribonucleases Employing Metal Ions as Scissors.- Site-Specific Artificial Ribonucleases: Conjugates of Oligonucleotides with Catalytic Groups.- DNA and RNA Cleavage Mediated by Phenanthroline-Cuprous Oligonucleotides: From Properties to Applications.- Sequence-Specific Cleavage of Double-Stranded DNA.- Bleomycin-Oligonucleotide Conjugates as Site-Specific Nucleases.
First book to present a concise overview of the rapidly developing field of artificial nucleases and their application Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras