A new method to produce a set of 20 high quality trinucleotide phosphoramidites on a 5-10 g scale each was developed. The procedure starts with condensation reactions of P-components with N-acyl nucleosides, bearing the 3 '-hydroxyl function protected with 2-azidomethylbenzoyl, to give fully protected dinucleoside phosphates 13. Upon cleavage of dimethoxytrityl group from 13, dinucleoside phosphates 16 are initially transformed into trinucleoside diphosphates 19 and then the 2-azidomethylbenzoyl is selectively removed under neutral conditions to generate trinucleoside diphosphates 5 in excellent yield. Subsequent 3 '-phosphitylation affords target trinucleotide phosphoramidites 7. When mutagenic oligonucleotides are synthesized employing mixtures of building blocks 7 as well as following the new synthetic protocol, representative oligonucleotide libraries are generated in good yields.
The universal solid support, USIII, representing a new and improved version of commercial USII, as well as 2 '-deoxynucleoside and 2 '-deoxy-2 '-fluoronucleoside bound supports, incorporating a labile phenoxyacetyl fragment, was synthesized by an aminomethyl polystyrene carbamoylation with corresponding azides in the presence of aqueous triethylammonium bicarbonate. All three solid phases incorporate a stable urea tether, thus bridging the polymer and functional linker. These new matrices proved to be potent solid phases for the synthesis of DNA, RNA, or modified oligonucleotides as well as randomized mixed 2 '-ribo/2 '-deoxy-2 '-fluoro-RNA libraries and/or DNA libraries, randomized with trinucleotides (codons).
Universal Linker phosphoramidite was synthesized and employed for conversion of conventional nucleoside bound solid phase into the universal support. The latter was successfully tested in preparation of the 20mer oligonucleotide.
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