5'-Pyrenylmethylphosphoramidite and 5'-bispyrenylmethylphosphordiamidite derivatives of oligo(2'-O-methylribonucleotides) and their analogues with thymidine attached at their 3'-termini by a 3'-3'-phosphodiester internucleotide bond (inverted thymidine) were synthesized. The effect of the pyrene residue(s) on the thermal stability of duplexes of the modified oligonucleotides with RNA and DNA was studied. A possibility of detection of hybridization of 5'-mono- and 5'-bispyrenyl derivatives with RNA and DNA targets in solution was demonstrated according to the changes in fluorescence. 5'-Pyrenylmethylphosphoramidite derivatives of oligo(2'-O-methylribonucleotides) and their inverted analogues were shown to serve as sensitive probes for the detection of oligonucleotide substitutions in RNA and DNA by the method of thermal denaturation of the formed duplexes detected according to changes in their fluorescence.
A new type of fluorescent nucleic acid probes, 2-bis-pyrene-modified oligonucleotides, is described. Preparation of these conjugates involves attachment of two pyrene moieties to the 2'-phosphate group introduced into any position within a sequence by solid-phase phosphoramidite synthesis. Good hybridization properties of the 2'-bis-pyrene probes, their nuclease resistance and sensitivity of fluorescence to the type of complementary nucleic acid have been demonstrated.
A series of octa (2-O-methylribonucleotides) with an additional 3'-terminal deoxynucleoside (T, dC, dA or dG) linked by the 3'-3' (inverted) bond was synthesized. The exceptional stability of these oligomers to a 3'-exonuclease (SVP) and nucleases in culture medium containing 10% heat-inactivated fetal calf serum was demonstrated. It was shown that the addition of the 3'-dangling inverted deoxynucleoside increases substantially the thermal stability of the duplexes of oligo(2'-O-methylribonucleotides) with complementary RNA and DNA in the case of a relatively weak terminal AmU(T) pair and enhances the mismatch sensitivity.
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