In this study, it was found that the arrangement of consecutive thiocarbonyl groups of s(2)T and m(5)s(2)C remarkably stabilized the pre-protonated form of the triplex, and that the stabilization of the pre-protonated form increased the pKa value of a cytosine derivative in the triplex.
Trivalent phosphoramidite derivatives could be readily converted by reacting with 1-hydroxy-7-azabenzotriazole to phosphotriester intermediates; these intermediates reacted smoothly with phosphorylated compounds to give pyrophosphate derivatives. This new phosphorylation approach enabled a facile and rapid synthesis of 5'-adenylated DNA oligomers (A(5')ppDNA) on resins using a silyl-type linker. Our new approach could be applied to the synthesis of a 2'-OMe-RNA oligomer containing the 5'-terminal 2,2,7-trimethylguanosine cap structure.
Amidine-type protecting groups, i.e., N,N-dimethylformamidine (dmf) and N,N-dibutylformamidine (dbf) groups, introduced into nucleobases were rapidly removed under mild acidic conditions using imidazolium triflate (IMT) or 1-hydroxybenztriazole (HOBt). This new deprotection strategy allowed a 2'-O-methyl-RNA derivative bearing a base-labile group to be efficiently synthesized using a silyl-type linker. It was also found that our new method could be applied to the synthesis of an unmodified RNA oligomer.
In this paper, we report DNA and 2'-OMe-RNA probes containing 5-methyl-2-thiocytidine (m(5)s(2)C) residues that can bind selectively and strongly to the corresponding RNA targets containing inosine residues by the significant stacking effect and steric hindrance of the 2-thiocarbonyl group.
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