A synthetic approach leading to novel-type modified oligothymidylates containing an isosteric, isopolar, enzyme-stable C3'-O-P-CH(2)-O-C4'' phosphonate alternative to phosphodiester internucleotide bond was elaborated. The suitable monomers were prepared from 4'-phosphonomethoxy derivatives of alpha-L-threo and beta-D-erythro-2',5'-dideoxythymidine, which were considered interesting as structurally related to nucleoside 5'-monophosphates. The phosphotriester method was applied to the automated synthesis of both homooligomeric phosphonate 15-mer chains and alternating phosphonate-phosphate constructs. The fully modified homooligomers did not hybridize while homooligomers with alternating sequences containing alpha-L-threo-configured units (but not beta-D-erythro-) showed a significant decrease in T(m) values in comparison with natural dT(15). For a comparative study, phosphodiester 4'-CH(3)-substituted oligothymidylate was synthesized and physical studies (NMR, CD, MDS modeling) were undertaken to shed more light on the changes in conformational behavior arising from the chosen structural alterations.
Several types of isopolar modified oligothymidylates and oligoadenylates (15 mers) with the phosphonate -O-P-CH2-O- internucleotide linkage were prepared. The modified oligonucleotides were subjected to the study of their hybridization properties, resistance against nucleases, and the ability to elicit RNase H activity.
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