“…In contrast, research into alternative nucleic acids to understand the chemical etiology of natural DNA/RNA systems has resulted in the synthesis of nucleic acids like threose nucleic acid (TNA) [3,4,7] and peptide nucleic acid (PNA), [8] which efficiently cross pair with natural DNA/RNA, and self-pairing systems like homo-DNA [1,4,9] and pyranosyl-RNA (p-RNA), [1,4,10] which have a six-membered sugar in the backbone and very high duplex stability. An orthogonal nucleic acid should have a stable [1] duplex structure with reasonable chemical and enzymatic stability, an inability to cross pair with DNA/RNA, and, Abstract: Orthogonal nucleic acids are chemically modified nucleic acid polymers that are unable to transfer information with natural nucleic acids and thus can be used in synthetic biology to store and transfer genetic information independently.…”