Publication | Closed Access
2-Aza-2′-deoxyadenosine: Synthesis, Base-Pairing Selectivity, and Stacking Properties of Oligonucleotides
21
Citations
0
References
2000
Year
Combinatorial ChemistryMedicinal ChemistrySolid-phase Oligonucleotide SynthesisBioorganic ChemistryNucleic Acid ChemistryBiochemistryNatural SciencesNucleic Acid Biochemistry2-Azapurine BaseMolecular BiologyOligonucleotideOrganic ChemistryBase-pairing SelectivityHeterocycle ChemistryChemical BiologyThermal Stability
2-Aza-2'-deoxyadenosine (2, z2Ad) is synthesized via its 1,N6-etheno derivative 7 and enzymatically deaminated to 2-aza-2'-deoxyinosine (3). Compound 2 is converted into the phosphoramidite building block 10b. This is employed in solid-phase oligonucleotide synthesis. The 2-azapurine base forms a strong base pair with guanine, but a much weaker one with adenine, thymine, and cytosine. Oligonucleotide duplexes with dangling nucleotide residues, such as 2-aza-2'-deoxyadenosine and 7-deaza-2'-deoxyadenosine (4, c7Ad), either on one or both termini, are synthesized, and the thermal stability of the duplexes is correlated with the hydrophobic properties of the dangling nucleotide residues.