Issue 38, 2015

Generation of long, fully modified, and serum-resistant oligonucleotides by rolling circle amplification

Abstract

Rolling Circle Amplification (RCA) is an isothermal enzymatic method generating single-stranded DNA products consisting of concatemers containing multiple copies of the reverse complement of the circular template precursor. Little is known on the compatibility of modified nucleoside triphosphates (dN*TPs) with RCA, which would enable the synthesis of long, fully modified ssDNA sequences. Here, dNTPs modified at any position of the scaffold were shown to be compatible with rolling circle amplification, yielding long (>1 kb), and fully modified single-stranded DNA products. This methodology was applied for the generation of long, cytosine-rich synthetic mimics of telomeric DNA. The resulting modified oligonucleotides displayed an improved resistance to fetal bovine serum.

Graphical abstract: Generation of long, fully modified, and serum-resistant oligonucleotides by rolling circle amplification

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Jul 2015
Accepted
07 Aug 2015
First published
07 Aug 2015
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Org. Biomol. Chem., 2015,13, 9820-9824

Author version available

Generation of long, fully modified, and serum-resistant oligonucleotides by rolling circle amplification

M. Hollenstein, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2015, 13, 9820 DOI: 10.1039/C5OB01540E

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