958-09-8Relevant articles and documents
Prebiotic Photochemical Coproduction of Purine Ribo- And Deoxyribonucleosides
Xu, Jianfeng,Green, Nicholas J.,Russell, David A.,Liu, Ziwei,Sutherland, John D.
supporting information, p. 14482 - 14486 (2021/09/18)
The hypothesis that life on Earth may have started with a heterogeneous nucleic acid genetic system including both RNA and DNA has attracted broad interest. The recent finding that two RNA subunits (cytidine, C, and uridine, U) and two DNA subunits (deoxyadenosine, dA, and deoxyinosine, dI) can be coproduced in the same reaction network, compatible with a consistent geological scenario, supports this theory. However, a prebiotically plausible synthesis of the missing units (purine ribonucleosides and pyrimidine deoxyribonucleosides) in a unified reaction network remains elusive. Herein, we disclose a strictly stereoselective and furanosyl-selective synthesis of purine ribonucleosides (adenosine, A, and inosine, I) and purine deoxynucleosides (dA and dI), alongside one another, via a key photochemical reaction of thioanhydroadenosine with sulfite in alkaline solution (pH 8-10). Mechanistic studies suggest an unexpected recombination of sulfite and nucleoside alkyl radicals underpins the formation of the ribo C2′-O bond. The coproduction of A, I, dA, and dI from a common intermediate, and under conditions likely to have prevailed in at least some primordial locales, is suggestive of the potential coexistence of RNA and DNA building blocks at the dawn of life.
RETRACTED ARTICLE: Convenient synthesis of pyrimidine 2′-deoxyribonucleoside monophosphates with important epigenetic marks at the 5-position
Zheng, Song,Tran, Ai,Curry, Alyson M.,White, Dawanna S.,Cen, Yana
, p. 5164 - 5173 (2020/07/23)
Methyl groups of thymine and 5-methylcytosine (5mC) bases in DNA undergo endogenous oxidation damage. Additionally, 5mC residues can be enzymatically deaminated or oxidized through either genetic alterations or the newly identified epigenetic reprogramming pathway. Several methods have been developed to measure the formation of modified DNA nucleobases including 32P-postlabeling. However, the postlabeling method is often limited by the absence of authentic chemical standards. The synthesis of monophosphate standards of nucleotide oxidation products is complicated by the presence of additional functional groups on the modified bases that require complex protection and deprotection strategies. Due to the emerging interest in the pyrimidine oxidation products, the corresponding protected 3′-phosphoramidites needed for solid-phase oligonucleotide synthesis have been reported, and several are commercially available. We report here an efficient synthesis of 3′-monophosphates from 3′-phosphoramidites and the subsequent enzymatic conversion of 3′-monophosphates to the corresponding 5′-monophosphates using commercially available enzymes. This journal is
Solid-phase synthesis and structural characterisation of phosphoroselenolate-modified DNA: A backbone analogue which does not impose conformational bias and facilitates SAD X-ray crystallography
Conlon, Patrick F.,Eguaogie, Olga,Wilson, Jordan J.,Sweet, Jamie S. T.,Steinhoegl, Julian,Englert, Klaudia,Hancox, Oliver G. A.,Law, Christopher J.,Allman, Sarah A.,Tucker, James H. R.,Hall, James P.,Vyle, Joseph S.
, p. 10948 - 10957 (2019/12/23)
Oligodeoxynucleotides incorporating internucleotide phosphoroselenolate linkages have been prepared under solid-phase synthesis conditions using dimer phosphoramidites. These dimers were constructed following the high yielding Michaelis-Arbuzov (M-A) reaction of nucleoside H-phosphonate derivatives with 5′-deoxythymidine-5′-selenocyanate and subsequent phosphitylation. Efficient coupling of the dimer phosphoramidites to solid-supported substrates was observed under both manual and automated conditions and required only minor modifications to the standard DNA synthesis cycle. In a further demonstration of the utility of M-A chemistry, the support-bound selenonucleoside was reacted with an H-phosphonate and then chain extended using phosphoramidite chemistry. Following initial unmasking of methyl-protected phosphoroselenolate diesters, pure oligodeoxynucleotides were isolated using standard deprotection and purification procedures and subsequently characterised by mass spectrometry and circular dichroism. The CD spectra of both modified and native duplexes derived from self-complementary sequences with A-form, B-form or mixed conformational preferences were essentially superimposable. These sequences were also used to study the effect of the modification upon duplex stability which showed context-dependent destabilisation (-0.4 to-3.1 °C per phosphoroselenolate) when introduced at the 5′-Termini of A-form or mixed duplexes or at juxtaposed central loci within a B-form duplex (-1.0 °C per modification). As found with other nucleic acids incorporating selenium, expeditious crystallisation of a modified decanucleotide A-form duplex was observed and the structure solved to a resolution of 1.45 ?. The DNA structure adjacent to the modification was not significantly perturbed. The phosphoroselenolate linkage was found to impart resistance to nuclease activity.