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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Weinheim : Wiley-Blackwell
    Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English 35 (1996), S. 1894-1909 
    ISSN: 0570-0833
    Keywords: crystal structure analysis ; DNA ; hydrogen bonding ; RNA ; DNA structures ; Hydrogen bonds ; RNA ; Structure elucidation ; Chemistry ; General Chemistry
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Hybridization of complementary oligonucleotides is essential to highly valuable research tools in many fields including genetics, molecular biology, and cell biology. For example, an antisense molecule for a particular segment of sense messenger RNA allows gene expression to be selectively turned off, and the polymerase chain reaction requires complementary primers in order to proceed. It is hoped that the antisense approach may lead to therapeutics for treatment of various diseases including cancer. Areas of active research in the antisense field focus on the mechanisms of cellular uptake of antisense molecules and their delivery to specific cell sites, an improved understanding of how these molecules inhibit the production of proteins, as well as the optimization of the chemical stability of antisense molecules and the thermodynamic stability of the duplexes they form with the mRNA targets. The last two issues in particular have prompted chemists to launch an extensive search for oligonucleotide analogs with improved binding properties for hybridization with RNA and higher resistance toward nuclease degradation. During the last years this research has resulted in a flurry of new chemical analogs of DNA and RNA with modifications in the sugar-phosphate backbone as well as in the nucleobase sites. However, to date little effort has been directed toward uncovering the exact origins of the gain or loss in stability when nucleic acid analogs bind to RNA. Although large amounts of thermodynamic data have been collected, the structural perturbations induced by the modifications in hybrid duplexes are only poorly understood. For many modified oligonucleotides the compatibility of protection, coupling, and deprotection chemistry with standard DNA and RNA synthesis protocols makes it now possible to generate modified nucleic acid fragments or mixed oligonucleotides containing modifications at selected sites in quantities suitable for three-dimensional structure investigations. Such studies should reveal the structural origins of the observed changes in affinity and specificity of binding for particular modifications and may guide the development of second-and third-generation antisense molecules. In addition, the availability of a previously unimaginable variety of modified building blocks and the investigation of their structures provides the basis for a deeper understanding of the native DNA and RNA structures. This contribution will summarize the results of X-ray crystallographic structure determinations of modified nucleic acid fragments conducted in our laboratory during the last three years and the insights gained from them.
    Additional Material: 17 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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