Synthesis of polynucleotide analogs containing a polyvinyl alcohol backbone

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Abstract

Water soluble homo-base polynucleotide analogues were synthesized in which polyvinyl alcohol and partially phosphonated polyvinyl alcohol constituted the backbones, onto which were grafted uracil or adenine via 1,3-dioxane spacers formed by acetal formation with the 1,3-diol moieties in PVA. The resulting adenine-PVA polynucleotide analogs exhibited hyperchromic effects, which was not the case for the corresponding uracil compounds. Mixtures of the adenine- and aracil PVA-phosphate polynucleotide analogs in solutions exhibited characteristic S-shaped UV-absorbance vs temperature and melting curves with melting points at approximately 40°C. © 2008 by MDPI.

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Yu, Q., & Carlsen, P. (2008). Synthesis of polynucleotide analogs containing a polyvinyl alcohol backbone. Molecules, 13(3), 701–715. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules13030701

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