Synthesis of Nucleobase-Modified RNA Oligonucleotides by Post-Synthetic Approach

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Abstract

The chemical synthesis of modified oligoribonucleotides represents a powerful approach to study the structure, stability, and biological activity of RNAs. Selected RNA modifications have been proven to enhance the drug-like properties of RNA oligomers providing the oligonucleotide-based therapeutic agents in the antisense and siRNA technologies. The important sites of RNA modification/functionalization are the nucleobase residues. Standard phosphoramidite RNA chemistry allows the site-specific incorporation of a large number of functional groups to the nucleobase structure if the building blocks are synthetically obtainable and stable under the conditions of oligonucleotide chemistry and work-up. Otherwise, the chemically modified RNAs are produced by post-synthetic oligoribonucleotide functionalization. This review highlights the post-synthetic RNA modification approach as a convenient and valuable method to introduce a wide variety of nucleobase modifications, including recently discovered native hypermodified functional groups, fluorescent dyes, photoreactive groups, disulfide crosslinks, and nitroxide spin labels.

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Bartosik, K., Debiec, K., Czarnecka, A., Sochacka, E., & Leszczynska, G. (2020, July 23). Synthesis of Nucleobase-Modified RNA Oligonucleotides by Post-Synthetic Approach. Molecules (Basel, Switzerland). NLM (Medline). https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules25153344

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