4.6 Article

Specific recognition of cytosine by hypoxanthine in pyrrolidinyl peptide nucleic acid

Journal

ORGANIC & BIOMOLECULAR CHEMISTRY
Volume 11, Issue 14, Pages 2310-2317

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c3ob27129c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Thailand Research Fund [RTA5280002]
  2. Thai government under the Project for Establishment of Comprehensive Center for Innovative Food, Health Products and Agriculture [TKK2555, SP2]
  3. National Research University of CHE
  4. Ratchadaphiseksomphot Endowment Fund [AM1006A]
  5. Ratchadaphiseksomphot Endowment Fund from Chulalongkorn University
  6. Thailand Research Fund
  7. Chulalongkorn University [PHD/0316/2550]

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Hypoxanthine is an unnatural base that can potentially pair with all natural nucleobases. While hypoxanthine in DNA exhibits marginal preference for pairing with cytosine (C), little is known about its pairing behavior in other DNA analogues. In this study, we synthesized a hypoxanthine-containing monomer and incorporated it into pyrrolidinyl peptide nucleic acid with alpha/beta-peptide backbone derived from D-prolyl-(1S,2S)-2-aminocyclopentanecarboxylic acid (acpcPNA). DNA binding studies clearly revealed that hypoxanthine in acpcPNA behaves like G-analogue because it can specifically form a stable base pair with dC in DNA. The ability to replace G by hypoxanthine without affecting the base pairing properties of acpcPNA can solve a number of problems associated with G-rich acpcPNA including difficult synthesis, formation of secondary structures and fluorescence quenching.

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