Since its discovery, COVID-19 has rapidly spread across the globe and has had a massive toll on human health, with infection mortality rates as high as 10%, and a crippling impact on the world economy. Despite numerous advances, there remains an urgent need for accurate and rapid point-of-care diagnostic tests and better therapeutic treatment options. To contribute chemically distinct, non-protein-based affinity reagents, we report here the identification of modified DNA-based aptamers that selectively bind to the S1, S2, or receptor-binding domain of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) spike protein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucleosides Nucleotides Nucleic Acids
July 2015
Chemically-modified derivatives of cytidine, bearing a 5-(N-substituted-carboxamide) functional group, are new reagents for use in aptamer discovery via the SELEX process (Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential enrichment). Herein, we disclose a practical synthesis of 5-(N-benzylcarboxamide)-2'-deoxycytidine, and the corresponding 5-(N-1-naphthylmethylcarboxamide)- and 5-(N-3-phenylpropylcarboxamide)-2'-deoxycytidine analogs, as both the suitably-protected 3'-O-cyanoethylphosphoramidite reagents (CEP; gram scale) and the 5'-O-triphosphate reagents (TPP; milligram-scale). The key step in the syntheses is a mild, palladium(0)-catalyzed carboxyamidation of an unprotected 5-iodo-cytidine.
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