Peptidoyl RNAs are the products of ribosome-free, single-nucleotide translation. They contain a peptide in the backbone of the oligoribonucleotide and are interesting from a synthetic and a bioorganic point of view. A synthesis of a stabilized version of peptidoyl RNA, with an amide bond between the C-terminus of a peptide and a 3'-amino-2',3'-dideoxynucleoside in the RNA chain was developed. The preferred synthetic route used an N-Teoc-protected aminonucleoside support and involved a solution-phase coupling of the amino-terminal oligonucleotide to a dipeptido dinucleotide. Exploratory UV-melting and NMR analysis of the hairpin 5'-UUGGCGAAAGCdC-LeuLeu-AA-3' indicated that the peptide-linked RNA segments do not fold in a cooperative fashion. The synthetic access to doubly RNA-linked peptides on a scale sufficient for structural biology opens the door to the exploration of their structural and biochemical properties.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9542650 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cbic.202200352 | DOI Listing |
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