Digital information encoded in polymers has been exclusively decoded by mass spectrometry. However, the size limit of analytes in mass spectrometry restricts the storage capacity per chain. In addition, sequential decoding hinders random access to the bits of interest without full-chain sequencing. Here we report the shotgun sequencing of a 512-mer sequence-defined polymer whose molecular weight (57.3 kDa) far exceeds the analytical limit of mass spectrometry. A 4-bit fragmentation code was implemented at aperiodic positions during the synthetic encoding of 512-bit information without affecting storage capacity per chain. Upon activating the fragmentation code, the polymer chain splits into 18 oligomers, which could be individually decoded by tandem-mass sequencing. These sequences were computationally reconstructed into a full sequence using an error-detection method. The proposed sequencing method eliminates the storage limit of a single polymer chain and allows random access to the bits of interest without full-chain sequencing.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.202415124DOI Listing

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