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Identification and Quantification of Protecting Groups Remaining in Commercial Oligonucleotide Products Using Monoclonal Antibodies

โœ Scribed by Chi Fu; Susanna Smith; Stephen G. Simkins; Paul F. Agris


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
195 KB
Volume
306
Category
Article
ISSN
0003-2697

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โœฆ Synopsis


Quality control is paramount to reproducibly achieving oligonucleotide therapeutics and diagnostics of superior value. However, incomplete deprotection of nucleoside reactive groups after the automated chemical synthesis of oligonucleotides would result in diminished antisense activity and in erroneous array analysis of gene expression. Mass spectrometry and capillary electrophoresis are used to detect aborted sequences of oligonucleotides, but not to identify and quantify incompletely deprotected oligonucleotides. To address this problem, monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), ELISA, and dotblot assays were developed for the specific identification and quantification of the commonly used nucleic acid base-and sugar-protecting groups: benzoyl, isobutyryl, isopropylphenoxyacetyl, and dimethoxytrityl. Each MAb was capable of reproducibly detecting 8 -32 pmol of the respectively protected nucleoside in an intact DNA or RNA sample composed of 320 -640 nmol of the deprotected nucleoside. In a direct comparison, HPLC nucleoside composition analysis of enzyme-hydrolyzed DNA was limited to the detection of 2-5 nmol of protected nucleoside. Using the MAb dot-blot assay, 5 of 16 commercial DNA products obtained from eight different companies were found to have 1.0 -5.2% of the benzoyl and isopropylphenoxyacetyl protecting groups remaining. Thus, MAbs selectively identify and quantify picomoles of remaining protecting groups on antisense therapeutics and oligonucleotide diagnostics.


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