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Creators/Authors contains: "Yin, Yipeng"

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  1. Abstract This protocol describes the synthesis of long oligonucleotides (up to 401‐mer), their isolation from complex mixtures using the catching‐by‐polymerization (CBP) method, and the selection of error‐free sequence via cloning followed by Sanger sequencing. Oligo synthesis is achieved under standard automated solid‐phase synthesis conditions with only minor yet critical adjustments using readily available reagents. The CBP method involves tagging the full‐length sequence with a polymerizable tagging phosphoramidite (PTP), co‐polymerizing the sequence into a polymer, washing away failure sequences, and cleaving the full‐length sequence from the polymer. Cloning and sequencing guided selection of error‐free sequence overcome the problems of substitution, deletion, and addition errors that cannot be addressed using any other methods, including CBP. Long oligos are needed in many areas such as protein engineering and synthetic biology. The methods described here are particularly important for projects requiring long oligos containing long repeats or stable higher‐order structures, which are difficult or impossible to produce using any other existing technologies. © 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC. Basic Protocol 1: Long oligo synthesis Support Protocol 1: Synthesis of polymerizable tagging phosphoramidite (PTP) Support Protocol 2: Synthesis of 5′‐O‐Bz phosphoramidite Basic Protocol 2: Catching‐by‐polymerization (CBP) purification Basic Protocol 3: Error‐free sequence selection via cloning and sequencing 
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  2. The longest oligos that can be chemically synthesized using known methods are typically considered to be 200-mers. Here, we report direct synthesis of an 800-mer green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene and a 1,728-mer Φ29 DNA polymerase gene on an automated synthesizer. Key innovations that enabled the breakthrough include conducting the synthesis on the smooth surface of glass wool or glass bead rather than within the pores of traditional solid supports, and the use of the powerful catching-by-polymerization (CBP) method for the isolation of the full-length oligos from the crude mixture. Conducting the synthesis on smooth surface not only eliminated the steric hindrance that would otherwise prevent long oligo assembly, but also, surprisingly, drastically reduced the errors that commonly occur in traditional oligo synthesis. The long oligos were characterized by cloning followed by Sanger sequencing. We anticipate that the new method for long oligo synthesis will have a significant impact on projects in areas such as synthetic biology, gene editing, protein engineering, and many others. 
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  3. Using PEGylated Dmoc (pDmoc) phosphoramidites for oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) synthesis increases the solubility of ODN on solid support and enables the synthesis of longer sensitive ODNs. 
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  4. The catching-by-polymerization (CBP) oligodeoxynucleotide (oligo or ODN) purification method has been demonstrated suitable for large-scale, parallel, and long oligo purification. The authenticity of the oligos has been verifiedviaDNA sequencing, and gene construction and expression. A remaining obstacle to the practical utility of the CBP method is affordable polymerizable tagging phosphoramidites (PTPs) that are needed for the method. In this article, we report scalable synthesis of the four nucleoside (dA, dC, dG and T) precursors to the PTPs using a route having five steps from inexpensive starting materials. The overall yields ranged from 21% to 35%. The scales of the synthesis presented here are up to 2.1 grams of the precursors. Because the syntheses are chromatography-free, further scaling up the syntheses of the precursors have become more feasible. With the precursors, the PTPs can be synthesized in one step using standard methods involving a chromatography purification. 
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  5. Over a hundred non-canonical nucleotides have been found in DNA and RNA. Many of them are sensitive toward nucleophiles. Because known oligonucleotide synthesis technologies require nucleophilic conditions for deprotection, currently there is no suitable technology for their synthesis. The recently disclosed method regarding the use of 1,3-dithian-2-yl-methyl (Dim) for phosphate protection and 1,3-dithian-2-yl-methoxycarbonyl (Dmoc) for amino protection can solve the problem. With Dim–Dmoc protection, oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) deprotection can be achieved with NaIO 4 followed by aniline. Some sensitive groups have been determined to be stable under these conditions. Besides serving as a base, aniline also serves as a nucleophilic scavenger, which prevents deprotection side products from reacting with ODN. For this reason, excess aniline is needed. Here, we report the use of alkyl Dim (aDim) and alkyl Dmoc (aDmoc) for ODN synthesis. With aDim–aDmoc protection, deprotection is achieved with NaIO 4 followed by K 2 CO 3 . No nucleophilic scavenger such as aniline is needed. Over 10 ODNs including one containing the highly sensitive N 4 -acetylcytidine were synthesized. Work on extending the method for sensitive RNA synthesis is in progress. 
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  6. Long oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) are segments of DNAs having over one hundred nucleotides (nt). They are typically assembled using enzymatic methods such as PCR and ligation from shorter 20 to 60 nt ODNs produced by automated de novo chemical synthesis. While these methods have made many projects in areas such as synthetic biology and protein engineering possible, they have various drawbacks. For example, they cannot produce genes and genomes with long repeats and have difficulty to produce sequences containing stable secondary structures. Here, we report a direct de novo chemical synthesis of 400 nt ODNs, and their isolation from the complex reaction mixture using the catching-by-polymerization (CBP) method. To determine the authenticity of the ODNs, 399 and 401 nt ODNs were synthesized and purified with CBP. The two were joined together using Gibson assembly to give the 800 nt green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene construct. The sequence of the construct was verified via Sanger sequencing. To demonstrate the potential use of the long ODN synthesis method, the GFP gene was expressed inE. coli. The long ODN synthesis and isolation method presented here provides a pathway to the production of genes and genomes containing long repeats or stable secondary structures that cannot be produced or are highly challenging to produce using existing technologies. 
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  7. Oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) are typically purified and analysed with HPLC equipped with a UV-Vis detector. Quantities of ODNs are usually determined using a UV-Vis spectrometer separately after HPLC, and are reported as optical density at 260 nm (OD 260 ). Here, we describe a method for direct determination of OD 260 of ODNs using the area of the peaks in HPLC profiles. It is expected that the method will save significant time for researchers in the area of nucleic acid research, and minimize the loss of oligonucleotide samples. 
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  8. The stepwise synthesis of monodisperse polyethylene glycols (PEGs) and their derivatives usually involves using an acid-labile protecting group such as DMTr and coupling the two PEG moieties together under basic Williamson ether formation conditions. Using this approach, each elongation of PEG is achieved in three steps – deprotection, deprotonation and coupling – in two pots. Here, we report a more convenient approach for PEG synthesis featuring the use of a base-labile protecting group such as the phenethyl group. Using this approach, each elongation of PEG can be achieved in two steps – deprotection and coupling – in only one pot. The deprotonation step, and the isolation and purification of the intermediate product after deprotection using existing approaches are no longer needed when the one-pot approach is used. Because the stepwise PEG synthesis usually requires multiple PEG elongation cycles, the new PEG synthesis method is expected to significantly lower PEG synthesis cost. 
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  9. Abstract This protocol describes a method for the incorporation of sensitive functional groups into oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs). The nucleophile‐sensitive epigeneticN4‐acetyldeoxycytosine (4acC) DNA modification is used as an example, but other sensitive groups can also be incorporated, e.g., alkyl halide, α‐haloamide, alkyl ester, aryl ester, thioester, and chloropurine groups, all of which are unstable under the basic and nucleophilic deprotection and cleavage conditions used in standard ODN synthesis methods. The method uses a 1,3‐dithian‐2‐yl‐methoxycarbonyl (Dmoc) group that carries a methyl group at the carbon of the methoxy moiety (meDmoc) for the protection of exo‐amines of nucleobases. The growing ODN is anchored to a solid support via a Dmoc linker. With these protecting and linking strategies, ODN deprotection and cleavage are achieved without using any strong bases and nucleophiles. Instead, they can be carried out under nearly neutral non‐nucleophilic oxidative conditions. To increase the length of ODNs that can be synthesized using the meDmoc method, the protocol also describes the synthesis of a PEGylated Dmoc (pDmoc) phosphoramidite. With some of the nucleotides being incorporated with pDmoc‐CE phosphoramidite, the growing ODN on the solid support carries PEG moieties and becomes more soluble, thus enabling longer ODN synthesis. The ODN synthesis method described in this protocol is expected to make many sensitive ODNs that are difficult to synthesize accessible to researchers in multiple areas, such as epigenetics, nanopore sequencing, nucleic acid‐protein interactions, antisense drug development, DNA alkylation carcinogenesis, and DNA nanotechnology. © 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC. Basic Protocol: Sensitive ODN synthesis Support Protocol 1: Synthesis of meDmoc‐CE phosphoramidites Support Protocol 2: Synthesis of a pDmoc‐CE phosphoramidite 
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