Abstract

Synthetic oligonucleotide strands ranging from 5 to 25 units in length are commonly used as standards, probes, and templates in various bioanalytical applications. Until recently, their preparation, storage, and handling were regarded as unimportant, but this work provides valuable information to the contrary. The systematic degradation of oligonucleotide strands during sample preparation is investigated by repeatedly freezing/thawing short strands followed by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometric (MALDI-MS) analysis. It is shown here that the longevity of an oligonucleotide strand is dependent on several factors including base composition, solution concentrations, and strand length as well as thawing conditions. Several trends in strand robustness were established. Our studies reveal that the robustness of strands is base-dependent: T-mer > A-mer > C-mer > G-mer. Likewise, an increase in the length of the strands increases the tendency of a sample to degrade. Another observation included that samples of mixed bases degrade according to structural conformations. All of these observations are attributed to the fact that the samples undergo degradation during sample/solvent isolation during freezing.

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