Abstract

By using the standard purine nucleosides, guanosine and adenosine, and the pyrimidine C-nucleosides, pseudoisocytidine and pseudouridine, as complements on a probe strand, it is possible to construct a regular Watson-Crick helix with a single-stranded target sequence having any arrangement of the four naturally-occurring bases found in nucleic acids. The major groove of this helix will have a unique configuration of hydrogen-bonding sites on the probe strand for each of these four base pairs. By using this duplex as a framework, an ensemble of recognition patterns composed of base triads may be constructed. In these patterns, either a homopyrimidine or homopurine third strand binds in the major groove of the duplex formed by the target and probe strands. Ten distinct geometries, or motifs, are shown, each one consisting of four isomorphic base triads built upon recognition of C, G, A, or U(T) residues in the target strand. In order to maintain specific hydrogen bonding and to construct isomorphous triads, the use of several nonstandard bases is proposed. 33 refs., 9 figs., 3 tabs.

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