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October 10, 2011 - Volume 89, Number 41
- p. 41
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New results in total synthesis reinvigorate a 40-year-old field of research.
Disagreement on conservation course of action complicates a potential reopening.
Researchers zero in on the pathways that allow cancer to bounce back after treatment.
Making the iconic pants requires both color-addition and color-removal chemistry.
Materials Science: Chemists observe metal objects sloughing off ions to form nanoparticles.
Chemical Biology: Methylated bases in mRNA may have roles in gene regulation and obesity.
Microfluidics: Automated chip is designed to detect extraterrestrial amino acids.
Publishing: Jonathan Sweedler to take the helm.
Yale updates policies on machine shop use after student death.
Conservation scientists seek new ways to keep modern paintings looking their best.
Studies could lead to sensitive and selective analyses for tiny signaling agent.
Materials Science: Guidelines predict structures formed by nanoparticles and DNA linkers.
Molecular Biology: Technique tags and enriches cells genetically altered by nucleases.
Electronics: Metal-carbon bonds increase electrical conductance.
Stereochemistry: Enzymelike pocket that hosts chiral species controls catalyst's enantioselectivity.
A new high-throughput method allows researchers to optimize nucleic acids for RNA interference (RNAi), Merck scientists report (J. Am. Chem. Soc., DOI: 10.1021/ja2068774). In RNAi, a double-stranded RNA molecule called small interfering RNA (siRNA) guides an enzyme complex (RISC) to cleave the complementary messenger RNA (mRNA) and prevents its translation into protein. The siRNAs can be improved by chemical modification so they interact more effectively with RISC and the target mRNA. To streamline this optimization, Gabor Butora and coworkers sequentially replaced the natural nucleosides with inosine, a nucleoside containing ribose and hypoxanthine, which acts as a universal base that pairs up with any of the canonical bases. By using inosine, the team can evaluate modifications along the siRNA oligomer and test their effect without having to synthesize modified versions of all four natural nucleosides. To illustrate the methodology they used an siRNA corresponding to part of the human ApoB gene as a test case and found that nucleosides containing 2´-O-benzyl modification would be well tolerated at four positions in the siRNA.
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