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TEST

Monday 10 February 2014

Complete Chemical Synthesis of DNA- Thanks to Click Chemistry

Dr Ali Tavassoli, a Reader in chemical biology at the University of Southampton, along with his collaborators, Dr Jeremy Blaydes and Professor Tom Brown, has lead an interdisciplinary study that assembles DNA which is functional in human cells using click chemistry. A linker has been used to stitch DNA strands together. Human cells can still read through this DNA correctly irrespective of the fact that linker used was not found in nature. This finding has opened doors to the possibility of total chemical synthesis of DNA.

Click chemistry functions like nature to generate substances quickly by joining small units together. Oligonucleotides were joined together to create artificial DNA using click chemistry. The usual approaches to assemble DNA strands comprises of  DNA synthesis, PCR amplification and enzymatic ligation. Click technique has several advantages over these usual techniques apart from being greatly efficient.
DNA is a strand of nucleotides that are attached together using phosphodiester bond, with the help of pentose sugars and phosphate groups. According to Dr Tavassoli, chemists had always assumed this phosphodiester bond to be essential for DNA functioning in the cell. However, in recent study using click technique, Modified DNA strands were stitched together rapidly and efficiently using the copper-catalysed alkyne-azide cycloaddition reaction. Click-linking DNA leaves behind a triazole group in the backbone and it was feared that cellular machinery would be unable to read these unnaturally joined DNA strands. However, the new study demonstrated error-free transcription in human cells, the first example of a non-natural DNA linker working correctly in eukaryotic cells.

This discovery not only gives an alternative to enzymatic methods for DNA assembly, but also suggests that we don't have to stick to the phosphodiester backbone of the DNA at the site of DNA ligation.