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Rigid polymerics: the future of oligonucleotide analysis and purification
Authors:Lloyd Linda L  Millichip Mark I  Mapp Keeley J
Institution:Polymer Laboratories Ltd., Essex Road, Church Stretton, Shropshire SY6 6AX, UK. linda.lloyd@polymerlabs.com
Abstract:A family of rigid macroporous HPLC materials, reversed phase and anion exchange, has been evaluated for the analysis and purification of a range of de-protected, dimethoxytrityl-off, oligonucleotides. A 25-base pair (bp) double-stranded DNA ladder was used to determine the resolving range for the four pore sizes of reversed-phase media. The 100 A pore size resolves up to 50-75 bp, the 300 A up to 250-300 bp, the 1000 A up to 400-450 bp and the 4000 A pore size is capable of resolving in excess of 500 bp. The dynamic capacity of these four pore sizes was also determined using a synthetic oligonucleotide with two ion-pairing agents at ambient and 60 degrees C. The dynamic capacity was shown to decrease with increasing pore size and that with the triethylammonium acetate ion-pairing agent there was negligible temperature dependency. The dynamic capacity was higher when tetrabutylammonium bromide was used at elevated temperature. A strong anion-exchange functionality on a pH-stable polymeric particle was used to investigate the selectivity and resolution of the technique. Using a poly-T-oligonucleotide size standard, resolution of full length oligonucleotide (n) from the truncated species due to coupling failure (n-1, n-2, etc.) was demonstrated up to at least the 30mer. Resolution of a phospho diester contaminant from a phospho thioate oligonucleotide and a truncated sequence was demonstrated using anion-exchange HPLC at high pH.
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