Issue 35, 2006

The difluorotoluene debate—a decade later

Abstract

2,4-Difluorotoluene is unusual among hydrofluorocarbons because it is shaped like the DNA base thymine. It was first synthesised as a nucleotide analogue and incorporated into DNA a decade ago. Although it is a nonpolar molecule, it was found to be replicated by DNA polymerase enzymes as if it were thymine. We concluded that replication of DNA base pairs can occur without Watson–Crick hydrogen bonds, and hypothesised that steric effects, rather than these hydrogen bonds, were the main arbiters of DNA replication fidelity. A debate was initiated then, with claims by some that the molecule is polar and forms hydrogen bonds with adenine, thus supporting the hydrogen bonding theory of DNA replication. Here we discuss the evolution of this debate, and reflect on the relevant data that have since come from hundreds of papers and dozens of laboratories. Although discussion on this topic continues, the steric hypothesis for DNA replication is now widely accepted among biochemists, and the changing paradigm has been reflected in textbooks.

Graphical abstract: The difluorotoluene debate—a decade later

Article information

Article type
Feature Article
Submitted
18 Apr 2006
Accepted
25 May 2006
First published
07 Jul 2006

Chem. Commun., 2006, 3665-3675

The difluorotoluene debate—a decade later

E. T. Kool and H. O. Sintim, Chem. Commun., 2006, 3665 DOI: 10.1039/B605414E

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