C3 CPG; 1000 Å

Catalog number: BRL-070

C3 CPG is used to add a C3 spacer at the 3' end of an oligonucleotide.

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Synonyms
C3 CPG (DMT-1,3-Propanediol-Suc-CPG); 1000 Å
Appearance
White to off-white powder
Storage
+2 to +8 °C.
Shipping
Room temperature.
Cleavage Conditions
Use concentrated ammonia for 90 min at 25°C or 30 min at 60°C, or 1:1 ammonia:methylamine (AMA) for 25 min at 25°C when using fast deprotecting amidites.
Deprotection Conditions
When using fast deprotecting amidites (e.g., C-Ac; G-DMF; G-PAC), please use concentrated ammonia for 1h or AMA for 30 min at 60°C. When using standard amidites (e.g., C-Bz; G-iBu), please use concentrated ammonia for 5h at 60°C.

Chemical Structure:

Reference Reading

1. Synthetic Oligodeoxynucleotide CpG Motifs Activate Human Complement through Their Backbone Structure and Induce Complement-Dependent Cytokine Release
Eline de Boer, Marina Sokolova, Huy Q Quach, Karin E McAdam, Maximilian P Götz, Viktoriia Chaban, Jarle Vaage, Beatrice Fageräng, Trent M Woodruff, Peter Garred, Per H Nilsson, Tom E Mollnes 0, Søren E Pischke. J Immunol. 2022 Nov 1;209(9):1760-1767. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.2101191.
Bacterial and mitochondrial DNA, sharing an evolutionary origin, act as danger-associated molecular patterns in infectious and sterile inflammation. They both contain immunomodulatory CpG motifs. Interactions between CpG motifs and the complement system are sparsely described, and mechanisms of complement activation by CpG remain unclear. Lepirudin-anticoagulated human whole blood and plasma were incubated with increasing concentrations of three classes of synthetic CpGs: CpG-A, -B, and -C oligodeoxynucleotides and their GpC sequence controls. Complement activation products were analyzed by immunoassays. Cytokine levels were determined via 27-plex beads-based immunoassay, and CpG interactions with individual complement proteins were evaluated using magnetic beads coated with CpG-B. In whole blood and plasma, CpG-B and CpG-C (p < 0.05 for both), but not CpG-A (p > 0.8 for all), led to time- and dose-dependent increase of soluble C5b-9, the alternative complement convertase C3bBbP, and the C3 cleavage product C3bc. GpC-A, -B, and -C changed soluble fluid-phase C5b-9, C3bBbP, and C3bc to the same extent as CpG-A, -B, and -C, indicating a DNA backbone-dependent effect. Dose-dependent CpG-B binding was found to C1q (r = 0.83; p = 0.006) and factor H (r = 0.93; p < 0.001). The stimulatory complement effect was partly preserved in C2-deficient plasma and completely preserved in MASP-2-deficient serum. CpG-B increased levels of IL-1β, IL-2, IL-6, IL-8, MCP-1, and TNF in whole blood, which were completely abolished by inhibition of C5 and C5aR1 (p < 0.05 for all). In conclusion, synthetic analogs of bacterial and mitochondrial DNA activate the complement system via the DNA backbone. We suggest that CpG-B interacts directly with classical and alternative pathway components, resulting in complement-C5aR1-dependent cytokine release.
2. Gene expression classification of colon cancer into molecular subtypes: characterization, validation, and prognostic value
Laetitia Marisa, Aurélien de Reyniès, Alex Duval, Janick Selves, Marie Pierre Gaub, Laure Vescovo, Marie-Christine Etienne-Grimaldi, Renaud Schiappa, Dominique Guenot, Mira Ayadi, Sylvain Kirzin, Maurice Chazal, Jean-François Fléjou, Daniel Benchimol, Anne Berger, Arnaud Lagarde, Erwan Pencreach, Françoise Piard, Dominique Elias, Yann Parc, Sylviane Olschwang, Gérard Milano, Pierre Laurent-Puig, Valérie Boige. PLoS Med. 2013;10(5):e1001453. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001453.
Colon cancer (CC) pathological staging fails to accurately predict recurrence, and to date, no gene expression signature has proven reliable for prognosis stratification in clinical practice, perhaps because CC is a heterogeneous disease. The aim of this study was to establish a comprehensive molecular classification of CC based on mRNA expression profile analyses. Fresh-frozen primary tumor samples from a large multicenter cohort of 750 patients with stage I to IV CC who underwent surgery between 1987 and 2007 in seven centers were characterized for common DNA alterations, including BRAF, KRAS, and TP53 mutations, CpG island methylator phenotype, mismatch repair status, and chromosomal instability status, and were screened with whole genome and transcriptome arrays. 566 samples fulfilled RNA quality requirements. Unsupervised consensus hierarchical clustering applied to gene expression data from a discovery subset of 443 CC samples identified six molecular subtypes. These subtypes were associated with distinct clinicopathological characteristics, molecular alterations, specific enrichments of supervised gene expression signatures (stem cell phenotype-like, normal-like, serrated CC phenotype-like), and deregulated signaling pathways. Based on their main biological characteristics, we distinguished a deficient mismatch repair subtype, a KRAS mutant subtype, a cancer stem cell subtype, and three chromosomal instability subtypes, including one associated with down-regulated immune pathways, one with up-regulation of the Wnt pathway, and one displaying a normal-like gene expression profile. The classification was validated in the remaining 123 samples plus an independent set of 1,058 CC samples, including eight public datasets. Furthermore, prognosis was analyzed in the subset of stage II-III CC samples. The subtypes C4 and C6, but not the subtypes C1, C2, C3, and C5, were independently associated with shorter relapse-free survival, even after adjusting for age, sex, stage, and the emerging prognostic classifier Oncotype DX Colon Cancer Assay recurrence score (hazard ratio 1.5, 95% CI 1.1-2.1, p = 0.0097). However, a limitation of this study is that information on tumor grade and number of nodes examined was not available. We describe the first, to our knowledge, robust transcriptome-based classification of CC that improves the current disease stratification based on clinicopathological variables and common DNA markers. The biological relevance of these subtypes is illustrated by significant differences in prognosis. This analysis provides possibilities for improving prognostic models and therapeutic strategies. In conclusion, we report a new classification of CC into six molecular subtypes that arise through distinct biological pathways.
3. Anti-Bacterial Effect of CpG-DNA Involves Enhancement of the Complement Systems
Te Ha Kim, Joongwon Park, Dongbum Kim, Avishekh Gautam, Madhav Akauliya, Jinsoo Kim, Hanseul Lee, Sangkyu Park, Younghee Lee, Hyung-Joo Kwon. Int J Mol Sci. 2019 Jul 10;20(14):3397. doi: 10.3390/ijms20143397.
CpG-DNA activates the host immune system to resist bacterial infections. In this study, we examined the protective effect of CpG-DNA in mice against Escherichia coli (E. coli) K1 infection. Administration of CpG-DNA increased the survival of mice after E. coli K1 infection, which reduces the numbers of bacteria in the organs. Pre-injection of mice with CpG-DNA before E. coli K1 infection increased the levels of the complement C3 but not C3a and C3b. The survival of the mice after E. coli K1 infection was significantly decreased when the mice were pre-injected with the cobra venom factor (CVF) removing the complement compared to the non-CVF-treated mice group. It suggests that the complement has protective roles against E. coli K1 infection. In addition, the survival of complement-depleted mice was increased by CpG-DNA pre-administration before E. coli K1 infection. Therefore, we suggest that CpG-DNA enhances the anti-bacterial activity of the immune system by augmenting the levels of complement systems after E. coli K1 infection and triggering other factors as well. Further studies are required to investigate the functional roles of the CpG-DNA-induced complement regulation and other factors against urgent bacterial infection.
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