Oligonucleotides containing the 5-substituted 2'-deoxyuridines 1b or Id bearing side chains with terminal C C bonds are described, and their duplex stability is compared with oligonucleoticles containing the 5-alkynyl compounds la or le with only one nonterminal C C bond in the side chain. For this, 5-iodo-2'-deoxyuridine (3) and diynes or alkynes were employed as starting materials in the Sonogashira cross-coupling reaction (Scheme 1). Phosphoramidites 2b-d were prepared (Scheme 3) and used as building blocks in solid-phase synthesis. T, Measurements demonstrated that DNA duplexes containing the octa-1,7-diynyl side chain or a diprop-2-ynyl ether residue, i.e., containing 1b or Id, are more stable than those containing only one triple bond, i.e., 1a or 1c (Table 3). The diyne-modified nucleosides were employed in further functionalization reactions by using the protocol of the Cu-I-catalyzed Huisgen-Meldal-Sharpless [2 + 3] cycloaddition ('click chemistry') (Scheme 2). An aliphatic azide, i.e., 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine (AZT; 4), as well as the aromatic azido compound 5 were linked to the terminal alkyne group resulting in 1H-1,2,3-triazole-modified derivatives 6 and 7, respectively (Scheme 2), of which 6 forms a stable duplex DNA (Table 3). The Husigen-Meldal-Sharpless cycloaddition was also performed with oligonucleotides (Schemes 4 and 5).