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1.
xDNA is a modified DNA, which contains natural as well as expanded bases. Expanded bases are generated by the addition of a benzene spacer to the natural bases. A set of AMBER force‐field parameters were derived for the expanded bases and the structural dynamics of the xDNA decamer ( xT5 ′ G xT A xC xG C xA xG T3′ ) · ( xA5′ C T xG C G xT A xC A3′) was explored using a 22 ns molecular dynamics simulation in explicit solvent. During the simulation, the duplex retained its Watson‐Crick base‐pairing and double helical structure, with deviations from the starting B‐form geometry towards A‐form; the deviations are mainly in the backbone torsion angles and in the helical parameters. The sugar pucker of the residues were distributed among a variety of modes; C2′ endo, C1′ exo, O4′ endo, C4′ exo, C2′ exo, and C3′ endo. The enhanced stacking interactions on account of the modification in the bases could help to retain the duplex nature of the helix with minor deviations from the ideal geometry. In our simulation, the xDNA showed a reduced minor groove width and an enlarged major groove width in comparison with the NMR structure. Both the grooves are larger than that of standard B‐DNA, but major groove width is larger than that of A‐DNA with almost equal minor groove width. The enlarged groove widths and the possibility of additional hydration in the grooves makes xDNA a potential molecule for various applications. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 91: 351–360, 2009. This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The “Published Online” date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com  相似文献   

2.
Abstract

A constrained model building procedure is used to generate nucleic acid structures of the familiar A-, B-, and Z-DNA duplexes. Attention is focused upon the multiple structural solutions associated with the arrangements of nucleic acid base pairs rather than the optimum sugar-phosphate structure. The glycosyl (χ) and sugar torsions (both the ring puckering and the exocyclic C5′-C4′ (ψ) torsion) are treated as independent variables and the resulting O3′…O5′ distances are used as closure determinants. When such distances conform to the known geometry of phosphate chemical bonding, an intervening phosphorus atom with correct C-O-P valence angles can be located. Four sequential torsion angles- φ,ω,ω,ω and φ about the C3′-O3′-P-O5′-C5′ bonds are then obtained as dependent variables. The resulting structures are categorized in terms of conformation, ranked in potential energy, and analyzed for torsional correlations. The numerical results are quite interesting with implications regarding nucleic acid models constructed to fit less than ideal experimental data. The multiple solutions to the problem are useful for comprehending the conformational complexities of thelocal sugar-phosphate backbone and for understanding the transitions between different helical forms. According to these studies, unique characterization of a nucleic acid duplex involves more than the determination of its base pair morphology, its sugar puckering preferences, or its groove binding features.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract

Sugar phosphate backbone conformations are a structural element inextricably involved in a complete understanding of specific recognition nucleic acid ligand interactions, from early stage discrimination of the correct target to complexation per se, including any structural adaptation on binding. The collective results of high resolution DNA, RNA and protein/DNA crystal structures provide an opportunity for an improved and enhanced statistical analysis of standard and unusual sugar-phosphate backbone conformations together with corresponding dinucleotide sequence effects as a basis for further exploration of conformational effects on binding. In this study, we have analyzed the conformations of all relevant crystal structures in the nucleic acids data base, determined the frequency distribution of all possible ?, ζ, α, β and γ backbone angle arrangements within four nucleic acid categories (A-RNA and A-DNA, free and bound B-DNA) and explored the relationships between backbone angles, sugar puckers and selected helical parameters. The trends in the correlations are found to be similar regardless of the nucleic acid category. It is interesting that specific structural effects exhibited by the different unusual backbone sub-states are in some cases contravariant. Certain α/γ changes are accompanied by C3′ endo (north) sugars, small twist angles and positive values of base pair roll, and favor a displacement of nucleotide bases towards the minor groove compared to that of canonical B form structures. Unusual ?/ζ combinations occur with C2′ (south) sugars, high twist angles, negative values of base pair roll, and base displacements towards the major groove. Furthermore, any unusual backbone correlates with a reduced dispersion of equilibrium structural parameters of the whole double helix, as evidenced by the reduced standard deviations of almost all con- formational parameters. Finally, a strong sequence effect is displayed in the free oligomers, but reduced somewhat in the ligand bound forms. The most variable steps are GpA and CpA, and, to a lesser extent, their partners TpC and TpG. The results provide a basis for considering if the variable and non-variable steps within a biological active sequence precisely determine morphological structural features as the curvature direction, the groove depth, and the accessibility of base pair for non covalent associations.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Abstract

Locked nucleic acid (LNA) is a conformationally constrained DNA analogue that exhibits exceptionally high affinity for complementary DNA and RNA strands. The deoxyribose sugar is modified by a 2′-O, 4′-C oxymethylene bridge, which projects into the minor groove. In addition to changing the distribution of functional groups in the groove and the overall helical geometry relative to unmodified DNA, the bridge likely alters the hydration of the groove. Each of these factors will impact the ability of small molecules, proteins and other nucleic acids to recognize LNA-containing hybrids. This report describes the ability of several DNA-intercalating ligands and one minor groove binder to recognize LNA-DNA and LNA-RNA hybrid duplexes. Using UV-vis, fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopies, we find that the minor groove binder as well as the intercalators exhibit significantly lower affinity for LNA-containing duplexes. The lone exception is the alkaloid ellipticine, which intercalates into LNA-DNA and LNA-RNA duplexes with affinities comparable to unmodified DNA-DNA and RNA-DNA duplexes.  相似文献   

6.
Structural effect of the anticancer agent 6-thioguanine on duplex DNA   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
The incorporation of 6-thioguanine (S6G) into DNA is an essential step in the cytotoxic activity of thiopurines. However, the structural effects of this substitution on duplex DNA have not been fully characterized. Here, we present the solution structures of DNA duplexes containing S6G opposite thymine (S6G·T) and opposite cytosine (S6G·C), solved by high-resolution NMR spectroscopy and restrained molecular dynamics. The data indicate that both duplexes adopt right-handed helical conformations with all Watson–Crick hydrogen bonding in place. The S6G·T structures exhibit a wobble-type base pairing at the lesion site, with thymine shifted toward the major groove and S6G displaced toward the minor groove. Aside from the lesion site, the helices, including the flanking base pairs, are not highly perturbed by the presence of the lesion. Surprisingly, thermal dependence experiments suggest greater stability in the S6G-T mismatch than the S6G-C base pair.  相似文献   

7.
NMR relaxation dispersion studies indicate that in canonical duplex DNA, Watson–Crick base pairs (bps) exist in dynamic equilibrium with short-lived low abundance excited state Hoogsteen bps. N1-methylated adenine (m1A) and guanine (m1G) are naturally occurring forms of damage that stabilize Hoogsteen bps in duplex DNA. NMR dynamic ensembles of DNA duplexes with m1A–T Hoogsteen bps reveal significant changes in sugar pucker and backbone angles in and around the Hoogsteen bp, as well as kinking of the duplex towards the major groove. Whether these structural changes also occur upon forming excited state Hoogsteen bps in unmodified duplexes remains to be established because prior relaxation dispersion probes provided limited information regarding the sugar-backbone conformation. Here, we demonstrate measurements of C3′ and C4′ spin relaxation in the rotating frame (R1ρ) in uniformly 13C/15N labeled DNA as sensitive probes of the sugar-backbone conformation in DNA excited states. The chemical shifts, combined with structure-based predictions using an automated fragmentation quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics method, show that the dynamic ensemble of DNA duplexes containing m1A–T Hoogsteen bps accurately model the excited state Hoogsteen conformation in two different sequence contexts. Formation of excited state A–T Hoogsteen bps is accompanied by changes in sugar-backbone conformation that allow the flipped syn adenine to form hydrogen-bonds with its partner thymine and this in turn results in overall kinking of the DNA toward the major groove. Results support the assignment of Hoogsteen bps as the excited state observed in canonical duplex DNA, provide an atomic view of DNA dynamics linked to formation of Hoogsteen bps, and lay the groundwork for a potentially general strategy for solving structures of nucleic acid excited states.  相似文献   

8.
Sugar phosphate backbone conformations are a structural element inextricably involved in a complete understanding of specific recognition nucleic acid ligand interactions, from early stage discrimination of the correct target to complexation per se, including any structural adaptation on binding. The collective results of high resolution DNA, RNA and protein/DNA crystal structures provide an opportunity for an improved and enhanced statistical analysis of standard and unusual sugar-phosphate backbone conformations together with corresponding dinucleotide sequence effects as a basis for further exploration of conformational effects on binding. In this study, we have analyzed the conformations of all relevant crystal structures in the nucleic acids data base, determined the frequency distribution of all possible epsilon, zeta, alpha, beta and gamma backbone angle arrangements within four nucleic acid categories (A-RNA and A-DNA, free and bound B-DNA) and explored the relationships between backbone angles, sugar puckers and selected helical parameters. The trends in the correlations are found to be similar regardless of the nucleic acid category. It is interesting that specific structural effects exhibited by the different unusual backbone sub-states are in some cases contravariant. Certain alpha/gamma changes are accompanied by C3' endo (north) sugars, small twist angles and positive values of base pair roll, and favor a displacement of nucleotide bases towards the minor groove compared to that of canonical B form structures. Unusual epsilon/zeta combinations occur with C2' (south) sugars, high twist angles, negative values of base pair roll, and base displacements towards the major groove. Furthermore, any unusual backbone correlates with a reduced dispersion of equilibrium structural parameters of the whole double helix, as evidenced by the reduced standard deviations of almost all conformational parameters. Finally, a strong sequence effect is displayed in the free oligomers, but reduced somewhat in the ligand bound forms. The most variable steps are GpA and CpA, and, to a lesser extent, their partners TpC and TpG. The results provide a basis for considering if the variable and non-variable steps within a biological active sequence precisely determine morphological structural features as the curvature direction, the groove depth, and the accessibility of base pair for non covalent associations.  相似文献   

9.
To provide insights into the unusual properties of 2',5' nucleic acids (iso nucleic acids), that includes their rejection by Nature as information molecules, modeling studies have been carried out to examine if they indeed possess the stereochemical ability to form helical duplexes and triplexes, just as their 3',5' linked constitutional isomers. The results show that the formation of helical duplexes with 2',5' linkages demands a mandatory displacement of the Watson and Crick base pairs from the helical axis, as a direct consequence of the lateral shift of the sugar-phosphate backbone from the periphery towards the interior of the helix. Thus, both duplexes and triplexes formed with a 2',5'-sugar-phosphate backbone possess this intrinsic trait, manifested normally only in A type duplexes of DNA and RNA. It was found that only a 10-fold symmetric parallel triplex with isomorphous T.AT triplets is stereochemically favorable for isoDNA with 'extended' nucleotide repeats, unlike the 12-fold symmetric triplex favored by DNA. The wider nature of a 12-fold triplex, concomitant with mandatory slide requirement for helix formation in isoDNA, demands even larger displacement, especially with 'extended' nucleotide structural repeats, thereby violating symmetry. However, a symmetric triplex possessing higher twist, can be naturally formed for isoDNA with a 'compact' nucleotide repeat. Two nanosecond molecular dynamics simulation of a 2',5'-B DNA duplex, formed with an intrinsic base pair displacement of -3.3 A, does not seem to favor a total transition to a typical A type duplex, although enhanced slide, X-displacement, decrease in helical rise and narrowing of the major groove during simulation seem to indicate a trend. Modeling of the interaction between the chimeric isoDNA.RNA duplex and E. coli RNase H has provided a structural basis for the inhibitory action of the enzyme. Interaction of residues Gln 80, Trp 81, Asn 16 and Lys 99, of E. coli RNase H with DNA of the DNA.RNA hybrid, are lost when the DNA backbone is replaced by isoDNA. Based on modeling and experimental observations, it is argued that 2',5' nucleic acids possess restricted conformational flexibility for helical polymorphism. The inability of isoDNA to favor the biologically relevant B form duplex and the associated topological inadequacies related to nucleic acid compaction and interactions with regulatory proteins may be some of the factors that might have led to the rejection of 2',5' links.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of G.T mispair incorporation into a double-helical environment was examined by molecular dynamics simulation. The 60-ps simulations performed on the two hexanucleotide duplexes d (G3C3)2 and d(G3TC2)2 included 10 Na+ counterions and first hydration shell waters. The resulting backbone torsional angle trajectories were analyzed to select time spans representative of conformational domains. The average backbone angles and helical parameters of the last time span for both duplexes are reported. During the simulation the hexamers retained B-type DNA structures that differed from typical A- or B-DNA forms. The overall helical structures for the two duplexes are vary similar. The presence of G.T mispairs did not alter the overall helical structure of the oligonucleotide duplex. Large propeller twist and buckle angles were obtained for both duplexes. The purine/pyrimidine crossover step showed a large decrease in propeller twist in the normal duplex but not in the mismatch duplex. Upon the formation of wobble mispairs in the mismatched duplex, the guanines moved into the minor groove and the thymines moved into the major groove. This helped prevent purine/purine clash and created a deformation in the relative orientation of the glycosidic bonds. It also exposed the free O4 of the thymines in the major groove and N2 of the guanines in the minor groove to interactions with solvent and counterions. These factors seemed to contribute to the apparently higher rigidity of the mismatched duplex during the simulation.  相似文献   

11.
D J Patel  L Shapiro 《Biochimie》1985,67(7-8):887-915
We have investigated intermolecular interactions and conformational features of the netropsin complexes with d(G1-G2-A3-A4-T5-T6-C7-C8) duplex (AATT 8-mer) and the d(G1-G2-T3-A4-T5-A6-C7-C8) duplex (TATA 8-mer) by one and two-dimensional NMR studies in solution. We have assigned the amide, pyrrole and methylene protons of netropsin and the base and sugar H1' protons of the nucleic acid from an analysis of the nuclear Overhauser effect (NOESY) and correlated (COSY) spectra of the complex at 25 degrees C. The directionality of the observed distance-dependent NOEs demonstrates that the 8-mer helices remain right-handed and that the arrangement of concave and convex face protons of netropsin are retained in the complexes. The observed changes in NOE patterns and chemical shift changes on complex formation suggest small conformational changes in the nucleic acid at the AATT and TATA antibiotic binding sites and possibly the flanking G.C base pairs. We observe intermolecular NOEs between all three amide and both pyrrole protons on the concave face of the antibiotic and the minor groove adenosine H2 proton of the two central A4.T5 base pairs of the AATT 8-mer and TATA 8-mer duplexes. The concave face pyrrole protons of the antibiotic also exhibit NOEs to the sugar H1' protons of residues 5 and 6 in the AATT and TATA 8-mer complexes. We also detect intermolecular NOEs between the guanidino and propioamidino methylene protons at either end of netropsin and the adenosine H2 proton of the two flanking A3.T6 base pairs in the AATT 8-mer and T3.A6 base pairs in the TATA 8-mer duplexes. These studies establish a set of nine contacts between the concave face of the antibiotic and the minor groove AATT segment and TATA segment of the 8-mer duplexes in solution. The observed magnitude of the NOEs require that there be no intervening water molecules sandwiched between the concave face of the antibiotic and the minor groove of the DNA so that release of the minor groove spine of hydration is a prerequisite for netropsin complex formation. The observed differences in the netropsin amide proton chemical shifts in the AATT 8-mer and TATA 8-mer complexes suggest differences in the strength and/or type of intermolecular hydrogen bonds at the AATT and TATA binding sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Oxidation of guanine or 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine can produce spiroiminodihydantoin (Sp) R and S stereoisomers. Both in vitro and in vivo experiments have shown that the Sp stereoisomers are highly mutagenic, causing G --> C and G --> T transversion mutations. Therefore, they are of interest as potential endogenous cancer causing lesions. However, their structural properties in DNA duplexes remain to be elucidated. We have employed computational methods to study the Sp lesions in 11-mer DNA duplexes with A, C, G, and T partners. Molecular dynamics simulations have been carried out to obtain ensembles of structures, and the trajectories were employed to analyze the structures and compute free energies. The structural and thermodynamic analyses reveal that the Sp stereoisomers energetically favor positioning in the B-DNA major groove, with minor groove conformers also low energy in some cases, depending on the partner base. The R and S stereoisomers adopt opposite orientations with respect to the 5' to 3' direction of the modified strand. Both syn and anti glycosidic bond conformations are energetically feasible, with partner base and stereochemistry determining the preference. The lesions adversely impact base stacking and Watson-Crick hydrogen bonding interactions in the duplex, and cause groove widening. The chemical nature of the partner base determines specific hydrogen bonding and stacking properties of the damaged duplexes. The structural characteristics may relate to observed mutagenic properties of the Sp stereoisomers, including possible stereoisomer-dependent differences.  相似文献   

13.
Polymerase slippage during DNA synthesis by the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase across A, C, G and T repeats (30 bases) has been studied. Within minutes, duplexes that contain only repeats (30 bp) expand dramatically to several hundred base pairs long. Rate comparisons in a repeat duplex when one strand was expanded as against that when both strands were expanded suggest a model of migrating hairpin loops which in the latter case coalesce into a duplex. Moreover, slippage (at the proximal or 3'-end) is subject to positive and negative effects from the 5'-end (distal) of the same strand. Growing T and G strands generate T.A:T and G-G:C motif fold-back structures at the distal end that hamper slippage at the proximal end. On the other hand, growing tails at the distal end upon annealing with excess complementary template accentuates proximal slippage several-fold.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The crystal structures of five double helical DNA fragments containing non-Watson-Crick complementary base pairs are reviewed. They comprise four fragments containing G.T base pairs: two deoxyoctamers d(GGGGCTCC) and d(GGGGTCCC) which crystallise as A type helices; a deoxydodecamer d(CGCGAATTTGCG) which crystallises in the B-DNA conformation; and the deoxyhexamer d(TGCGCG), which crystallises as a Z-DNA helix. In all four duplexes the G and T bases form wobble base pairs, with bases in the major tautomer forms and hydrogen bonds linking N1 of G with O2 of T and O6 of G with N3 of T. The X-ray analyses establish that the G.T wobble base pair can be accommodated in the A, B or Z double helix with minimal distortion of the global conformation. There are, however, changes in base stacking in the neighbourhood of the mismatched bases. The fifth structure, d(CGCGAATTAGCG), contains the purine purine mismatch G.A where G is in the anti and A in the syn conformation. The results represent the first direct structure determinations of base pair mismatches in DNA fragments and are discussed in relation to the fidelity of replication and mismatch recognition.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The actinomycin-D-d(A1-A2-A3-G4-C5-T6-T7-T8) complex (1 drug per duplex) has been generated in aqueous solution and its structure characterized by a combined application of two-dimensional NMR experiments and molecular dynamics calculations. We have assigned the exchangeable and nonexchangeable proton resonances of Act and d(A3GCT3) in the complex and identified the intermolecular proton-proton NOES that define the alignment of the antitumor agent at its binding site on duplex DNA. The molecular dynamics calculations were guided by 70 intermolecular distance constraints between Act and nucleic acid protons in the complex. The phenoxazone chromophore of Act intercalates at the (G-C)I·(G-C)II step in the d(A3GCT3) duplex with the phenoxazone ring stacking selectively with the G4I and G4II purine bases but not with C4I and C4II pyrimidine bases at the intercalation site. There is a pronounced unwinding between the A3·T6 and G4·C5 base pairs which are the next steps located in either direction from the intercalation site in the Act-d(A3GCT3) complex. The Act cyclic pentapeptide ring conformations in the complex are similar to those for free Act in the crystal except for a change in orientation of the ester linkage connecting meVal and Thr residues. The cyclic pentapeptide rings are positioned in the minor groove with the established G-C sequence specificity of binding associated with intermolecular hydrogen bonds between the Thr backbone CO and NH groups to the NH2-2 and N3 positions of guanosine, respectively. Complex formation is also stabilized by van der Waals interactions between nonpolar groups on the cyclic pentapeptide rings and the sugar residues and base pair edges lining the widened minor groove of the (A3-G4-C5-T6)I·(A3-G4-C5-T6)II binding site segment of the DNA helix.Dedicated to the memory of Professor V.F. Bystrov  相似文献   

17.
Synthetic polycarboxamides consisting of N‐methylpyrrole (Py), N‐methylimidazole (Im), N‐methyl‐3‐hydroxypyrrole (Hp) and β‐alanine (β) show strong and sequence‐specific interaction with the DNA minor groove when they form hairpin structures with side‐by‐side antiparallel motifs. In the present paper, new conjugates containing two ligands linked to the same terminal phosphate of DNA strand were constructed. The paper describes optimized synthesis and properties of oligonucleotide‐linked polyamide strands that insert into the minor groove of a duplex in a parallel or antiparallel orientation. Strong stabilization of DNA duplexes by two attached minor groove ligands is demonstrated by the thermal denaturation method. The unmodified duplex 5′‐CGTTTATTp‐3′/5′‐AATAAACG‐3′ melts at 20°C. When one tetra(Py) residue was attached to the first strand of this duplex, denaturation temperature was increased to 46°C; attachment of the second tetra(Py) in a parallel orientation resulted in denaturation temperature of 60°C. It is even higher than in case of “classic” octapyrrole hairpin ligand (Tm = 58°C). Sequence‐specific character of stabilization by two conjugated ligands was demonstrated for G:C‐containing oligonucleotides attached to tetracarboxamide and octacarboxamide ligands constructed from Py, Im and β units according to established recognition rules (ΔTm = 20°C). The two‐strand parallel minor groove binder constructions attached to addressing oligonucleotides could be considered as site‐specific ligands recognizing single‐ and double‐stranded DNA similarly to already described hairpin MGB structures with antiparallel orientation of carboxamide units.  相似文献   

18.
The influence of DNA base sequence context on the removal of a bulky benzo[a]pyrene diol epoxide-guanine adduct, (+)-trans-B[a]P-N2-dG (G*), by UvrABC nuclease from the thermophilic organism Bacillus caldotenax was investigated. The lesion was flanked by either T or C in otherwise identical complementary 43-mer duplexes (TG*T or CG*C, respectively). It was reported earlier that in the CG*C context, a dominant minor groove adduct structure was observed by NMR methods with all Watson-Crick base pairs intact, and the duplex exhibited a rigid bend. In contrast, in the TG*T context, a highly flexible bend was observed, base pairing at G*, and two 5'-base pairs flanking the adduct were impaired, and multiple solvent-accessible adduct conformations were observed. The TG*T-43-mer duplexes are incised with consistently greater efficiency by UvrABC proteins from B. caldotenax by a factor of 2.3 +/- 0.3. The rates of incisions increase with increasing temperature and are characterized by linear Arrhenius plots with activation energies of 27.0 +/- 1.5 and 23.4 +/- 1.0 kcal/mol for CG*C and TG*T duplexes, respectively. These values reflect the thermophilic characteristics of the UVrABC nuclease complex and the contributions of the different DNA substrates to the overall activation energies. These effects are consistent with base sequence context-dependent differences in structural disorder engendered by a loss of local base stacking interactions and Watson-Crick base pairing in the immediate vicinity of the lesions in the TG*T duplexes. The local weakening of base pairing interactions constitutes a recognition element of the UvrABC nucleotide excision repair apparatus.  相似文献   

19.
Locked nucleic acid (LNA) is a conformationally constrained DNA analogue that exhibits exceptionally high affinity for complementary DNA and RNA strands. The deoxyribose sugar is modified by a 2'-O, 4'-C oxymethylene bridge, which projects into the minor groove. In addition to changing the distribution of functional groups in the groove and the overall helical geometry relative to unmodified DNA, the bridge likely alters the hydration of the groove. Each of these factors will impact the ability of small molecules, proteins and other nucleic acids to recognize LNA-containing hybrids. This report describes the ability of several DNA-intercalating ligands and one minor groove binder to recognize LNA-DNA and LNA-RNA hybrid duplexes. Using UV-vis, fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopies, we find that the minor groove binder as well as the intercalators exhibit significantly lower affinity for LNA-containing duplexes. The lone exception is the alkaloid ellipticine, which intercalates into LNA-DNA and LNA-RNA duplexes with affinities comparable to unmodified DNA-DNA and RNA-DNA duplexes.  相似文献   

20.
DNA probes with conjugated minor groove binder (MGB) groups form extremely stable duplexes with single-stranded DNA targets, allowing shorter probes to be used for hybridization based assays. In this paper, sequence specificity of 3′-MGB probes was explored. In comparison with unmodified DNA, MGB probes had higher melting temperature (Tm) and increased specificity, especially when a mismatch was in the MGB region of the duplex. To exploit these properties, fluorogenic MGB probes were prepared and investigated in the 5′-nuclease PCR assay (real-time PCR assay, TaqMan assay). A 12mer MGB probe had the same Tm (65°C) as a no-MGB 27mer probe. The fluorogenic MGB probes were more specific for single base mismatches and fluorescence quenching was more efficient, giving increased sensitivity. A/T rich duplexes were stabilized more than G/C rich duplexes, thereby leveling probe Tm and simplifying design. In summary, MGB probes were more sequence specific than standard DNA probes, especially for single base mismatches at elevated hybridization temperatures.  相似文献   

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