首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
In this study, we have systematically compared the uranyl photocleavage of a range of bent A-tracts and nonbent TA-tracts as well as interrupted A-tracts. We demonstrate that uranyl photocleavage of A-tracts and TA-tracts is almost identical, indicating a very similar minor groove conformation. Furthermore, a 10 base pair A-tract is divided into two independent tracts by an intervening TA or GC step. Uranyl probing also clearly distinguishes the bent A4T4 and the nonbent T4A4 sequences as adopting different structures, and our interpretation of the data is consistent with a structure for the bent A4T4 sequence that resembles a continuous A-tract, whereas the nonbent T4A4 sequences are closer to two independent and opposite A-tracts that cancel each other in terms of macroscopic bending. Finally, we also note that even single TA and TAT steps are highly sensitive to uranyl photocleavage and propose that in addition to average minor groove width, uranyl also senses DNA helix flexibility/deformability. Thus, the structural difference of TA-tracts and A-tracts may to a large extent reflect a difference in flexibility, and DNA curvature may consequently require a rigid narrow minor groove conformation that creates distinct A-tract-B-DNA junctions as the predominant cause of the bending.  相似文献   

2.
Alternative models have been presented to provide explanations for the sequence-dependent variation of the DNA minor groove width. In a structural model groove narrowing in A-tracts results from direct, short-range interactions among DNA bases. In an electrostatic model, the narrow minor groove of A-tracts is proposed to respond to sequence-dependent localization of water and cations. Molecular dynamics simulations on partially methylphosphonate substituted helical chains of d(TATAGGCCTATA) and d(CGCGAATTCGCG) duplexes have been carried out to help evaluate the effects of neutralizing DNA phosphate groups on the minor groove width. The results show that the time-average minor groove width of the GGCC duplex becomes significantly more narrow on neutralizing the phosphate backbone with methylphosphonates. The minor groove of the AATT sequence is normally narrow and the methylphosphonate substitutions have a smaller but measurable affect on this sequence. These results and models provide a system that can be tested by experiment and they support the hypothesis that the electrostatic environment around the minor groove affects the groove width in a sequence-dependent dynamic and time-average manner.  相似文献   

3.
(+)-CC -1065 is biologically potent DNA-reactive antitumor antibiotic produced by Streptomyces zelensis. This antibiotic covalently modifies DNA by alkylation of N-3 of a adenine in the minor groove. As a Structural consequence of covalent modification of DNA, the helix axis id bent into the minor groove. The drug-induced bending of DNA has similarities to intrinsic. A-tract bending and the 3′ adenine of A-tracts shows a unique reactivity to alkylation by (+) -CC-1065. Upon covalent modification of A-tracts, the magnitude of bending is increased and helix is stiffened. Using high-field NMR, hydroxyl-radical footprinting and gel electrophoresis, the molecular basis for the high reactivity of the bonding sequence 5′ - AGTTA* (an asterisk indicates the covalent modification site) to (+)-CC-1065 has been shown to involve the inherent conformational flexibility of this sequence. Furthermore, these studies also demonstrate that after alkylation the drug-induced bending is focused over the TT region. By analogy with the junction bend model for A-tracts, a ‘truncated junction bend model’ is proposed for this structure. Last, the application of (+)-CC-1065 entrapped/induced bending of DNA as a probe for the Sp1-induced bending of the 21-base-pair repeat an Mu transpose bending of the att L3 sequence is described.  相似文献   

4.
Hud NV  Plavec J 《Biopolymers》2003,69(1):144-158
The fine structure of the DNA double helix and a number of its physical properties depend upon nucleotide sequence. This includes minor groove width, the propensity to undergo the B-form to A-form transition, sequence-directed curvature, and cation localization. Despite the multitude of studies conducted on DNA, it is still difficult to appreciate how these fundamental properties are linked to each other at the level of nucleotide sequence. We demonstrate that several sequence-dependent properties of DNA can be attributed, at least in part, to the sequence-specific localization of cations in the major and minor grooves. We also show that effects of cation localization on DNA structure are easier to understand if we divide all DNA sequences into three principal groups: A-tracts, G-tracts, and generic DNA. The A-tract group of sequences has a peculiar helical structure (i.e., B*-form) with an unusually narrow minor groove and high base-pair propeller twist. Both experimental and theoretical studies have provided evidence that the B*-form helical structure of A-tracts requires cations to be localized in the minor groove. G-tracts, on the other hand, have a propensity to undergo the B-form to A-form transition with increasing ionic strength. This property of G-tracts is directly connected to the observation that cations are preferentially localized in the major groove of G-tract sequences. Generic DNA, which represents the vast majority of DNA sequences, has a more balanced occupation of the major and minor grooves by cations than A-tracts or G-tracts and is thereby stabilized in the canonical B-form helix. Thus, DNA secondary structure can be viewed as a tug of war between the major and minor grooves for cations, with A-tracts and G-tracts each having one groove that dominates the other for cation localization. Finally, the sequence-directed curvature caused by A-tracts and G-tracts can, in both cases, be explained by the cation-dependent mismatch of A-tract and G-tract helical structures with the canonical B-form helix of generic DNA (i.e., a cation-dependent junction model).  相似文献   

5.
Mocci F  Saba G 《Biopolymers》2003,68(4):471-485
Molecular dynamics simulations have been employed to probe the sequence-specific binding of sodium ions to the minor groove of B-DNA of three A. T-rich oligomers having identical compositions but different orders of the base pairs: C(AT)(4)G, CA(4)T(4)G, and CT(4)A(4)G. Recent experimental investigations, either in crystals or in solution, have shown that monovalent cations bind to DNA in a sequence-specific mode, preferentially in the narrow minor groove regions of uninterrupted sequences of four or more adenines (A-tracts), replacing a water molecule of the ordered hydration structure, the hydration spine. Following this evidence, it has been hypothesized that in A-tracts these events may be responsible for structural peculiarities such as a narrow minor groove and a curvature of the helix axis. The present simulations confirm a sequence specificity of the binding of sodium ions: Na(+) intrusions in the first layer of hydration of the minor groove, with long residence times, up to approximately 3 ns, are observed only in the minor groove of A-tracts but not in the alternating sequence. The effects of these intrusions on the structure of DNA depend on the ion coordination: when the ion replaces a water molecule of the spine, the minor groove becomes narrower. Ion intrusions may also disrupt the hydration spine modifying the oligomer structure to a large extent. However, in no case intrusions were observed to locally bend the axis toward the minor groove. The simulations also show that ions may reside for long time periods in the second layer of hydration, particularly in the wider regions of the groove, often leading to an opening of the groove.  相似文献   

6.
Møllegaard NE  Nielsen PE 《Biochemistry》2003,42(28):8587-8593
DNA curvature is affected by elevated temperature and dehydrating agents such as 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol (MPD) (used in crystallization). This effect of MPD has been ascribed to a specific distortion of the structure of adenine tracts (A-tracts), probably through a deformation of the characteristic narrow minor groove. Uranyl photoprobing indicates that a narrowed minor groove is present in all A/T regions containing four or more A/T base pairs. Consequently, this technique may be employed to study conformational changes in other A/T-rich sequences than pure A-tracts. In this study we use uranyl photoprobing to demonstrate that the effect of elevated temperature and MPD is analogous on both "normal" and curve-inducing A/T-rich sequences. The results therefore indicate that under these conditions the minor groove is widened in all A/T sequences and not only in pure A-tracts as previously suggested. Thus, the rather subtle structural difference of AT regions and A-tracts in nonbent DNA versus A-tracts in bent DNA may be quantitative rather than qualitative; i.e., the structure is more persistent and/or rigid in bent DNA.  相似文献   

7.
8.
9.
《Biophysical journal》2021,120(17):3747-3763
Linker histones (LHs) bind to nucleosomes with their globular domain (gH) positioned in either an on- or an off-dyad binding mode. Here, we study the effect of the linker DNA (L-DNA) sequence on the binding of a full-length LH, Xenopus laevis H1.0b, to a Widom 601 nucleosome core particle (NCP) flanked by two 40 bp long L-DNA arms, by single-pair FRET spectroscopy. We varied the sequence of the 11 bp of L-DNA adjoining the NCP on either side, making the sequence either A-tract, purely GC, or mixed with 64% AT. The labeled gH consistently exhibited higher FRET efficiency with the labeled L-DNA containing the A-tract than that with the pure-GC stretch, even when the stretches were swapped. However, it did not exhibit higher FRET efficiency with the L-DNA containing 64% AT-rich mixed DNA when compared to the pure-GC stretch. We explain our observations with a model that shows that the gH binds on dyad and that two arginines mediate recognition of the A-tract via its characteristically narrow minor groove. To investigate whether this on-dyad minor groove-based recognition was distinct from previously identified off-dyad major groove-based recognition, a nucleosome was designed with A-tracts on both the L-DNA arms. One A-tract was complementary to thymine and the other to deoxyuridine. The major groove of the thymine-tract was lined with methyl groups that were absent from the major groove of the deoxyuridine tract. The gH exhibited similar FRET for both these A-tracts, suggesting that it does not interact with the thymine methyl groups exposed on the major groove. Our observations thus complement previous studies that suggest that different LH isoforms may employ different ways of recognizing AT-rich DNA and A-tracts. This adaptability may enable the LH to universally compact scaffold-associated regions and constitutive heterochromatin, which are rich in such sequences.  相似文献   

10.
Uranyl mediated photocleavage of double stranded DNA is proposed as a general probing for DNA helix conformation in terms of minor groove width/electronegative potential. Specifically, it is found that A/T-tracts known to constitute strong distamycin binding sites are preferentially photocleaved by uranyl in a way indicating strongest uranyl binding at the center of the minor groove of the AT-region. The A-tracts of kinetoplast DNA show the highest reactivity at the 3'-end of the tract--as opposed to cleavage by EDTA/Fell--in accordance with the minor groove being more narrow at this end. Finally, uranyl photocleavage of the internal control region (ICR) of the 5S-RNA gene yields a cleavage modulation pattern fully compatible with that obtained by DNase I which also--in a more complex way--senses DNA minor groove width.  相似文献   

11.
The binding of proteins to specific sequences of DNA is an important feature of virtually all DNA transactions. Proteins recognize specific DNA sequences using both direct readout (sensing types and positions of DNA functional groups) and indirect readout (sensing DNA conformation and deformability). Previously we showed that the P22 c2 repressor N-terminal domain (P22R NTD) forces the central non-contacted 5'-ATAT-3' sequence of the DNA operator into the B′ state, a state known to affect DNA hydration, rigidity and bending. Usually the B′ state, with a narrow minor groove and a spine of hydration, is reserved for A-tract DNA (TpA steps disrupt A-tracts). Here, we have co-crystallized P22R NTD with an operator containing a central 5′-ACGT-3′ sequence in the non-contacted region. C·G base pairs have not previously been observed in the B′ state and are thought to prevent it. However, P22R NTD induces a narrow minor groove and a spine of hydration to 5'-ACGT-3'. We observe that C·G base pairs have distinctive destabilizing and disordering effects on the spine of hydration. It appears that the reduced stability of the spine results in a higher energy cost for the B to B′ transition. The differential effect of DNA sequence on the barrier to this transition allows the protein to sense the non-contacted DNA sequence.  相似文献   

12.
13.
14.
The abundant Fis nucleoid protein selectively binds poorly related DNA sequences with high affinities to regulate diverse DNA reactions. Fis binds DNA primarily through DNA backbone contacts and selects target sites by reading conformational properties of DNA sequences, most prominently intrinsic minor groove widths. High-affinity binding requires Fis-stabilized DNA conformational changes that vary depending on DNA sequence. In order to better understand the molecular basis for high affinity site recognition, we analyzed the effects of DNA sequence within and flanking the core Fis binding site on binding affinity and DNA structure. X-ray crystal structures of Fis-DNA complexes containing variable sequences in the noncontacted center of the binding site or variations within the major groove interfaces show that the DNA can adapt to the Fis dimer surface asymmetrically. We show that the presence and position of pyrimidine-purine base steps within the major groove interfaces affect both local DNA bending and minor groove compression to modulate affinities and lifetimes of Fis-DNA complexes. Sequences flanking the core binding site also modulate complex affinities, lifetimes, and the degree of local and global Fis-induced DNA bending. In particular, a G immediately upstream of the 15 bp core sequence inhibits binding and bending, and A-tracts within the flanking base pairs increase both complex lifetimes and global DNA curvatures. Taken together, our observations support a revised DNA motif specifying high-affinity Fis binding and highlight the range of conformations that Fis-bound DNA can adopt. The affinities and DNA conformations of individual Fis-DNA complexes are likely to be tailored to their context-specific biological functions.  相似文献   

15.
The chemical probes potassium permanganate (KMnO4) and diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC) can be used to study the conformational flexibility of short tracts of adenine (A-tracts) present in DNA. With these probes, we demonstrate that a novel distortion is induced in a 5 base pair A-tract at low temperature. Formation of this distorted A-tract structure, which occurs in a DNA fragment from the promoter region of the plasmid pBR322, is distinguished by a dramatic increase in the KMnO4 reactivity of the central thymines in this tract at 12 degrees C. This alteration occurs in the absence of any detectable rearrangement in the conformation of the adenines in the complementary strand. Induction of this low temperature A-tract structure is blocked by the minor groove binding drug distamycin. Hydroxyl radical footprinting of distamycin binding to the fragment containing the d(A)5 tract at 12 degrees C suggests that this drug has two different modes of binding to DNA in agreement with recent NMR data. These experiments show that short A-tracts are capable of forming more than one structural variant of B DNA in solution. The possible relationship between the intrinsic bending of DNA containing short phased A-tracts and the low temperature A-tract conformation is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Capillary electrophoresis has been used to characterize the interaction of monovalent cations with 26-basepair DNA oligomers containing A-tracts embedded in flanking sequences with different basepair compositions. A 26-basepair random-sequence oligomer was used as the reference; lithium and tetrabutylammonium (TBA+) ions were used as the probe ions. The free solution mobilities of the A-tract and random-sequence oligomers were identical in solutions containing <∼100 mM cation. At higher cation concentrations, the A-tract oligomers migrated faster than the reference oligomer in TBA+ and slower than the reference in Li+. Hence, cations of different sizes can interact very differently with DNA A-tracts. The increased mobilities observed in TBA+ suggest that the large hydrophobic TBA+ ions are preferentially excluded from the vicinity of the A-tract minor groove, increasing the effective net charge of the A-tract oligomers and increasing the mobility. By contrast, Li+ ions decrease the mobility of A-tract oligomers because of the preferential localization of Li+ ions in the narrow A-tract minor groove. Embedding the A-tracts in AT-rich flanking sequences markedly alters preferential interactions of monovalent cations with the B conformation. Hence, A-tracts embedded in genomic DNA may or may not interact preferentially with monovalent cations, depending on the relative number of A·T basepairs in the flanking sequences.  相似文献   

17.
Bovine pancreatic DNase I shows a strong preference for double-stranded substrates and cleaves DNA with strongly varying cutting rates suggesting that the enzyme recognises sequence-dependent structural variations of the DNA double helix. The complicated cleavage pattern indicates that several local as well as global helix parameters influences the cutting frequency of DNase I at a given bond. The high resolution crystal structures of two DNase I-DNA complexes showed that the enzyme binds tightly in the minor groove, and to the sugar-phosphate backbones of both strands, and thereby induces a widening of the minor groove and a bending towards the major grooves. In agreement with biochemical data this suggests that flexibility and minor groove geometry are major parameters determining the cutting rate of DNase I. Experimental observations showing that the sequence environmental of a dinucleotide step strongly affects its cleavage efficiency can be rationalized by that fact that six base pair are in contact with the enzyme. Mutational analysis based on the structural results has identified critical residues for DNA binding and cleavage and has lead to a proposal for the catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

18.
Dirk Stigter 《Biopolymers》1998,46(7):503-516
We have studied electrostatic properties of DNA with a discrete charge model consisting of a cylindrical dielectric core with a radius of 8 Å and a dielectric constant Di = 4, surrounded by two helical strings of phosphate point charges at 10 Å from the axis, immersed in an aqueous medium with dielectric constant Dw = 78.54. Eliminating the dielectric core makes potentials in the phosphate surface less negative by about 0.5 kT/e. Salt effects are evaluated for the model without a dielectric core, using the shielded Coulomb potential. Smearing the phosphate charges increases their potential by about 2.5 kT/e, due mostly to the self-potential of the smeared charge. Potentials in the center of the minor and major grooves vary less than 0.02 kT/e along their helical path. The potential in the center of the minor groove is from 1.0 to 1.7 kT/e, more negative than in the center of the major groove, depending on dielectric core and salt concentration. So multivalent cations and also larger cationic ligands, such as some antibiotics, are likely to adsorb in the minor groove, in agreement with earlier computations by A. and B. Pullman. Dielectric effects on the surface potential and the local potential variations are found to be relatively small. Bending of DNA is studied by placing a multivalent cation, MZ+, in the center of the minor or major groove, curving DNA around it for a certain length, and calculating the free energy difference between the bent and the straight configuration. Boltzmann averaged bending angles, 〈β〉, are found to be maximal in 0.03M monovalent salt, for a length of about 50 or 25 Å of curved DNA when an MZ+ ion is adsorbed in the minor or the major groove, respectively. When the dielectric constant of water is used throughout the calculation, we find maximal bends of 〈β〉 = 11° for M2+ and 〈β〉 = 16° for M3+ in the minor groove, 〈β〉 = 13° for M3+ in the major groove. The absence of bends in DNA adsorbed to mica in the presence of Mg salts supports the role of Mg2+ in “ion bridging” between DNA and mica. The treatment of the effective dielectric constant between two points outside a dielectric cylinder in water is appended. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Biopoly 46: 503–516, 1998  相似文献   

19.
Introduction of a T-A or pyrimidine-purine step into a straight and rigid A-tract can cause a positive roll deformation that kinks the DNA helix at that step. In CCTTTAAAGG, the central T-A step has an 8.6 degrees bend toward the major groove. We report the structural analysis of CCTTTAAAGG and a comparison with 25 other representative crystal structures from the NDB containing at least four consecutive A or T bases. On average, more local bending occurs at the disruptive T-A step (8.21 degrees ) than at an A-T step (5.71 degrees ). In addition, A-tracts containing an A-T step are more bent than are pure A-tracts, and hence A-A and A-T steps are not equivalent. All T-A steps examined exhibit positive roll, bending towards the major groove, while A-T steps display negative roll and bend slightly towards the minor groove. This illustrates how inherent negative and positive roll are, respectively, at A-T and T-A steps within A-tracts. T-A steps are more deformable, showing larger and more variable deformations of minor groove width, rise, cup, twist, and buckle. Standard deviations of twist, rise, and cup for T-A steps are 6.66 degrees, 0.55 A, and 15.90 degrees, versus 2.28 degrees, 0.21 A, and 2.99 degrees for A-T steps. Packing constraints determine which local values of these helical parameters an individual T-A step will adopt. For instance, with CCTTTAAAGG and three isomorphous structures, CGATTAATCG, CGATATATCG, and CGATCGATCG, crystal packing forces lead to a series of correlated changes: widened minor groove, large slide, low twist, and large rise. The difference in helical parameters between A-T steps lying within A-tracts, versus A-T steps within alternating AT sequences, demonstrates the importance of neighboring steps on the conformation of a given dinucleotide step.  相似文献   

20.
Heterocyclic diamidines are compounds with antiparasitic properties that target the minor groove of kinetoplast DNA. The mechanism of action of these compounds is unknown, but topological changes to DNA structures are likely to be involved. In this study, we have developed a polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis-based screening method to determine topological effects of heterocyclic diamidines on four minor groove target sequences: AAAAA, TTTAA, AAATT and ATATA. The AAAAA and AAATT sequences have the largest intrinsic bend, whereas the TTTAA and ATATA sequences are relatively straight. The changes caused by binding of the compounds are sequence dependent, but generally the topological effects on AAAAA and AAATT are similar as are the effects on TTTAA and ATATA. A total of 13 compounds with a variety of structural differences were evaluated for topological changes to DNA. All compounds decrease the mobility of the ATATA sequence that is consistent with decreased minor groove width and bending of the relatively straight DNA into the minor groove. Similar, but generally smaller, effects are seen with TTTAA. The intrinsically bent AAAAA and AAATT sequences, which have more narrow minor grooves, have smaller mobility changes on binding that are consistent with increased or decreased bending depending on compound structure.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号