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1.
Translesional DNA synthesis past abasic sites proceeds with the preferential incorporation of dAMP opposite the lesion and, depending on the sequence context, one or two base deletions. High-resolution NMR spectroscopy and molecular dynamics simulations were used to determine the three-dimensional structure of a DNA heteroduplex containing a synthetic abasic site (tetrahydrofuran) residue positioned in a sequence that promotes one base deletions. Analysis of NMR spectra indicates that the stem region of the duplex adopts a right-handed helical structure and the glycosidic torsion angle is in anti orientation for all residues. NOE interactions establish Watson-Crick alignments for all canonical base pairs of the duplex. Measurement of distance interactions at the lesion site shows the abasic residue excluded from the helix. Restrained molecular dynamics simulations generated three-dimensional models in excellent agreement with the spectroscopic data. These structures show a regular duplex region and a slight bend at the lesion site. The tetrahydrofuran residue extrudes from the helix and is highly flexible. The model reported here, in conjunction with a previous study performed on abasic sites, explains the structural bias of one-base deletion mutations.  相似文献   

2.
The short-time (submicrosecond) bending dynamics of duplex DNA were measured to determine the effect of sequence on dynamics. All measurements were obtained from a single site on duplex DNA, using a single, site-specific modified base containing a rigidly tethered, electron paramagnetic resonance active spin probe. The observed dynamics are interpreted in terms of single-step sequence-dependent bending force constants, determined from the mean squared amplitude of bending relative to the end-to-end vector using the modified weakly bending rod model. The bending dynamics at a single site are a function of the sequence of the nucleotides constituting the duplex DNA. We developed and examined several dinucleotide-based models for flexibility. The models indicate that the dominant feature of the dynamics is best explained in terms of purine- and pyrimidine-type steps, although distinction is made among all 10 unique steps: It was found that purine-purine steps (which are the same as pyrimidine-pyrimidine steps) were near average in flexibility, but the pyrimidine-purine steps (5' to 3') were nearly twice as flexible, whereas purine-pyrimidine steps were more than half as flexible as average DNA. Therefore, the range of stepwise flexibility is approximately fourfold and is characterized by both the type of base pair step (pyrimidine/purine combination) and the identity of the bases within the pair (G, A, T, or C). All of the four models considered here underscore the complexity of the dependence of dynamics on DNA sequence with certain sequences not satisfactorily explainable in terms of any dinucleotide model. These findings provide a quantitative basis for interpreting the dynamics and kinetics of DNA-sequence-dependent biological processes, including protein recognition and chromatin packaging.  相似文献   

3.
We report two-dimensional NOE (NOESY) spectra on the sequence d(GCGATCATGG).d(CCATGATCGC) which contains the unmethylated dam site. As expected the DNA adopts a B-form conformation but appears to be distorted at the TG step of the second strand. This distorsion, probably bending, is not seen on the opposite strand. When the first strand is methylated on adenine in the GATC or CATG sequence the NOESY spectra indicate little or no change in the conformation. However the single strand-duplex exchange is slowed down to the slow-exchange region on a proton NMR time scale. We have assigned the exchangeable imino and cytidine amino resonances of the three duplexes. From the imino linewidths as a function of temperature, we observe that the unmethylated and the hemimethylated Gm6ATC duplexes melt normally from the ends. However, this is not so for the hemimethylated Cm6ATG duplex which, apart from the terminal base pairs, melts cooperatively and at higher temperature. In spectra recorded in H2O a second duplex is observed, for the Gm6ATC sequence, which we have not been able to identify. It is however unlikely to be a hairpin structure. Ultraviolet-melting curves also indicate the presence of two transitions for this duplex. The effect of methylation upon base-pair lifetimes has been studied by comparing the above three duplexes. Little effect is observed upon methylation in the GATC sequence but a drastic increase in the lifetimes of all base pairs is observed upon methylation in the CATG sequence.  相似文献   

4.
A self-cleaving RNA sequence from hepatitis delta virus was modified to produce a ribozyme capable of catalyzing the cleavage of RNA in an intermolecular (trans) reaction. The delta-derived ribozyme cleaved substrate RNA at a specific site, and the sequence specificity could be altered with mutations in the region of the ribozyme proposed to base pair with the substrate. A substrate target size of approximately 8 nucleotides in length was identified. Octanucleotides containing a single ribonucleotide immediately 5' to the cleavage site were substrates for cleavage, and cleavage activity was significantly reduced only with a guanine base at that position. A deoxyribose 5' to the cleavage site blocked the reaction. These data are consistent with a proposed secondary structure for the self-cleaving form of the hepatitis delta virus ribozyme in which a duplex forms with sequences 3' to the cleavage site, and they support a proposed mechanism in which cleavage involves attack on the phosphorus at the cleavage site by the adjacent 2'-hydroxyl group.  相似文献   

5.
Photoinduced hole transfer reaction in DNA duplex bearing cytosine-cytosine (CC) or thymine-thymine (TT) mismatched base pairs as metal-ion binding sites was studied using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Site-specific binding of silver (I) ion to a CC mismatched base pair as well as non-specific binding to multiple sites of nucleobases in the DNA suppressed hole migration through the sequence. In the case of mercury (II) binding to duplex DNA containing single TT mismatch at N3 of the pyrimidine rings, little effect on the efficiency of hole transfer was observed, which is in accordance with a recent theoretical prediction. On the other hand, addition of Hg(II) to duplex containing tandem TT base pairs remarkably reduced hole transfer efficiency, although the calculation has suggested such binding could form high degree of electronic coupling between the hole carrier bases.  相似文献   

6.
The SfiI endonuclease cleaves DNA at the sequence GGCCNNNN NGGCC, where N is any base and downward arrow is the point of cleavage. Proteins that recognise discontinuous sequences in DNA can be affected by the unspecified sequence between the specified base pairs of the target site. To examine whether this applies to SFII, a series of DNA duplexes were made with identical sequences apart from discrete variations in the 5 bp spacer. The rates at which SFII cleaved each duplex were measured under steady-state conditions: the steady-state rates were determined by the DNA cleavage step in the reaction pathway. SFII cleaved some of these substrates at faster rates than other substrates. For example, the change in spacer sequence from AACAA to AAACA caused a 70-fold increase in reaction rate. In general, the extrapolated values for k(cat) and K(m) were both higher on substrates with inflexible spacers than those with flexible structures. The dinucleotide at the site of cleavage was largely immaterial. SFII activity is thus highly dependent on conformational variations in the spacer DNA.  相似文献   

7.
Abasic sites are common DNA lesions resulting from spontaneous depurination and excision of damaged nucleobases by DNA repair enzymes. However, the influence of the local sequence context on the structure of the abasic site and ultimately, its recognition and repair, remains elusive. In the present study, duplex DNAs with three different bases (G, C or T) opposite an abasic site have been synthesized in the same sequence context (5′-CCA AAG6 XA8C CGG G-3′, where X denotes the abasic site) and characterized by 2D NMR spectroscopy. Studies on a duplex DNA with an A opposite the abasic site in the same sequence has recently been reported [Chen,J., Dupradeau,F.-Y., Case,D.A., Turner,C.J. and Stubbe,J. (2007) Nuclear magnetic resonance structural studies and molecular modeling of duplex DNA containing normal and 4′-oxidized abasic sites. Biochemistry, 46, 3096–3107]. Molecular modeling based on NMR-derived distance and dihedral angle restraints and molecular dynamics calculations have been applied to determine structural models and conformational flexibility of each duplex. The results indicate that all four duplexes adopt an overall B-form conformation with each unpaired base stacked between adjacent bases intrahelically. The conformation around the abasic site is more perturbed when the base opposite to the lesion is a pyrimidine (C or T) than a purine (G or A). In both the former cases, the neighboring base pairs (G6-C21 and A8-T19) are closer to each other than those in B-form DNA. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal that transient H-bond interactions between the unpaired pyrimidine (C20 or T20) and the base 3′ to the abasic site play an important role in perturbing the local conformation. These results provide structural insight into the dynamics of abasic sites that are intrinsically modulated by the bases opposite the abasic site.  相似文献   

8.
B P Cho  F A Beland  M M Marques 《Biochemistry》1992,31(40):9587-9602
Proton NMR studies were conducted on the complementary 15-mer duplex d(5'-TACTCTTCTTGACCT).(5'-AGGTCAAGAAGAGTA) (designated as unmodified 15-mer duplex) spanning a portion of the mouse c-Ha-ras protooncogene centered around codon 61. Identical studies were carried out on the same sequence, after specific modification with a reactive derivative of the carcinogen 4-aminobiphenyl (ABP), which resulted in incorporation of a single N-(deoxyguanosin-8-yl)-4-aminobiphenyl (dG-C8-ABP) adduct in the noncoding strand (designated as ABP-modified 15-mer duplex). The adduct was located at the position corresponding to the first base of codon 61. The NMR data for the unmodified 15-mer duplex were fully consistent with a standard right-handed B-type DNA duplex conformation, with the possible exception of the frayed terminal base pairs. The ABP-modified 15-mer duplex was found to adopt one major conformation, although at least one additional conformation could be detected especially near room temperature. The major form, which exhibited strikingly similar NOE patterns as to those of the parent oligomer, both in H2O and D2O spectra, assumed a standard Watson-Crick base pairing throughout the entire length of the duplex, including the modification site and its flanking base pairs. Although some local perturbation of the helix could be detected in the vicinity of the modified guanosine, the NOE distance constraints established that the helix was globally right-handed and that the glycosidic torsion angles had the normal anti orientation, both at the modified base and its partner cytidine. Furthermore, the absence of strong NOE interactions between protons in the ABP moiety, which was rapidly rotating, and the nucleic acid protons was consistent with positioning of the arylamine moiety in the major groove of a weakly distorted double-helical structure. Although insufficient data prevented a detailed characterization of the minor conformer(s), the observation of significant shieldings for all the arylamine protons indicated a different orientation at the modified site in the minor contributor(s), possibly with extensive stacking between the ABP fragment and the neighboring bases.  相似文献   

9.
Telomeric DNA can form duplex regions or single-stranded loops that bind multiple proteins, preventing it from being processed as a DNA repair intermediate. The bases within these regions are susceptible to damage; however, mechanisms for the repair of telomere damage are as yet poorly understood. We have examined the effect of three thymine (T) analogs including uracil (U), 5-fluorouracil (5FU) and 5-hydroxymethyluracil (5hmU) on DNA–protein interactions and DNA repair within the GGTTAC telomeric sequence. The replacement of T with U or 5FU interferes with Pot1 (Pot1pN protein of Schizosaccharomyces pombe) binding. Surprisingly, 5hmU substitution only modestly diminishes Pot1 binding suggesting that hydrophobicity of the T-methyl group likely plays a minor role in protein binding. In the GGTTAC sequence, all three analogs can be cleaved by DNA glycosylases; however, glycosylase activity is blocked if Pot1 binds. An abasic site at the G or T positions is cleaved by the endonuclease APE1 when in a duplex but not when single-stranded. Abasic site formation thermally destabilizes the duplex that could push a damaged DNA segment into a single-stranded loop. The inability to enzymatically cleave abasic sites in single-stranded telomere regions would block completion of the base excision repair cycle potentially causing telomere attrition.  相似文献   

10.
4,5',8-Trimethylpsoralen (TMP) cross-links a 5' TpA or a 5' ApT site by photoreacting with one thymine moiety in each DNA strand. We are interested in whether psoralen interstrand cross-links all share one structure or whether there are significant differences. In this paper, we employed a rapid method for probing the structure of the cross-link by making a series of TMP cross-linked duplexes containing specific base-pair mismatches. The relative stability provided by a base pair can be correlated with neighboring base pairs by comparing the extents of gel retardation when base-pair mismatches happen in each position. From our studies, we infer that with respect to the furan-side strand, the 5'T.A base pair of the two T.A base pairs in the TpA site is not hydrogen bonded. Immediately on each side of the cross-linked TpA site is a highly stabilized base pair. Next, a region of decreased stability occurs in each arm of a cross-linked duplex and these base pairs of least stability are located farther away from the cross-linked thymines as the lengths of the arms of the cross-linked helix increase. Finally, even in 7 M urea at 49 degrees C the cross-linked helix is hydrogen bonded at both ends of a duplex of 22 base pairs. We propose that the structures of interstrand cross-links in DNA vary appreciably with the DNA sequence, the length of the DNA duplex, and the structures of the DNA cross-linking agents.  相似文献   

11.
12.
A complete understanding of the sequence-specific interaction between the EcoRI restriction endonuclease and its DNA substrate requires identification of all contacts between the enzyme and substrate, and evaluation of their significance. We have searched for possible contacts adjacent to the recognition site, GAATTC, by using a series of substrates with differing lengths of flanking sequence. Each substrate is a duplex of non-self-complementary oligodeoxyribonucleotides in which the recognition site is flanked by six base pairs on one side and from zero to three base pairs on the other. Steady-state kinetic values were determined for the cleavage of each strand of these duplexes. A series of substrates in which the length of flanking sequence was varied on both sides of the hexamer was also examined. The enzyme cleaved both strands of each of the substrates. Decreasing the flanking sequence to fewer than three base pairs on one side of the recognition site induced an asymmetry in the rates of cleavage of the two strands. The scissile bond nearest the shortening sequence was hydrolyzed with increasing rapidity as base pairs were successively removed. Taken together, the KM and kcat values obtained may be interpreted to indicate the relative importance of several likely enzyme-substrate contacts located outside the canonical hexameric recognition site.  相似文献   

13.
Fifty-nine RNA duplexes containing single-nucleotide bulge loops were optically melted in 1 M NaCl, and the thermodynamic parameters DeltaH degrees, DeltaS degrees, DeltaG 37 degrees, and TM for each sequence were determined. Sequences from this study were combined with sequences from previous studies [Longfellow, C. E., et al. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 278-285; Znosko, B. M., et al. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 10406-10417], thus examining all possible group I single-nucleotide bulge loop and nearest-neighbor sequence combinations. The free energy increments at 37 degrees C for the introduction of a group I single-nucleotide bulge loop range between 1.3 and 5.2 kcal/mol. The combined data were used to develop a model for predicting the free energy of a RNA duplex containing a single-nucleotide bulge. For bulge loops with adjacent Watson-Crick base pairs, neither the identity of the bulge nor the nearest-neighbor base pairs had an effect on the influence of the bulge loop on duplex stability. The proposed model for prediction of the stability of a duplex containing a bulged nucleotide was primarily affected by non-nearest-neighbor interactions. The destabilization of the duplex by the bulge was related to the stability of the stems adjacent to the bulge. Specifically, there was a direct correlation between the destabilization of the duplex and the stability of the less stable duplex stem. The stability of a duplex containing a bulged nucleotide adjacent to a wobble base pair also was primarily affected by non-nearest-neighbor interactions. Again, there was a direct correlation between the destabilization of the duplex and the stability of the less stable duplex stem. However, when one or both of the bulge nearest neighbors was a wobble base pair, the free energy increment for insertion of a bulge loop is dependent upon the position and orientation of the wobble base pair relative the bulged nucleotide. Bulge sequences of the type ((5'UBX)(3'GY)), ((5'GBG)(3'UU)) and ((5'UBU)(3'GG)) are less destabilizing by 0.6 kcal/mol, and bulge sequences of the type ((5'GBX)(3'UY)) and ((5'XBU)(3'YG)) are more destabilizing by 0.4 kcal/mol than bulge loops adjacent to Watson-Crick base pairs.  相似文献   

14.
Stephens OM  Yi-Brunozzi HY  Beal PA 《Biochemistry》2000,39(40):12243-12251
ADARs are adenosine deaminases responsible for RNA editing reactions that occur in eukaryotic pre-mRNAs, including the pre-mRNAs of glutamate and serotonin receptors. Here we describe the generation and analysis of synthetic ADAR2 substrates that differ in structure around an RNA editing site. We find that five base pairs of duplex secondary structure 5' to the editing site increase the single turnover rate constant for deamination 17-39-fold when compared to substrates lacking this structure. ADAR2 deaminates an adenosine in the sequence context of a natural editing site >90-fold more rapidly and to a higher yield than an adjacent adenosine in the same RNA structure. This reactivity is minimally dependent on the base pairing partner of the edited nucleotide; adenosine at the editing site in the naturally occurring A.C mismatch is deaminated to approximately the same extent and only 4 times faster than adenosine in an A.U base pair at this site. A steady-state rate analysis at a saturating concentration of the most rapidly processed substrate indicates that product formation is linear with time through at least three turnovers with a slope of 13 +/- 1.5 nM.min(-1) at 30 nM ADAR2 for a k(ss) = 0.43 +/- 0.05 min(-1). In addition, ADAR2 induces a 3.3-fold enhancement in fluorescence intensity and a 14 nm blue shift in the emission maximum of a duplex substrate with 2-aminopurine located at the editing site, consistent with a mechanism whereby ADAR2 flips the reactive nucleotide out of the double helix prior to deamination.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract

The solution structure of an estrone (Es)-tethered tandem DNA duplex consisting of two Estethered tetranucleotides and a target octameric DNA sequence is reported. The structure of this Es-tethered tandem duplex has been compared with a corresponding natural tandem duplex without estrones. The Tm of the 3′-Es-tethered tetranucleotide part of the tandem duplex increases by 5°C, whereas the Tm of the 5′-Es-tethered tetranucleotide part increases by 7°C, compared with the corresponding natural counterpart. The NMR structures of both the Es-tethered tandem duplex and the natural counterpart have been based on 24 experimental NMR constraints per residue. Despite the fact that there is considerable distortion at the junction of two Es-tethered tetranucleotides in the major groove of the Es-tethered DNA duplex compared to the natural counterpart, both duplexes do take up B-type DNA structures. It is likely that the spatial proximity of two Es residues, and the resulting hydrophobic interaction between them might be responsible for the increase of the thermal stability of the Es-tethered tandem duplex in comparison with the natural counterpart.  相似文献   

16.
LNA (Locked Nucleic Acids) is a novel oligonucleotide analogue containing a conformationally restricted nucleotide with a 2'-O, 4'-C-methylene bridge that induces unprecedented thermal affinities when mixed with complementary single stranded DNA and RNA. We have used two-dimensional 1H NMR spectroscopy obtained at 750 and 500 MHz to determine a high resolution solution structure of an LNA oligonucleotide hybridized to the complementary DNA strand. The determination of the structure was based on a complete relaxation matrix analysis of the NOESY cross peaks followed by restrained molecular dynamics calculations. Forty final structures were generated for the duplex from A-type and B-type dsDNA starting structures. The root-mean-square deviation (RMSD) of the coordinates for the forty structures of the complex was 0.32A. The structures were analysed by use of calculated helix parameters. This showed that the values for rise and buckle in the LNA duplex is markedly different from canonical B-DNA at the modification site. A value of twist similar to A-DNA is also observed at the modification site. The overall length of the helix which is 27.3 A. The average twist over the sequence are 35.9 degrees +/- 0.3 degrees. Consequently, the modification does not cause the helix to unwind. The bis-intercalation of the thiazole orange dye TOTO to the LNA duplex was also investigated by 1H NMR spectroscopy to sense the structural change from the unmodified oligonucleotide. We observed that the bis-intercalation of TOTO is much less favourable in the 5'-CT(L)AG-3' site than in the unmodified 5'-CTAG-3' site. This was related to the change in the base stacking of the LNA duplex compared to the unmodified duplex.  相似文献   

17.
Song R  Kafaie J  Laughrea M 《Biochemistry》2008,47(10):3283-3293
The HIV-1 genome consists of two identical RNAs that are linked together through noncovalent interactions involving nucleotides from the 5' untranslated region (5' UTR) of each RNA strand. The 5' UTR is the most conserved part of the HIV-1 RNA genome, and its 335 nucleotide residues form regulatory motifs that mediate multiple essential steps in the viral replication cycle. Here, studying the effect of selected mutations both singly and together with mutations disabling SL1 (SL1 is a 5' UTR stem-loop containing a palindrome called the dimerization initiation site), we have done a rather systematic survey of the 5' UTR requirements for full genomic RNA dimerization in grown-up (i.e., predominantly >/=10 h old) HIV-1 viruses produced by transfected human and simian cells. We have identified a role for the 5' transactivation response element (5' TAR) and a contribution of a long-distance base pairing between a sequence located at the beginning of the U5 region and nucleotides surrounding the AUG Gag initiation codon. The resulting intra- or intermolecular duplex is called the U5-AUG duplex. The other regions of the 5' UTR have been shown to play no systematic role in genomic RNA dimerization, except for a sequence located around the 3' end of a large stem-loop enclosing the primer binding site, and the well-documented SL1. Our data are consistent with a direct role for the 5' TAR in genomic RNA dimerization (possibly via a palindrome encompassing the apical loop of the 5' TAR).  相似文献   

18.
Proton and phosphorus NMR studies are reported for the complementary d(C-A-T-G-A-G-T-A-C).d(G-T-A-C-F-C-A-T-G) nonanucleotide duplex (designated APF 9-mer duplex) which contains a stable abasic site analogue, F, in the center of the helix. This oligodeoxynucleotide contains a modified tetrahydrofuran moiety, isosteric with 2-deoxyribofuranose, which serves as a structural analogue of a natural apurinic/apyrimidinic site [Takeshita, M., Chang, C.N., Johnson, F., Will, S., & Grollman, A.P. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 10171-10179]. Exchangeable and nonexchangeable base and sugar protons, including those located at the abasic site, have been assigned in the complementary APF 9-mer duplex by recording and analyzing two-dimensional phase-sensitive NOESY data sets in H2O and D2O solution at low temperature (0 degrees C). These studies indicate that A5 inserts into the helix opposite the abasic site F14 and stacks with flanking G4.C15 and G6.C13 Watson-Crick base pairs. Base-sugar proton NOE connectivities were measured through G4-A5-G6 on the unmodified strand and between the base protons of C15 and the sugar protons of the 5'-flanking residue F14 on the modified strand. These studies establish that all glycosidic torsion angles are anti and that the helix is right-handed at and adjacent to the abasic site in the APF 9-mer duplex. Two of the 16 phosphodiester groups exhibit phosphorus resonances outside the normal spectral dispersion indicative of altered torsion angles at two of the phosphate groups in the backbone of the APF 9-mer duplex.  相似文献   

19.
1H resonance assignments in the NMR spectra of the self-complementary hexadeoxyribonucleoside pentaphosphate d(5'-GCATGC)2 and its complex with the antibiotic nogalamycin, together with interproton distance constraints obtained from two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) spectra, have enabled us to characterize the three-dimensional structure of these species in solution. In the complex described, two drug molecules are bound per duplex, in each of two equivalent binding sites, with full retention of the dyad symmetry. Twenty-eight NOE distance constraints between antibiotic and nucleotide protons define the position and orientation of the bound drug molecule. Nogalamycin intercalates at the 5'-CA and 5'-TG steps with the major axis of the anthracycline chromophore aligned approximately at right angles to the major axes of the base pairs. The nogalose sugar occupies the minor groove of the helix and makes many contacts with the deoxyribose moieties of three nucleotides along one strand of the duplex in the 5'-TGC segment. The charged dimethylamino group and hydroxyl functions of the bicyclic sugar lie in the major groove juxtaposed to the guanine base, the bridging atoms of the bicyclic sugar making contacts with the methyl group of the thymine. Thus the antibiotic is not symmetrically disposed in the intercalation site but is in close contact in both grooves with atoms comprising the 5'-TGC strand. The intercalation cavity is wedge-shaped, the major axes of the base pairs forming the site being tilted with respect to one another. All base-pair hydrogen-bonding interactions are maintained in the complex, and there is no evidence for Hoogsteen pairing. The free duplex adopts a regular right-handed B-type conformation in which all glycosidic bond angles are anti and all sugar puckers lie in the C2'-endo range. In the complex the glycosidic bond angles and the sugar puckers deviate little from those observed for the duplex alone. The presence of two bound nogalamycin molecules substantially slows the "breathing" motions of the base pairs forming the intercalation cavity, and the observation of two downfield-shifted resonances in the 31P NMR spectrum of the complex suggests a pronounced local helix unwinding at the drug binding site. The footprinting data of Fox and Waring [Fox, K.R., & Waring, M.J. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 4349-4356] imply that the highest affinity binding sites of nogalamycin have the sequence 5'-GCA (or 5'-TGC).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The effects of 5-fluorouridine (FUrd) and 5-fluorodeoxyuridine (FdUrd) substitution on the stabilities of duplex RNA and DNA have been studied to determine how FUrd substitution in nucleic acids may alter the efficiency of biochemical processes that require complementary base pairing for molecular recognition. The parent sequence, 5'-GCGAAUUCGC, contains two non-equivalent uridines. Eight oligonucleotides (four RNA and four DNA) were prepared with either zero, one or two Urd substituted by FUrd. The stability of each self-complementary duplex was determined by measuring the absorbance at 260 nm as a function of temperature. Tm values were calculated from the first derivative of the absorbance versus temperature profiles and values for delta H0 and delta S0 were calculated from the concentration dependence of the Tm. Individual absorbance versus temperature curves were also analyzed by a parametric approach to calculate thermodynamic parameters for the duplex to single-stranded transition. Analysis of the thermodynamic parameters for each oligonucleotide revealed that FUrd substitution had sequence-dependent effects in both A-form RNA and B-form DNA duplexes. Conservation of helix geometry in FUrd-substituted duplexes was determined by CD spectroscopy. FUrd substitution at a single site in RNA stabilized the duplex (delta delta G37 = 0.8 kcal/mol), largely due to more favorable stacking interactions. FdUrd substitution at a single site in DNA destabilized the duplex (delta delta G37 = 0.3 kcal/mol) as a consequence of less favorable stacking interactions. All duplexes melt via single cooperative transitions.  相似文献   

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