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1.
Structural features of pyrimidine.pyrimidine mismatches in the interior of oligonucleotide duplexes have been investigated by high resolution two-dimensional proton nuclear magnetic resonance (n.m.r.) spectroscopy. These studies were conducted on the self-complementary d(C-G-C-T-A-G-C-T-T-G-C-G) duplex (designated T.T 12-mer) and the self-complementary d(C-G-C-C-A-G-C-T-C-G-C-G) duplex (designated C.C 12-mer) containing T.T and C.C pairs located at identical positions four base-pairs from either end of the duplex. Proton n.m.r. studies on the T.T 12-mer duplex were undertaken in the neutral pH range, while studies on the C.C 12-mer duplex were recorded at acidic pH. The proton spectra narrowed considerably on lowering the pH below neutrality for the C.C 12-mer duplex. Two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy (NOESY) data sets have been recorded on the T.T 12-mer and C.C 12-mer duplexes in high salt H2O and D2O solution. The magnitude of the NOE crosspeaks and the directionality of the NOE connectivities demonstrate that both duplexes are right-handed with all bases, including those at the mismatch site, adopting an anti configuration about the glycosidic bond. The observed base and sugar proton chemical shifts suggest structural similarities for the trinucleotide segments centered about the T.T and C.C mismatches. A NOE is detected between the resolved imino protons of T4 and T9 at the mismatch site, consistent with formation of a stacked "wobble" T4(anti).T9(anti) pair in the T.T 12-mer duplex. A comparison of the imino proton chemical shift and NOE data suggests that the imino-carbonyl hydrogen bonds in the wobble T.T mismatch are weaker than the corresponding imino-carbonyl hydrogen bonds in the wobble G.T mismatch. The 4-amino protons of C4 and C9 at the mismatch site in the C.C 12-mer duplex do not exhibit the pattern of hydrogen-bonded and exposed protons separated by approximately 1.5 parts per million characteristic of cytidine amino protons involved in Watson-Crick G.C pairing. The experimental data are insufficient to differentiate between wobble C(anti).C+(anti) and other pairing possibilities for the mismatch in the C.C 12-mer duplex at acidic pH.  相似文献   

2.
The structure of guanosine-thymidine mismatches in B-DNA at 2.5-A resolution   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
The structure of the deoxyoligomer d(C-G-C-G-A-A-T-T-T-G-C-G) was determined at 2.5-A resolution by single crystal x-ray diffraction techniques. The final R factor is 18% with the location of 71 water molecules. The oligomer crystallizes in a B-DNA-type conformation, with two strands interacting to form a dodecamer duplex. The double helix consists of four A X T and six G X C Watson-Crick base pairs and two G X T mismatches. The G X T pairs adopt a "wobble" structure with the thymine projecting into the major groove and the guanine into the minor groove. The mispairs are accommodated in the normal double helix by small adjustments in the conformation of the sugar phosphate backbone. A comparison with the isomorphous parent compound containing only Watson-Crick base pairs shows that any changes in the structure induced by the presence of G X T mispairs are highly localized. The global conformation of the duplex is conserved. The G X T mismatch has already been studied by x-ray techniques in A and Z helices where similar results were found. The geometry of the mispair is essentially identical in all structures so far examined, irrespective of the DNA conformation. The hydration is also similar with solvent molecules bridging the functional groups of the bases via hydrogen bonds. Hydration may be an important factor in stabilizing G X T mismatches. A characteristic of Watson-Crick paired A X T and G X C bases is the pseudo 2-fold symmetry axis in the plane of the base pairs. The G X T wobble base pair is pronouncedly asymmetric. This asymmetry, coupled with the disposition of functional groups in the major and minor grooves, provides a number of features which may contribute to the recognition of the mismatch by repair enzymes.  相似文献   

3.
Multiple molecular dynamics trajectories of the solvated and neutralized 17-residue tRNA(Asp) anticodon hairpin were generated for a total of 3 ns. Explicit treatment of all long-ranged electrostatic interactions by the particle mesh Ewald algorithm, as implemented in the AMBER MD software package, effected a degree of structural stabilization not previously achieved by use of a long 16-A solvent interaction truncation scheme. The increased stability of this multiple molecular dynamics set was appropriate for an in-depth analysis of the six 500-ps-long trajectories and allowed the characterization of a number of key structural interactions. The dynamical behavior of the standard Watson-Crick base pairs, the noncanonical G30-U40 "wobble" base pair, and the psi 32-C38 pseudo-base pair is presented as well as that of two C--H... O hydrogen bonds found to contribute to the array of tertiary interactions that stabilize the seven-nucleotide native loop conformation. The least mobile residue in the loop is U33, which forms the U-turn motif and which participates in several hydrogen-bonding interactions, whereas the most mobile residue is the apical residue G34 at the wobble position, a factor undoubtedly important in its biological function. The set of multiple molecular dynamics trajectories obtained does not converge on a 500-ps time scale to a unique dynamical model but instead describes an ensemble of structural microstates accessible to the system under the present simulation protocol, which is the result of local structural heterogeneity rather than of global conformational changes.  相似文献   

4.
E Trotta  M Paci 《Nucleic acids research》1998,26(20):4706-4713
The solution structure of the complex between 4', 6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and DNA oligomer [d(GCGATTCGC)]2, containing a central T.T mismatch, has been characterized by combined use of proton one- and two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy, molecular mechanics and molecular dynamics computations including relaxation matrix refinement. The results show that the DAPI molecule binds in the minor groove of the central region 5'-ATT-3' of the DNA oligomer, which predominantly adopts a duplex structure with a global right-handed B-like conformation. In the final models of the complex, the DAPI molecule is located nearly isohelical with its NH indole proton oriented towards the DNA helix axis and forming a bifurcated hydrogen bond with the carbonyl O2 groups of a mismatched T5 and the T6 residue of the opposite strand. Mismatched thymines adopt a wobble base pair conformation and are found stacked between the flanking base pairs, inducing only minor local conformational changes in global duplex structure. In addition, no other binding mechanisms were observed, showing that minor groove binding of DAPI to the mismatch-containing site is favoured in comparison with any other previously reported interaction with G.C sequences.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Giri I  Stone MP 《Biochemistry》2003,42(23):7023-7034
The structure of 5'-d(ACATC(AFB)GATCT)-3'.5'-d(AGATCAATGT)-3', containing the C(5).A(16) mismatch at the base pair 5' to the modified (AFB)G(6), was determined by NMR. The characteristic 5'-intercalation of the AFB(1) moiety was maintained. The mismatched C(5).A(16) pair existed in the wobble conformation, with the C(5) imino nitrogen hydrogen bonded to the A(16) exocyclic amino group. The wobble pair existed as a mixture of protonated and nonprotonated species. The pK(a) for protonation at the A(16) imino nitrogen was similar to that of the C(5).A(16) wobble pair in the corresponding duplex not adducted with AFB(1). Overall, the presence of AFB(1) did not interfere with wobble pair formation at the mismatched site. Molecular dynamics calculations restrained by distances derived from NOE data and torsion angles derived from (1)H (3)J couplings were carried out for both the protonated and nonprotonated wobble pairs at C(5).A(16). Both sets of calculations predicted the A(16) amino group was within 3 A of the C(5) imino nitrogen. The calculations suggested that protonation of the C(5).A(16) wobble pair should shift C(5) toward the major groove and shift A(16) toward the minor groove. The NMR data showed evidence for the presence of a minor conformation characterized by unusual NOEs between T(4) and (AFB)G(6). T(4) is two nucleotides in the 5'-direction from the modified base. These NOEs suggested that in the minor conformation nucleotide T(4) was in closer proximity to (AFB)G(6) than would be expected for duplex DNA. Modeling studies examined the possibility that T(4) transiently paired with the mismatched A(16), allowing it to come within NOE distance of (AFB)G(6). This model structure was consistent with the unusual NOEs associated with the minor conformation. The structural studies are discussed in relationship to nontargeted C --> T transitions observed 5' to the modified (AFB)G in site-specific mutagenesis experiments [Bailey, E. A., Iyer, R. S., Stone, M. P., Harris, T. M., and Essigmann, J. M. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 93, 1535-1539].  相似文献   

7.
Solution structure of an oncogenic DNA duplex containing a G.A mismatch   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The DNA duplex 5'-d(GCCACAAGCTC).d(GAGCTGGTGGC), which contains a central G.A mismatch has been studied by one and two-dimensional NMR techniques. The duplex corresponds to the sequence 29-39 of the K-ras gene. The mismatch position is that of the first base of the Gly12 codon, a hot spot for mutations. The observed NOEs of the nonexchangeable protons show that both of the bases of the mismatched pair are intrahelical over a wide range of pH. However, the structure of the G.A mispair and the conformation of the central part of the duplex change with pH. This structural change shows a pK of 6.0. At low pH, the G.A bases are base paired with hydrogen bonds between the keto group of the G residue and the amino group of the A residue and, secondly, between the N7 of the G and a proton on N1 of A. This causes the G residue to adopt a syn conformation. On raising the pH, the N1-H proton of the protonated A residue is removed, and the base pair rearranges. In the neutral G.A base pair both residues adopt an anti conformation, and the mismatch is stabilized by hydrogen bonds. Our results on the exchangeable and A(H2) protons of the mismatched pair indicate a shift from a classical face-to-face two hydrogen-bonded structure to a slipped structure stabilized by bifurcated hydrogen bonds. This may be a particular characteristics of this oncogenic sequence in which the G.A error is poorly repaired.  相似文献   

8.
NMR shielding constants are calculated for the base protons of duplexes formed by the dodecamer d(CGTGAATTCGCG) and the decamer d(CCAAGATTGG). A good agreement with experimental data is obtained for B-DNA helices in which the wobble GT and GA pairs are in the plane of the corresponding GC pairs of the parent duplexes formed by d(CGCGAATTCGCG) and d(CCAAGCTTGG), if the glycosyl bonds of T and G or A and G are symmetrical with respect to the dyad axis of the Watson-Crick GC pair. Interaction energy calculations show that this type of geometrical arrangement, which implies a distortion of the ribonphosphate backbone of both strands of the duplexes are more stable than those in which only one strand has its conformation modified by the presence of the wobble pair. For the duplex containing the GA pair, NMR chemical shifts as well as interaction energy computations favour the Watson-Crick hydrogen bonding scheme. The variation of the different contributions (intrastrand, interstrand, pair-pair) to the interaction energy between the bases of the duplexes, with the geometrical arrangement of the wobble pairs, is reported.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract

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 02 of T and 06 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   

10.
High-resolution two-dimensional NMR studies have been completed on the self-complementary d(C-G-C-G-A-G-C-T-T-G-C-G) duplex (designated G.T 12-mer) and the self-complementary d(C-G-C-G-A-G-C-T-O4meT-G-C-G) duplex (designated G.O4meT 12-mer) containing G.T and G.O4meT pairs at identical positions four base pairs in from either end of the duplex. The exchangeable and nonexchangeable proton resonances have been assigned from an analysis of two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOESY) spectra for the G.T 12-mer and G.O4meT 12-mer duplexes in H2O and D2O solution. The guanosine and thymidine imino protons in the G.T mismatch resonate at 10.57 and 11.98 ppm, respectively, and exhibit a strong NOE between themselves and to imino protons of flanking base pairs in the G.T 12-mer duplex. These results are consistent with wobble pairing at the G.T mismatch site involving two imino proton-carbonyl hydrogen bonds as reported previously [Hare, D. R., Shapiro, L., & Patel, D. J. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 7445-7456]. In contrast, the guanosine imino proton in the G.O4meT pair resonates at 8.67 ppm. The large upfield chemical shift of this proton relative to that of the imino proton resonance of G in the G.T mismatch or in G.C base pairs indicates that hydrogen bonding to O4meT is either very weak or absent. This guanosine imino proton has an NOE to the OCH3 group of O4meT across the pair and NOEs to the imino protons of flanking base pairs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The cissyn cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) is a cytotoxic, mutagenic and carcinogenic DNA photoproduct and is repaired by the nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway in mammalian cells. The XPC–hHR23B complex as the initiator of global genomic NER binds to sites of certain kinds of DNA damage. Although CPDs are rarely recognized by the XPC–hHR23B complex, the presence of mismatched bases opposite a CPD significantly increased the binding affinity of the XPC–hHR23B complex to the CPD. In order to decipher the properties of the DNA structures that determine the binding affinity for XPC–hHR23B to DNA, we carried out structural analyses of the various types of CPDs by NMR spectroscopy. The DNA duplex which contains a single 3′ T·G wobble pair in a CPD (CPD/GA duplex) induces little conformational distortion. However, severe distortion of the helical conformation occurs when a CPD contains double T·G wobble pairs (CPD/GG duplex) even though the T residues of the CPD form stable hydrogen bonds with the opposite G residues. The helical bending angle of the CPD/GG duplex was larger than those of the CPD/GA duplex and properly matched CPD/AA duplex. The fluctuation of the backbone conformation and significant changes in the widths of the major and minor grooves at the double T·G wobble paired site were also observed in the CPD/GG duplex. These structural features were also found in a duplex that contains the (6–4) adduct, which is efficiently recognized by the XPC–hHR23B complex. Thus, we suggest that the unique structural features of the DNA double helix (that is, helical bending, flexible backbone conformation, and significant changes of the major and/or minor grooves) might be important factors in determining the binding affinity of the XPC–hHR23B complex to DNA.  相似文献   

12.
D Hare  L Shapiro  D J Patel 《Biochemistry》1986,25(23):7445-7456
We report below on features of the three-dimensional structure of the d(C-G-T-G-A-A-T-T-C-G-C-G) self-complementary duplex (designated 12-mer GT) containing symmetrical G X T mismatches in the interior of the helix. The majority of the base and sugar protons in the 12-mer GT duplex were assigned by two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect (NOESY) spectra in H2O and D2O solution. A set of 92 short (less than 4.5-A) proton-proton distances defined by lower and upper bounds for one symmetrical half of the 12-mer GT duplex were estimated from NOESY data sets recorded as a function of mixing time. These experimental distances combined with nucleotide bond length parameters were embedded into Cartesian space; several trial structures were refined to minimize bond geometry and van der Waals and chirality error. Confidence in this approach is based on the similarity of the refined structures for the solution conformation of the 12-mer GT duplex. The G and T bases pair through two imino-carbonyl hydrogen bonds, and stacking is maintained between the G X T wobble pair and adjacent Watson-Crick G X C pairs. The experimental distance information is restricted to base and sugar protons, and hence structural features such as base pair overlap, glycosidic torsion angles, and sugar pucker are well-defined by this combination of NMR and distance geometry methods. By contrast, we are unable to define the torsion angles about the bonds C3'-O3'-P-O5'-C5'-C4' in the backbone of the nucleic acid.  相似文献   

13.
The T:G mismatched base pair is associated with many genetic mutations. Understanding its biological consequences may be aided by studying the structural perturbation of DNA caused by a T:G base pair and by specific probing of the mismatch using small molecular ligands. We have shown previously that AR-1-144, a tri-imidazole (Im-Im-Im) minor groove binder, recognizes the sequence CCGG. NMR structural analysis of the symmetric 2:1 complex of AR-1-144 and GAACCGGTTC revealed that each AR-1-144 binds to four base pairs with the guanine N2 amino group forming a bifurcated hydrogen bond to a side-by-side Im/Im pair. We predicted that the free G-N2 amino group in a T:G wobble base pair can form two individual hydrogen bonds to a side-by-side Im/Im pair. Thus an Im/Im pair may be a good recognition motif for a T:G base pair in DNA. Cooperative and tight binding of an AR-1-144 homodimer to GAACTGGTTC permits a detailed structural analysis by 2D NOE NMR refinement and the refined structure confirms our prediction. Surprisingly, AR-1-144 does not bind to GAATCGGTTC. We further show that both the Im-Im-Im/Im-Py-Im heterodimer and the Im-Im-Im/Im-Im-Im homodimer bind strongly to the CACGGGTC + GACTCGTG duplex. These results together suggest that an Im/Im pair can specifically recognize a single T:G mismatch. Our results may be useful in future design of molecules (e.g. linked dimers) that can recognize a single T:G mismatch with specificity.  相似文献   

14.
Solution structures of DNA duplexes containing oxanine (Oxa, O) opposite a cytosine (O:C duplex) and opposite a thymine (O:T duplex) have been solved by the combined use of (1)H NMR and restrained molecular dynamics calculation. One mismatch pair was introduced into the center of the 11-mer duplex of [d(GTGACO(6)CACTG)/d(CAGTGX(17)GTCAC), X = C or T]. (1)H NMR chemical shifts and nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) intensities indicate that both the duplexes adopt an overall right-handed B-type conformation. Exchangeable resonances of C(17) 4-amino proton of the O:C duplex and of T(17) imino proton of O:T duplex showed unusual chemical shifts, and disappeared with temperature increasing up to 30 °C, although the melting temperatures were >50 °C. The O:C mismatch takes a wobble geometry with positive shear parameter where the Oxa ring shifted toward the major groove and the paired C(17) toward the minor groove, while, in the O:T mismatch pair with the negative shear, the Oxa ring slightly shifted toward the minor groove and the paired T(17) toward the major groove. The Oxa mismatch pairs can be wobbled largely because of no hydrogen bond to the O1 position of the Oxa base, and may occupy positions in the strands that optimize the stacking with adjacent bases.  相似文献   

15.
16.
M W Kalnik  B F Li  P F Swann  D J Patel 《Biochemistry》1989,28(15):6170-6181
High-resolution two-dimensional NMR studies are reported on the self-complementary d-(C1-G2-C3-O6etG4-A5-G6-C7-T8-T9-G10-C11-G12) duplex (designated O6etG.T 12-mer) containing two symmetrically related O6etG.T lesion sites located four base pairs in from either end of the duplex. Parallel studies were undertaken on a related sequence containing O6meG.T lesion sites (designated O6meG.T 12-mer) in order to evaluate the influence of the size of the alkyl substituent on the structure of the duplex and were undertaken on a related sequence containing G.T mismatch sites (designated G.T 12-mer duplex), which served as the control duplex. The exchangeable and nonexchangeable proton and the phosphorus nuclei have been assigned from an analysis of two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) and correlated spectra of the O6etG.T 12-mer, O6meG.T 12-mer, and G.T 12-mer duplexes in H2O and D2O solutions. The distance connectivities observed in the NOESY spectra of the O6alkG.T 12-mer duplexes establish that the helix is right-handed and all of the bases adopt an anti conformation of the glycosidic torsion angle including the O6alkG4 and T9 bases at the lesion site. The imino proton of T9 at the O6alkG.T lesion sites resonates at 8.85 ppm in the O6etG.T 12-mer duplex and at 9.47 ppm in the O6meG.T 12-mer duplex. The large upfield shift of the T9 imino proton resonance at the O6alkG4.T9 lesion site relative to that of the same proton in the G4.T9 wobble pair (11.99 ppm) and the A4.T9 Watson-Crick pair (13.95 ppm) in related sequences establishes that the hydrogen bonding of the imino proton of T9 to O6alkG4 is either very weak or absent. The imino proton of T9 develops NOEs to the CH3 protons of the O6etG and O6meG alkyl groups across the base pair, as well as to the imino and H5 protons of the flanking C3.G10 base pair and the imino and CH3 protons of the flanking A5.T8 base pair in the O6alkG.T 12-mer duplexes. These observations establish that the O6alkG4 and T9 residues are stacked into the duplex and that the O6CH3 and O6CH2CH3 groups of O6alkG4 adopt a syn orientation with respect to the N1 of the alkylated guanine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
The structure of the cytosine-adenine mispair in a 7 base pair duplex has been investigated by proton NMR spectroscopy. At low pH, the predominant structure is protonated on the A residue and assumes a wobble conformation consistent with previous findings. The C residue of the mispair is found in a C2'-C3' endo equilibrium. This is confirmed by molecular dynamics calculations which suggest that the conformation of the protonated wobble is flexible and not as rigid as a normal base pair. As the solution pH is raised, a structural transition is observed with an apparent pK of 7.54 at 23 degrees C. At higher pH the predominant structure is one in which both the C and A residues are intrahelical. Evidence is presented that this structure corresponds to a reverse wobble in which the two bases are held together by one hydrogen bond. This structure is much less stable than the protonated form and even at low temperature single strands are observed in slow exchange with the neutral duplex form.  相似文献   

18.
Pan B  Mitra SN  Sundaralingam M 《Biochemistry》1999,38(9):2826-2831
G.A mispairs are one of the most common noncanonical structural motifs of RNA. The 1.9 A resolution crystal structure of the RNA 16-mer r(GCAGAGUUAAAUCUGC)2 has been determined with two isolated or nonadjacent G.A mispairs. The molecule crystallizes with one duplex in the asymmetric unit in space group R3 and unit cell dimensions a = b = c = 49.24 A and alpha = beta = gamma = 51.2 degrees. It is the longest known oligonucleotide duplex at this resolution and isomorphous to the 16-mer duplex with the C.A+ mispairs [Pan, et al., (1998) J. Mol. Biol. 283, 977-984]. The C.A+ mispair behaves like a wobble pair while the G.A+ does not. The G.A mispairs are protonated at N1 of the adenines as in the C.A+ mispairs, and two hydrogen bonds in the G(syn).A+(anti) conformation are formed. The syn guanine is stabilized by an intranucleotide hydrogen bond between the 2-amino and the 5'-phosphate groups. The G(syn).A+(anti) conformation can provide a different surface for recognition in the grooves compared to other G.A hydrogen bonding schemes. The major groove is widened between the two mispairs allowing access to ligands. One of the 3-fold axes is occupied by a sodium ion and a water molecule, while a second is occupied by another water molecule.  相似文献   

19.
A preferential target of antisense oligonucleotides directed against human PGY/MDR1 mRNA is a hairpin containing a stem with a G*U wobble pair, capped by the purine-rich 5'r(GGGAUG)3' hexaloop. This hairpin is studied by multidimensional NMR and restrained molecular dynamics, with special emphasis on the conformation of south sugars and non-standard phosphate linkages evidenced in both the stem and the loop. The hairpin is found to be highly structured. The G*U wobble pair, a strong counterion binding site, displays structural particularities that are characteristic of this type of mismatch. The upper part of the stem undergoes distortions that optimize its interactions with the beginning of the loop. The loop adopts a new fold in which the single-stranded GGGA purine tract is structured in A-like conformation stacked in continuity of the stem and displays an extensive hydrogen bonding surface for recognition. The remarkable hairpin stability results from classical inter- and intra-strand interactions reinforced by numerous hydrogen bonds involving unusual backbone conformations and ribose 2'-hydroxyl groups. Overall, this work emphasizes numerous features that account for the well-ordered structure of the whole hairpin and highlights the loop properties that facilitate interaction with antisense oligonucleotides.  相似文献   

20.
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) has been used to monitor the conformation and dynamics of the d-(C1-G2-A3-G4-A5-A6-T6-T5-C4-G3-C2-G1) self-complementary dodecanucleotide (henceforth called 12-mer GA) that contains a dG X dA purine-purine mismatch at position 3 in the sequence. These results are compared with the corresponding d(C-G-C-G-A-A-T-T-C-G-C-G) dodecamer duplex (henceforth called 12-mer) containing standard Watson-Crick base pairs at position 3 [Patel, D.J., Kozlowski, S.A., Marky, L.A., Broka, C., Rice, J.A., Itakura, K., & Breslauer, K.J. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 428-436]. The dG X dA interaction at position 3 was monitored at the guanosine exchangeable H-1 and nonexchangeable H-8 protons and the nonexchangeable adenosine H-2 proton. We demonstrate base-pair formation between anti orientations of the guanosine and adenosine rings on the basis of nuclear Overhauser effects (NOE) observed between the H-2 proton of adenosine 3 and the imino protons of guanosine 3 (intra base pair) and guanosines 2 and 4 (inter base pair). The dG(anti) X dA(anti) pairing should result in hydrogen-bond formation between the guanosine imino H-1 and carbonyl O-6 groups and the adenosine N-1 and NH2-6 groups, respectively. The base pairing on either side of the dG X dA pair remains intact at low temperature, but these dG X dC pairs at positions 2 and 4 are kinetically destabilized in the 12-mer GA compared to the 12-mer duplex. We have estimated the hydrogen exchange kinetics at positions 4-6 from saturation-recovery measurements on the imino protons of the 12-mer GA duplex between 5 and 40 degrees C. The measured activation energies for imino proton exchange in the 12-mer GA are larger by a factor of approximately 2 compared to the corresponding values in the 12-mer duplex. This implies that hydrogen exchange in the 12-mer GA duplex results from a cooperative transition involving exchange of several base pairs as was previously reported for the 12-mer containing a G X T wobble pair at position 3 [Pardi, A., Morden, K.M., Patel, D.J., & Tinoco, I., Jr. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 6567-6574]. We have assigned the nonexchangeable base protons by intra and inter base pair NOE experiments and monitored these assigned markers through the 12-mer GA duplex to strand transition.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

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