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1.
The human gene for cartilage oligomeric matrix protein contains five tandem repeats of the GAC trinucleotide. Its expansion by one repeat causes multiple epiphyseal dysplasia, while expansion by two repeats or, remarkably, deletion of one repeat causes pseudoachondroplasia. Here we used CD spectroscopy, PAGE and UV absorption spectroscopy to compare conformational properties of the DNA strands containing four, five, six and seven repeats of the GAC trinucleotide. The (GAC)n strands were found to form four distinct ordered conformations, depending on the solution conditions. The first was a foldback, stable at slightly alkaline pH values and low and medium ionic strengths. Increasing salt concentration induced a transition of the foldback into an antiparallel right-handed homoduplex. Both the conformers contained the Watson-Crick G.C pairs while the intervening adenines contributed little to their B-like conformation. Thirdly, the strands associated into a parallel homoduplex stabilized by the hemiprotonated C+.C pairs and by the GpA steps that both favor the parallel DNA strand orientation. The parallel homoduplex was stable even at neutral pH. The fourth conformation was the left-handed Z-DNA, which formed easier with (GAC)n than with (GC)n of comparable length, indicating that the adenines of (GAC)n promoted the left-handed duplex. The paper shows that stability of the above four conformers strongly depends on the GAC repeat number.  相似文献   

2.
Repetitions of CAG or CTG triplets in DNA can form intrastrand hairpin loops with combinations of normal and mismatched base pairs that easily rearrange. Such loops may promote primer-template slippage in DNA replication or repair to give triplet-repeat expansions like those associated with neurodegenerative diseases. Using self-priming sequences (e.g. (CAG)(16)(CTG)(4)), we resolve all hairpin loops formed and measure their slippage and expansion rates with DNA polymerase at 37 degrees C. Comparing CAG/CTG loop structures with GAC/GTC structures, having similar hydrogen bonding but different base stacking, we find that CAG, CTG, and GTC triplets predominantly form even-membered loops that slip in steps of two triplets, whereas GAC triplets favor odd-numbered loops. Slippage rates decline as hairpin stability increases, supporting the idea that slippage initiates more easily in less stable regions. Loop stabilities (in low salt) increase in the order GTC < CAG < GAC < CTG, while slippage rates decrease in the order GTC > CAG approximately GAC > CTG. Loops of GTC compared with CTG melt 9 degrees C lower and slip 6-fold faster. We interpret results in terms of base stacking, by relating melting temperature to standard enthalpy changes for doublets of base pairs and mispairs, considering enthalpy-entropy compensation.  相似文献   

3.
Lee I  Deng W  Yang L  Wang C  Bai C 《Biophysical chemistry》1997,67(1-3):159-165
The conformational transitions (helix-coil transitions) of three hairpin triple helices, models 5'-(A-G)(3) + 5'-(T-C)(3)-T(4)-((br)C-T)(3) [CY], 5'-(A-G)(3) + 5'-(T-(br)C)(3)-T(4)-(C-T)(3) [YC] and 5'-(A-G)(3) + 5'-(T-(br)C)(3)-T(4)-((br)C-T)(3) [YY], are characterized in this work by UV spectroscopy. Melting of these triplexes is biphasic, and the profiles are used to obtain the thermodynamic parameters. The thermodynamic properties of the hairpin triplex are T(m) = 19.45 degrees C and DeltaH(vH) = 293.12 kJ mol(-1) for CY, T(m) = 22.85 degrees C and DeltaH(vH) = 256.63 kJ mol(-1) for YC and T(m) = 28.47 degrees C and DeltaH(vH) = 234.68 kJ mol(-1) for YY at pH 4.4. Those of the duplex are T(m) = 30.50 degrees C and DeltaH(vH) = 427.09 kJ mol(-1) for CY, T(m) = 32.96 degrees C and DeltaH(vH) = 374.47 kJ mol(-1) for YC and T(m) = 33.24 degrees C and DeltaH(vH) = 329.67 kJ mol(-1) for YY at pH 4.4. The distinct transitions of triplex to duplex and duplex to single strands are analyzed using the nearest-neighbor Ising model. Electrostatic effects on each conformation are also analyzed.  相似文献   

4.
Paiva AM  Sheardy RD 《Biochemistry》2004,43(44):14218-14227
Genetic expansion diseases have been linked to the properties of triplet repeat DNA sequences during replication. The most common triplet repeats associated with such diseases are CAG, CCG, CGG, and CTG. It has been suggested that gene expansion occurs as a result of hairpin formation of long stretches of these sequences on the leading daughter strand synthesized during DNA replication [Gellibolian, R., Bacolla, A., and Wells, R. D. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 16793-7]. To test the biophysical basis for this model, oligonucleotides of general sequence (CNG)(n), where N = A, C, G, or T and n = 4, 5, 10, 15, or 25, were synthesized and characterized by circular dichroism (CD) spectropolarimetry, optical melting studies, and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The goal of these studies was to evaluate the influence of sequence context and oligomer length on their secondary structures and stabilities. The results indicate that all single oligomers, even those as short as 12 nucleotides, form stable hairpin structures at 25 degrees C. Such hairpins are characterized by the presence of N:N mismatched base pairs sandwiched between G:C base pairs in the stems and loops of three to four unpaired bases. Thermodynamic analysis of these structures reveals that their stabilities are influenced by both the sequence of the particular oligomer and its length. Specifically, the stability order of CGG > CTG > CAG > CCG was observed. In addition, longer oligomers were found to be more stable than shorter oligomers of the same sequence. However, a stability plateau above 45 nucleotides suggests that the length dependence reaches a maximum value where the stability of the G:C base pairs can no longer compensate the instability of the N:N mismatches in the stems of the hairpins. The results are discussed in terms of the above model proposed for gene expansion.  相似文献   

5.
Expansion of CAG/CTG repeats causes certain neurological and neurodegenerative disorders, and the formation and subsequent persistence of stable DNA hairpins within these repeats are believed to contribute to CAG/CTG repeat instability. Human cells possess a DNA hairpin repair (HPR) pathway, which removes various (CAG)(n) and (CTG)(n) hairpins in a nick-directed and strand-specific manner. Interestingly, this HPR system processes a (CTG)(n) hairpin on the template DNA strand much less efficiently than a (CAG)(n) hairpin on the same strand (Hou, C., Chan, N. L., Gu, L., and Li, G. M. (2009) Incision-dependent and error-free repair of (CAG)(n)/(CTG)(n) hairpins in human cell extracts. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol. 16, 869-875), suggesting the involvement of an additional component for (CTG)(n) HPR. To identify this activity, a functional in vitro HPR assay was used to screen partially purified HeLa nuclear fractions for their ability to stimulate (CTG)(n) HPR. We demonstrate here that the stimulating activity is the Werner syndrome protein (WRN). Although WRN contains both a 3'→5' helicase activity and a 3'→5' exonuclease activity, the stimulating activity was found to be the helicase activity, as a WRN helicase mutant failed to enhance (CTG)(n) HPR. Consistently, WRN efficiently unwound large (CTG)(n) hairpins and promoted DNA polymerase δ-catalyzed DNA synthesis using a (CTG)(n) hairpin as a template. We, therefore, conclude that WRN stimulates (CTG)(n) HPR on the template DNA strand by resolving the hairpin so that it can be efficiently used as a template for repair or replicative synthesis.  相似文献   

6.
The etiology of a large class of inherited neurological diseases is founded on hairpin structures adopted by repeated DNA sequences, and this folding is determined by base sequence and DNA context. Using single substitutions of adenine with 2-aminopurine, we show that intrastrand folding in repeated CAG trinucleotides is also determined by the number of repeats. This isomeric analogue has a fluorescence quantum yield that varies strongly with solvent exposure, thereby distinguishing particular DNA motifs. Prior studies demonstrated that (CAG)(8) alone favors a stem-loop hairpin, yet the same sequence adopts an open loop conformation in a three-way junction. This comparison suggests that repeat folding is disrupted by base pairing in the duplex arms and by purine-purine mismatches in the repeat stem. However, these perturbations are overcome in longer CAG repeats, as demonstrated by studies of isolated and integrated forms of (CAG)(15). The oligonucleotide alone forms a symmetrically folded hairpin with looplike properties exhibited by the relatively high emission intensities from a modification in the central eighth repeat and with stemlike properties evident from the relatively low emission intensities from peripheral modifications. Significantly, these hairpin properties are retained when (CAG)(15) is integrated into a duplex. Intrastrand folding by (CAG)(15) in the three-way junction contrasts with the open loop adopted by (CAG)(8) in the analogous context. This distinction suggests that cooperative interactions in longer repeat tracts overwhelm perturbations to reassert the natural folding propensity. Given that anomalously long repeats are the genetic basis of a large class of inherited neurological diseases, studies with (CAG)-based three-way junctions suggest that their secondary structure is a key factor in the length-dependent manifestation and progression of such diseases.  相似文献   

7.
Summary

Highly polymorphic DNA triplet repeats, (CAG)n, are located inside the first exon of the Huntington's disease gene. Inordinate expansion of this repeat is correlated with the onset and progression of the disease. NMR spectroscopy, gel electrophoresis, digestion by single-strand specific PI enzyme, and in vitro replication assay have been used to investigate the structural basis of (CAG)n expansion. Nondenaturing gel electrophoresis and ID 1H NMR studies of (CAG)5 and (CAG)6 reveal the presence of hairpins and mismatched duplexes as the major and minor populations respectively. However, at high DNA concentrations (i.e., 1.0–2.0 mM that is typically required for 2D NMR experiments) both (CAG)5 and (CAG)6 exist predominantly in mismatched duplex forms. Mismatched duplex structures of (CAG)5and (CAG)6 are useful, because they adequately model the stem of the biologically relevant hairpins formed by (CAG).,. We, therefore, performed detailed NMR spectroscopic studies on the duplexes of (CAG)5 and (CAG)6. We also studied a model duplex, (CGCAGCG)2 that contains the underlined building block of the duplex. This duplex shows the following structural characteristics: (i) all the nucleotides are in (C2′-endo, anti) conformations, (ii) mismatched A?A base pairs are flanked by two Watson-Crick G?C base pairs and (iii) A?A base pairs are stably stacked (and intra-helical) and are formed by a single N6-H—N1 hydrogen bond. The nature of A?A pairing is confirmed by temperature-dependent HMQC and HMQC-NOESY experiments on the [(CA*G)5]2 duplex where the adenines are 15N-labeled at N6. Temperature-and pH-dependent imino proton spectra, nondenaturing electrophoresis, and PI digestion data demonstrate that under a wide range of solution conditions longer (CAG)n repeats (n>10) exist exclusively in hairpin conformation with two single-stranded loops. Finally, an in vitro replication assay with (CAG)821 inserts in the Ml3 single-stranded DNA templates shows a replication bypass for the (CAG)21 insert but not for the (CAG)8 insert in the template. This demonstrates that for a sufficiently long insert (n=21 in this case), a hairpin is formed by the (CAG)., even in presence of its complementary strand. This observation implies that the formation of hairpin by the (CAG)n may cause slippage during replication and thus may explain the observed length polymorphism.  相似文献   

8.
1H- and 31P-NMR and UV-absorption studies were carried out with the oligonucleotide strands d(AGCT-TATC-ATC-GATAAGCT) (-ATC-) and d(AGCTTATC-GAT-GATAAGCT) (-GAT-) contained in the strongest and salt resistant cleavage site for topoisomerase II in pBR322 DNA. We found that the two oligonucleotides were stabilized under a hairpin structure characterized by a eight base pair stem and a three base loop at low DNA and salt concentrations. In such experimental conditions, only the -GAT- oligonucleotide displayed a partial homoduplex structure in slow equilibrium with its folded structure. Temperature dependencies of imino protons showed that the partial homoduplex of -GAT- melted at a lower temperature than the hairpin structure. It was suggested that the appearance of the partial homoduplex in -GAT- is related to the formation of two stabilizing (G.T) mismatched base pairs in the central loop of this structure. Finally, it was inferred from the dispersion of chemical shifts in the 31P-NMR spectra that the distortions affecting the backbone of the hairpin loop are larger in the case of -ATC- compared with -GAT-. At the same time NOEs proved that the base stacking was stronger within the loop of the -ATC- hairpin.  相似文献   

9.
Trotta E  Del Grosso N  Erba M  Paci M 《Biochemistry》2000,39(23):6799-6808
AAT.ATT is the most abundant and also the most frequently polymorphic class of trinucleotide repeats in the human genome. To characterize its structural properties and conformational changes induced by minor groove ligands, (AAT)(6) and (ATT)(6) oligomers as well as their complexes with DAPI were investigated by electrophoretic mobility and UV thermal stability as well as fluorescence and NMR spectroscopy. The results show that individual (AAT)(6) and (ATT)(6) strands exist principally as monomeric non-hydrogen-bonded structures. Their individual interaction with DAPI induces the formation of base-paired structures with different thermal stabilities by quite spectroscopically distinct binding mechanisms. In the presence of DAPI, (ATT)(6) forms a monomeric hairpin structure stabilized by two ligands located in the minor groove with a strong apparent binding constant of 3.4 x 10(6) M(-)(1). The DAPI-induced (ATT)(6) hairpin is characterized by well-stacked A.T Watson-Crick and T.T wobble base pairs, a high electrophoretic mobility, and a melting temperature of 41 degrees C. Interaction of DAPI with the complementary (AAT)(6) strand favors less stable base-paired structures, and the results are consistent with electrostatic and hydrogen-bond interactions of the ligand with the phosphodiester backbone of (AAT)(6) by minor involvement of DNA bases.  相似文献   

10.
Three-dimensional structures of the fragile X triplet repeats (GCC)n and (GGC)n are derived by using one- dimensional/two-dimensional NMR. Under a wide range of solution conditions (10-150 mM NaCl,pH6-7)(GCC)5-7 strands form exclusively slipped hairpins with a 3' overhanging C. The slipped hairpins of (GCC)n strands show the following structural characteristics: (i) maximization of Watson-Crick G.C pairs; (ii) formation of C.C mispairs at the CpG steps in the stem; (iii) C2'-endo, anti conformations for all the nucleotides. The ability of (GCC)n strands to form hairpin structures more readily than complementary (GGC)n strands suggests preferential slippage during replication and subsequent expansion of the (GCC)n strands. In addition, the C.C. mispairs at the CpG site of (GCC)n hairpins account for their exceptional substrate efficiencies for human methyltransferase. Gel electrophoresis data show that (GGC)n strands form both hairpin and mismatched duplex structures in 10-150 mM NaCl (ph 6-7) for n < 10, but for n > or + 11 hairpin structures are exclusively present. However, (GGC)n strands remain predominantly in the duplex state for n=4-11 under NMR solution conditions, which require DNA concentrations 100- to 1000-fold higher than in gel electrophoresis. NMR analyses of [(GGC)n]2 duplexes for n=4-6 show the presence of Watson-Crick G.C and mismatched G anti G syn pairs. The mismatches adjacent to the CpG step introduce local structural flexibility in these duplexes. Similar structural properties are also expected in the stem of the hairpins formed by (GGC)n strands.  相似文献   

11.
Single-residue d(Pu1NPu2) (Pu1.Pu2=G.A, G.G or A.A) hairpin loops can be stably closed by sheared purine.purine pairs. These special motifs have been found in several important biological systems. We now extend these loop-closing base-pairs to a sheared purine. pyrimidine (A.C) pair at a neutral pH condition. High-resolution NMR spectroscopy, distance geometry, and molecular dynamics methods were used to study d(GTACANCGTAC) oligomers. Numerous idiosyncratic nuclear Overhauser enhancements, especially those across the A.C base-pair between C4NH2left and right arrow AH1', C4NH2left and right arrow AH2, and CH5left and right arrow AH2 proton pairs, clearly define the novel sheared nature of the closing A.C base-pair. This novel base-pair is possibly present in several biological systems and in two single-stranded DNA aptamers selected from oligonucleotide libraries.  相似文献   

12.
Lee BJ  Barch M  Castner EW  Völker J  Breslauer KJ 《Biochemistry》2007,46(38):10756-10766
The triplet repeat sequence (CAG)n and related triplet repeats are associated with dynamic DNA mutations implicated in a number of debilitating human diseases. To gain insight into the dynamics of the (CAG)n repeat, we have substituted a single 2-aminopurine (2AP) fluorescent base for adenine at select positions within the 18 base looped domain of a (GC)3(CAG)6(GC)3 hairpin oligonucleotide. Using temperature-dependent steady-state fluorescence measurements in combination with time correlated photon counting spectroscopy, we show the conformation and dynamics of the C2APG domains to be strongly dependent on the position of the probe in the looped region. In other words, rather than being a uniform, single stranded loop, the (CAG)6 triplet repeat looped domain exhibits order and dynamics that are position dependent. The 2AP fluorescence dynamics within the C2APG repeat are well described by a 4 component exponential decay model, with lifetimes ranging from 5 ps to 4 ns. Differences in global DNA conformation (duplex, hairpin, single strand), as well as the local position of the probe within the loop of a given hairpin, predominantly are reflected in the relative amplitude rather than the lifetime of the probe. The time dependent 2AP anisotropy in the hairpin (CAG)n loops is sensitive to the position of the fluorescent base, with the fluorescence depolarization of a centrally located 2AP probe within the loop proceeding significantly more slowly than 2AP positioned at the 5'- or 3'-end of the repeat sequence near the loop-stem junction. These results are consistent with segmental motions of the CAG repeat, while also suggesting that the 2AP probe is significantly stacked, possibly even hydrogen bonded, within the partially structured CAG looped domain. Our results characterize the position-dependent and conformation-dependent dynamics and order within (CAG)n triplet repeat DNAs, properties of relevance to the biological mechanisms by which such domains can lead to disease states.  相似文献   

13.
We have performed systematic spectroscopic titrations to characterize the binding reaction of cationic meso-tetrakis(4-(N-methylpyridiumyl))porphyrin (TMPyP4) with the G-quadruplex (G4) of human telomeric single-strand oligonucleotide d[TAGGG(TTAGGG)3T] (S24), for which special effort was made to examine the TMPyP4-G4 binding stoichiometry, the binding modes, and the conformational conversion of the G4 structure under different potassium ion (K+) concentration. It is found that, in the presence of 0, 10 mM, and 100 mM K+, TMPyP4 forms a complex with the anti-parallel G4 in a TMPyP4-to-G4 molar ratio of 5, 5 and 3, respectively, and the increase of K+ concentration would reduce the binding affinity of TMPyP4 to G4. For the TMPyP4-G4 complex, the end-stacking mode and groove binding mode were presumed mainly by the results of time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy in the three cases. Most importantly, it is found that TMPyP4 can directly induce the formation of the anti-parallel G4 structure from the single-strand oligonucleotide S24 in the absence of K+, and that it can preferentially induce the conformational conversion of the G4 structure from the hybrid-type to the anti-parallel one in the presence of K+.  相似文献   

14.
The cleavage site of the Neurospora VS RNA ribozyme is located in a separate hairpin domain containing a hexanucleotide internal loop with an A-C mismatch and two adjacent G-A mismatches. The solution structure of the internal loop and helix la of the ribozyme substrate hairpin has been determined by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The 2 nt in the internal loop, flanking the cleavage site, a guanine and adenine, are involved in two sheared G.A base pairs similar to the magnesium ion-binding site of the hammerhead ribozyme. Adjacent to the tandem G.A base pairs, the adenine and cytidine, which are important for cleavage, form a noncanonical wobble A+-C base pair. The dynamic properties of the internal loop and details of the high-resolution structure support the view that the hairpin structure represents a ground state, which has to undergo a conformational change prior to cleavage. Results of chemical modification and mutagenesis data of the Neurospora VS RNA ribozyme can be explained in context with the present three-dimensional structure.  相似文献   

15.
Expansion and contraction instabilities associated with CAG, CGG, GAA and CGA (GAC) repeats propagation cause more than a dozen human genetic diseases and cancers. In this work, the propagation behavior of a bacteriophage M13 carrying a calf prochymosin cDNA fragment with a (CGA)2 repeat in a small hairpin forming region is reported. Such a M13 derivative when propagated in Escherichia coli, produces small plaques by decreasing phage yield and also mitigates the inhibition on host cell growth, compared to those control bacteriophages either containing a "CTGCTA" sequence or wildtype, suggesting that CGA2 repeat impedes DNA replication in vivo. Moreover, an increased internal free energy is found associated with (CGA)2 sequence compared to those "CTGCTA" and wildtype, which ruled out a possibility of CGA2 repeat effects on propagation is through influencing the hairpin structure formation.  相似文献   

16.
NMR and CD data have previously shown the formation of the T(4) tetraloop hairpin in aqueous solutions, as well as the possibility of the B-to-Z transition in its stem in high salt concentration conditions. It has been shown that the stem B-to-Z transition in T(4) hairpins leads to S (south)- to N (north)-type conformational changes in the loop sugars, as well as anti to syn orientations in the loop bases. In this article, we have compared by means of UV absorption, CD, Raman, and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR), the thermodynamic and structural properties of the T(4) and A(4) tetraloop hairpins formed in 5'-d(CGCGCG-TTTT-CGCGCG)-3' and 5'-d(CGCGCG-AAAA-CGCGCG)-3', respectively. In presence of 5M NaClO(4), a complete B-to-Z transition of the stems is first proved by CD spectra. UV melting profiles are consistent with a higher thermal stability of the T(4) hairpin compared to the A(4) hairpin. Order-to-disorder transition of both hairpins has also been analyzed by means of Raman spectra recorded as a function of temperature. A clear Z-to-B transition of the stem has been confirmed in the T(4) hairpin, and not in the A(4) hairpin. With a right-handed stem, Raman and FTIR spectra have confirmed the C2'-endo/anti conformation for all the T(4) loop nucleosides. With a left-handed stem, a part of the T(4) loop sugars adopt a N-type (C3'-endo) conformation, and the C3'-endo/syn conformation seems to be the preferred one for the dA residues involved in the A(4) tetraloop.  相似文献   

17.
Zhang T  Huang J  Gu L  Li GM 《DNA Repair》2012,11(2):201-209
Expansion of CAG/CTG trinucleotide repeats (TNRs) in humans is associated with a number of neurological and neurodegenerative disorders including Huntington's disease. Increasing evidence suggests that formation of a stable DNA hairpin within CAG/CTG repeats during DNA metabolism leads to TNR instability. However, the molecular mechanism by which cells recognize and repair CAG/CTG hairpins is largely unknown. Recent studies have identified a novel DNA repair pathway specifically removing (CAG)(n)/(CTG)(n) hairpins, which is considered a major mechanism responsible for TNR instability. The hairpin repair (HPR) system targets the repeat tracts for incisions in the nicked strand in an error-free manner. To determine the substrate spectrum of the HPR system and its ability to process smaller hairpins, which may be the intermediates for CAG/CTG expansions, we constructed a series of CAG/CTG hairpin heteroduplexes containing different numbers of repeats (from 5 to 25) and examined their repair in human nuclear extracts. We show here that although repair efficiencies differ slightly among these substrates, removal of the individual hairpin structures all involve endonucleolytic incisions within the repeat tracts in the nicked DNA strand. Analysis of the repair intermediates defined specific incision sites for each substrate, which were all located within the repeat regions. Mismatch repair proteins are not required for, nor do they inhibit, the processing of smaller hairpin structures. These results suggest that the HPR system ensures CAG/CTG stability primarily by removing various sizes of (CAG)(n)/(CTG)(n) hairpin structures during DNA metabolism.  相似文献   

18.
A Yu  J Dill    M Mitas 《Nucleic acids research》1995,23(20):4055-4057
The structures of single-stranded (ss) oligonucleotides containing (CAG)15 [ss(CAG)15] or (GAC)15 [ss(GAC)15] were examined. At 10 degrees C, the electrophoretic mobilites of the two DNAs were similar to ss(CTG)15, a DNA that forms a hairpin containing base paired and/or stacked thymines. At 37 degrees C in 50 mM NaCl, single-strand-specific P1 nuclease cleaved the G33-G36 phosphodiesters of ss(GAC)15, and the G32-A34, G35-C36 phosphodiesters of ss(CAG)15 (where the loop apex of both DNAs = A34). Electrophoretic mobility melting profiles indicated that the melting temperature (Tm) of ss(CAG)15 in low (approximately 1 mM Na+) ionic strength was 38 degrees C. In contrast, the Tm of ss(GAC)15 was 49 degrees C, a value similar to the Tm of ss(CTG)15. These results provide evidence that ss(GAC)15 and ss(CAG)15 form similar, but distinguishable hairpin structures.  相似文献   

19.
Modified nucleotides allow fundamental energetic and kinetic properties of nucleic acids to be probed. Here, we demonstrate that an RNA hairpin containing the nucleotide analogue 8-bromoguanosine (8BrG or G), gcUUCGgc, has enhanced stability relative to the unmodified hairpin, with DeltaDeltaG(37)(degrees)= -0.69 +/- 0.15 kcal mol(-1) and DeltaT(M) = +6.8 +/- 1.4 degrees C. NMR spectroscopic data suggest that the enhanced stability of gcUUCGgc does not arise from the native state; laser temperature-jump experiments support this notion, as gcUUCGgc and gcUUCGgc have similar unfolding rate constants, but the folding rate constant of gcUUCGgc is 4.1-fold faster at 37.5 degrees C and 2.8-fold faster under isoenergetic conditions. On the basis of these findings, we propose that 8BrG reduces the conformational entropy of the denatured state, resulting in an accelerated conformational search for the native state and enhanced stability.  相似文献   

20.
Recently, it was reported that expanded r(CAG) triplet repeats (r(CAG)(exp)) associated with untreatable neurological diseases cause pre-mRNA mis-splicing likely due to sequestration of muscleblind-like 1 (MBNL1) splicing factor. Bioactive small molecules that bind the 5'CAG/3'GAC motif found in r(CAG)(exp) hairpin structure were identified by using RNA binding studies and virtual screening/chemical similarity searching. Specifically, a benzylguanidine-containing small molecule was found to improve pre-mRNA alternative splicing of MBNL1-sensitive exons in cells expressing the toxic r(CAG)(exp). The compound was identified by first studying the binding of RNA 1 × 1 nucleotide internal loops to small molecules known to have affinity for nucleic acids. Those studies identified 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) as a specific binder to RNAs with the 5'CAG/3'GAC motif. DAPI was then used as a query molecule in a shape- and chemistry alignment-based virtual screen to identify compounds with improved properties, which identified 4-guanidinophenyl 4-guanidinobenzoate, a small molecule that improves pre-mRNA splicing defects associated with the r(CAG)(exp)-MBNL1 complex. This compound may facilitate the development of therapeutics to treat diseases caused by r(CAG)(exp) and could serve as a useful chemical tool to dissect the mechanisms of r(CAG)(exp) toxicity. The approach used in these studies, defining the small RNA motifs that bind small molecules with known affinity for nucleic acids and then using virtual screening to optimize them for bioactivity, may be generally applicable for designing small molecules that target other RNAs in the human genomic sequence.  相似文献   

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