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1.
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   

2.
A computational method is elaborated for studying the water environment around regular polynucleotide duplexes; it allows rigorous structural information on the hydration shell of DNA to be obtained. The crucial aspect of this Monte Carlo simulation is the use of periodical boundary conditions. The output data consists of local maxima of water density in the space near the DNA molecule and the properties of one- and two-membered water bridges as function of pairs of polar groups of DNA. In the present paper the results for poly(dG).poly(dC) and poly(dG-dC).poly(dG-dC) are presented. The differences in their hydration shells are of a purely structural nature and are caused by the symmetry of the polar groups of the polymers under study, the symmetry being reflected by the hydration shell. The homopolymer duplex hydration shell mirrors the mononucleotide repeat. The water molecules contacting the polynucleotide in the minor groove are located nearly in the plane midway between the planes of successive base pairs. One water molecule per base pair forms a water bridge facing two polar groups of bases from adjacent base pairs and on different strands making a "spine"-like structure. In contrast, the major groove hydration is stabilized exclusively by two-membered water bridges; the water molecules deepest in the groove are concentrated near the plane of the corresponding base pair. The alternating polymer is characterized by a marked dyad symmetry of the hydration shell corresponding to the axis between two successive base pairs. The minor groove hydration of the dCpdG step resembles the characteristic features of the homopolymer, but the bridge between the O2 oxygens of the other base-stacking type is formed by two water molecules. The major groove hydration is characterized by high probability of one-membered water bridges and by localization of a water molecule on the dyad axis of the dGpdC step. The found structural elements are discussed as reasonable invariants of a dynamic hydration shell.  相似文献   

3.
Hydration of the RNA duplex r(CGCAAAUUUGCG)2 determined by NMR.   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
M R Conte  G L Conn  T Brown    A N Lane 《Nucleic acids research》1996,24(19):3693-3699
The so-called spine of hydration in the minor groove of AnTn tracts in DNA is thought to stabilise the structure, and kinetically bound water detected in the minor groove of such DNA species by NMR has been attributed to a narrow minor groove [Liepinsh, E., Leupin, W. and Otting, G. (1994) Nucleic Acids Res. 22, 2249-2254]. We report here an NMR study of hydration of an RNA dodecamer which has a wide, shallow minor groove. Complete assignments of exchangeable protons, and a large number of non-exchangeable protons in r(CGCAAAUUUGCG)2 have been obtained. In addition, ribose C2'-OH resonances have been detected, which are probably involved in hydrogen bonds. Hydration at different sites in the dodecamer has been measured using ROESY and NOESY experiments at 11.75 and 14.1 T. Base protons in both the major and minor grooves are in contact with water, with effective correlation times for the interaction of approximately 0.5 ns, indicating weak hydration, in contrast to the hydration of adenine C2H in the homologous DNA sequence. NOEs to H1' in the minor groove are consistent with hydration water present that is not observed in the analogous DNA sequence. Hydration kinetics in nucleic acids may be determined by chemical factors such as hydrogen-bonding more than by simple conformational factors such as groove width.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Detailed analyses of the sequence-dependent solvation and ion atmosphere of DNA are presented based on molecular dynamics (MD) simulations on all the 136 unique tetranucleotide steps obtained by the ABC consortium using the AMBER suite of programs. Significant sequence effects on solvation and ion localization were observed in these simulations. The results were compared to essentially all known experimental data on the subject. Proximity analysis was employed to highlight the sequence dependent differences in solvation and ion localization properties in the grooves of DNA. Comparison of the MD-calculated DNA structure with canonical A- and B-forms supports the idea that the G/C-rich sequences are closer to canonical A- than B-form structures, while the reverse is true for the poly A sequences, with the exception of the alternating ATAT sequence. Analysis of hydration density maps reveals that the flexibility of solute molecule has a significant effect on the nature of observed hydration. Energetic analysis of solute-solvent interactions based on proximity analysis of solvent reveals that the GC or CG base pairs interact more strongly with water molecules in the minor groove of DNA that the AT or TA base pairs, while the interactions of the AT or TA pairs in the major groove are stronger than those of the GC or CG pairs. Computation of solvent-accessible surface area of the nucleotide units in the simulated trajectories reveals that the similarity with results derived from analysis of a database of crystallographic structures is excellent. The MD trajectories tend to follow Manning's counterion condensation theory, presenting a region of condensed counterions within a radius of about 17 A from the DNA surface independent of sequence. The GC and CG pairs tend to associate with cations in the major groove of the DNA structure to a greater extent than the AT and TA pairs. Cation association is more frequent in the minor groove of AT than the GC pairs. In general, the observed water and ion atmosphere around the DNA sequences is the MD simulation is in good agreement with experimental observations.  相似文献   

6.
DNA structure is known to be sensitive to hydration and ionic environment. To explore the dynamics, hydration, and ion binding features of A-tract sequences, a 7-ns Molecular dynamics (MD) study has been performed on the dodecamer d(CGCAAATTTGCG)(2). The results suggest that the intrusion of Na(+) ion into the minor groove is a rare event and the structure of this dodecamer is not very sensitive to the location of the sodium ions. The prolonged MD simulation successfully leads to the formation of sequence dependent hydration patterns in the minor groove, often called spine of hydration near the A-rich region and ribbon of hydration near the GC regions. Such sequence dependent differences in the hydration patterns have been seen earlier in the high resolution crystal structure of the Drew-Dickerson sequence, but not reported for the medium resolution structures (2.0 approximately 3.0 A). Several water molecules are also seen in the major groove of the MD simulated structure, though they are not highly ordered over the extended MD. The characteristic narrowing of the minor groove in the A-tract region is seen to precede the formation of the spine of hydration. Finally, the occurrence of cross-strand C2-H2.O2 hydrogen bonds in the minor groove of A-tract sequences is confirmed. These are found to occur even before the narrowing of the minor groove, indicating that such interactions are an intrinsic feature of A-tract sequences.  相似文献   

7.
The structure of DAPI bound to DNA   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
The structure of the DNA fluorochrome 4'-6-diamidine-2-phenyl indole (DAPI) bound to the synthetic B-DNA oligonucleotide C-G-C-G-A-A-T-T-C-G-C-G has been solved by single crystal x-ray diffraction methods, at a resolution of 2.4 A. The structure is nearly isomorphous with that of the native DNA molecule alone. With one DAPI and 25 waters per DNA double helix, the residual error is 21.5% for the 2428 reflections above the 2-sigma level. DAPI inserts itself edgewise into the narrow minor groove, displacing the ordered spine of hydration. DAPI and a single water molecule together span the four AT base pairs at the center of the duplex. The indole nitrogen forms a bifurcated hydrogen bond with the thymine O2 atoms of the two central base pairs, as with netropsin and Hoechst 33258. The preference of all three of these drugs for AT regions of B-DNA is a consequence of three factors: (1) The intrinsically narrower minor groove in AT regions than in GC regions of B-DNA, leading to a snug fit of the flat aromatic drug rings between the walls of the groove. (2) The more negative electrostatic potential within the minor groove in AT regions, attributable in part to the absence of electropositive-NH2 groups along the floor of the groove, and (3) The steric advantage of the absence of those same guanine-NH2 groups, thus permitting the drug molecule to sink deeper into the groove. Groove width and electrostatic factors are regional, and define the relative receptiveness of a section of DNA since they operate over several contiguous base pairs. The steric factor is local, varying from one base pair to the next, and hence is the means of fine-tuning sequence specificity.  相似文献   

8.
The counterion distribution around a DNA dodecamer (5'-CGCGAATTCGCG-3') is analyzed using both standard and novel techniques based on state of the art molecular dynamics simulations. Specifically, we have explored the population of Na(+) in the minor groove of DNA duplex, and whether or not a string of Na(+) can replace the spine of hydration in the narrow AATT minor groove. The results suggest that the insertion of Na(+) in the minor groove is a very rare event, but that when once the ion finds specific sites deep inside the groove it can reside there for very long periods of time. According to our simulation the presence of Na(+) inside the groove does not have a dramatic influence in the structure or dynamics of the duplex DNA. The ability of current MD simulations to obtain equilibrated pictures of the counterion atmosphere around DNA is critically discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The self-complementary DNA duplex C-C-A-G-G-C-m5C-T-G-G has been refined against 1.75-A x-ray diffraction data to an R value of 17.4%. In the crystal of space group P6, 10-base pair DNA fragments with characteristic sequence-related fine structure stack end to end to form long antiparallel B-type double helices. As shown by a structure analysis at lower resolution (Heinemann, U., and Alings, C. (1991) EMBO J. 10, 35-43), the overall geometry of C-C-A-G-G-C-m5C-T-G-G is similar to that of the unmethylated analog C-C-A-G-G-C-C-T-G-G despite a different crystal environment. The present high resolution structure analysis permits a detailed comparison of the two duplexes and their hydration spheres. Helical parameters are significantly correlated between both molecules, with the exception of the base pair propeller. Sugar pucker and backbone torsion angles alpha, gamma, delta, and chi show similar mean values, but their individual values deviate significantly between duplexes. In contrast, torsion angles beta, epsilon, and zeta change along the strands of both duplexes in much the same way. The effect of single-site methylation on DNA conformation appears to be small and limited to the base pairs directly involved. Methylation tends to push base pairs toward the minor groove of the helix. A regular minor groove hydration pattern involves dual hydrogen bonding of water molecules to O-4' and base atoms of C-C-A-G-G-C-m5C-T-G-G.  相似文献   

10.
Adjacent phosphate oxygen atoms in A and Z-DNA are located much closer together than in the B form and can be hydrated more economically due to the formation of water bridges between them, whereas in the B form phosphates are hydrated individually. This principle of hydration economy of phosphate groups discovered by Saenger and colleagues could not be applied to the B-D transition, which, like the B-A and B-Z transitions, occurs in a situation of water deficiency, because the distances between adjacent phosphates of individual polynucleotide chains in the D form are not much different from B-DNA. It follows from our calculations of B and D-DNA accessibility to solvent performed by the method of Lee & Richards, and from a simulation of solvent structure near DNA, that there is an economy of hydration only for the minor groove atoms. This feature and some experimental data can explain why only a limited range of sequences consisting of A.T or I.C pairs undergo the transition to the D form. The conformational transition in DNAs with such sequences to a poly[d(A]).poly[d(T])-like conformation (Bh-DNA), which is accompanied by a narrowing of the minor groove, can be explained in the same way. Calculations suggest that in the D-form minor groove of different A-T or I-C DNAs there is a double-layer hydration spine similar to that observed by Drew & Dickerson in the A-T tract of the d(C-G-C-G-A-A-T-T-C-G-C-G) dodecamer. The B-D and B-Bh transitions in A + T-rich DNAs can have biological implications, e.g. they can facilitate DNA bending upon the interaction with proteins.  相似文献   

11.
Sun Z  Chen D  Lan T  McLaughlin LW 《Biopolymers》2002,65(3):211-217
Eight oligonucleotide duplexes have been prepared with four pairs of selected complementary pairs of native/analogue heterocyclic bases incorporated at a selected test site. The base pairs vary in the nature of their functionality in the minor groove. Each pair has a minor groove purine amino group present or absent, and correspondingly has a minor grove pyrimidine carbonyl present or absent. Loss of duplex stability is most notable when the minor groove pyrimidine carbonyl is absent although in other respects normal Watson-Crick hydrogen bonding is maintained in these sequences. These differences in stability are discussed in terms of possible variations in minor groove hydration.  相似文献   

12.
The crystal structure of the B-DNA hexamer d(CTCGAG) has been solved at 1.9 A resolution by iterative single isomorphous replacement, using the brominated derivative d(CG5BrCGAG), and refined to an R-factor of 18.6% for 120 nonhydrogen nucleic acid atoms and 32 water molecules. Although the central four base pairs form a typical B-form helix, several parameters suggest a transition to an A-like conformation at the termini. Based on this observation, a B-to-A transition was modeled, maintaining efficient base stacking across the junction. The wide minor groove (approximately 6.9 A) is reminiscent of that in the side-by-side double drug-DNA complexes and hosts a double spine of hydration. The global helix axes of the pseudo-continuous helices are at an acute angle of 60 degrees. The pseudocontinuous stacking is reinforced by the minor groove water structure extending between the two duplexes. The crossover point of two pairs of stacked duplexes is at the stacking junction, unlike that observed in the B-DNA decamers and dodecamers. This arrangement may have implications for the structure of a four-way DNA junction. The duplexes are arranged around a large (approximately 20 A diameter) channel centered on a 6(2) screw axis.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Morales JC  Kool ET 《Biochemistry》2000,39(42):12979-12988
Recent studies have identified amino acid side chains forming several hydrogen bonds in the DNA minor groove as potentially important in polymerase replication of DNA. Few studies have probed these interactions on the DNA itself. Using non-hydrogen-bonding nucleoside isosteres, we have now studied effects in both primer and template strands with several polymerases to investigate the general importance of these interactions. All six polymerases show differences in the H-bonding effects in the minor groove. Two broad classes of activity are seen, with a first group of DNA polymerases (KF(-), Taq, and HIV-RT) that efficiently extends nonpolar base pairs containing nucleoside Q (9-methyl-1H-imidazo[4,5-b]pyridine) but not the analogue Z (4-methylbenzimidazole), implicating a specific minor groove interaction at the first extension site. A second group of polymerases (Pol alpha, Pol beta, and T7(-)) fails to extend all non-H-bonding base pairs, indicating that these enzymes may need minor groove hydrogen bonds at both minor groove sites or that they are especially sensitive to noncanonical DNA structure or stability. All DNA polymerases examined use energetically important minor groove interactions to probe newly synthesized base pairs before extending them. The positions of these interactions vary among the enzymes, and only a subset of the interactions identified structurally appears to be functionally important. In addition, polymerases appear to be differently sensitive to small changes in base pair geometry.  相似文献   

15.
In this paper, hydrogen bonding interaction and hydration in crystal structures of both DNA and RNA oligonucleotides are discussed. Their roles in the formation and stabilization of oligonucleotides have been covered. Details of the Watson-Crick base pairs G.C and A.U in DNA and RNA are illustrated. The geometry of the wobble (mismatched) G.U base pairs and the cis and almost trans conformations of the mismatched U.U base pairs in RNA is described. The difference in hydration of the Watson-Crick base pairs G.C, A.U and the wobble G.U in different sequences of codon-anticodon interaction in double helical molecules are indicative of the effect of hydration. The hydration patterns of the phosphate, the 2'-hydroxyl groups, the water bridges linking the phosphate group, N7 (purine) and N4 of Cs or O4 of Us in the major groove, the water bridges between the 2'-hydroxyl group and N3 (purine) and O2 (pyrimidine) in the minor groove are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
F Eisenhaber  J H Mannik  V G Tumanyan 《Biopolymers》1990,29(10-11):1453-1464
Being interested in possible effects of sequence-dependent hydration of B-DNA with mixed sequence in fibers, we performed a series of Monte Carlo calculations of hydration of polydeoxyribonucleotides in B form, considering all sequences with dinucleotide repeat. The computational results allow the ten base-stacking types to be classified in accordance with their primary hydration in the minor groove. As a rule, the minor groove is occupied by two water molecules per base pair in the depth of the groove, which are located nearly midway between the planes of successive base pairs and symmetrically according to the dyad there. The primary hydration of the major groove depends on the type of the given base pair. The coordinates of 3 water molecules per base pair in the depth of the major groove are determined by the type of this pair together with its position and orientation in the helix, and are practically independent on the adjacent base pairs. A/T-homopolymer tracts do not fit into this hydration pattern; the base pair edges are hydrated autonomously in both grooves. Analysis of the Li-B-DNA x-ray diffraction intensities reveals those two water positions in the minor groove. In the major groove, no electronic density peaks in sufficient distance from the base edges were found, thus confirming the absence of any helical invariance of primary hydration in this region. With the help of the rules proposed in this paper it is possible to position the water molecules of the first hydration shell in the grooves of canonical B-DNA for any given sequence.  相似文献   

17.
BACKGROUND: The drug chromomycin-A(3) binds to the minor groove of DNA and requires a divalent metal ion for complex formation. (1)H, (31)P and (13)C pseudocontact shifts occurring in the presence of a tightly bound divalent cobalt ion in the complex between d(TTGGCCAA)(2) and chromomycin-A(3) have been used to determine the structure of the complex. The accuracy of the structure was verified by validation with nuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOEs) and J-coupling constants not used in the structure calculation. RESULTS: The final structure was determined to 0.7 A resolution. The structure was compared with a structure obtained in an earlier study using NOEs, in order to assess the accuracy of NOEs in giving global structural information for a DNA complex. Although some basic features of the structures agreed, they differed substantially in the fine structural details and in the DNA axis curvature generated by the drug. The distortion of base-pair planarity that was observed in the NOE structure was not seen in our structure. Differences in drug orientation and hydrogen bonding also occurred. The curvature and elongation of the DNA that was obtained previously was not found to occur in our study. CONCLUSIONS: The use of pseudocontact shifts has enabled us to obtain a high-precision global structure of the chromomycin-DNA complex, which provides an accurate template on which to consider targeting minor groove binding drugs. The effect of such binding is not propagated far along the helix but is restricted to a local kink in the axis that reverts to its original direction within four base pairs.  相似文献   

18.
The results of the search for low-energy conformations of poly(dA).poly(dT) and of the poly(dA).poly(dT) "complex" with the spine of hydration similar to that found by Dickerson and co-workers (Kopka, M.L., Fratini, A.V., Drew, H.R. and Dickerson, R.E. (1983) J. Mol. Biol. 163, 129-146) in the minor groove of the CGCGAATTCGCG crystals are described. It is shown that the existence of such a spine in the minor groove of poly(dA).poly(dT) is energetically favourable. Moreover, the spine of hydration makes the polynucleotide conformation similar to the poly(dA).poly(dT) structure in fibers and to the conformation of the central part of CGCGAATTCGCG in crystals; it also acquires features characteristic of the structure of poly(dA).poly(dT) and DNA oligo(dA)-tracts in solution. It is shown that the existence of the TpA step in conformations characteristic of the poly(dA).poly(dT) complex with the spine of hydration is energetically unfavourable (in contrast to the ApT step) and therefore this step should result in destabilization of the spine of hydration in the DNA minor groove. Thus, it appears that the spine of hydration as described by Dickerson and co-workers is unlikely to exist in the poly d(A-T).poly d(A-T) structure. The data obtained permit us to interpret a large body of experimental facts concerning the unusual structure and properties of poly(dA).poly(dT) and oligo(dA)-tracts in DNA both in fibers and in solution. The results provide evidence of the existence of the minor groove spine of hydration both in fibers and in solution on A/T tracts of DNA which do not contain the TpA step. The spine plays an active role in the formation of the anomalous conformation of these tracts.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Amsacrine is an anilinoacridine derivative anticancer drug, used to treat a wide variety of malignancies. In cells, amsacrine poisons topoisomerase 2 by stabilizing DNA-drug-enzyme ternary complex. Presence of amsacrine increases the steady-state concentration of these ternary complexes which in turn hampers DNA replication and results in subsequent cell death. Due to reversible binding and rapid slip-out of amsacrine from DNA duplex, structural data is not available on amsacrine-DNA complexes. In the present work, we designed five oligonucleotide duplexes, differing in their minor groove widths and hydration pattern, and examined their binding with amsacrine using attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy. Complexes of amsacrine with calf thymus DNA were also evaluated for a comparison. Our results demonstrate for the first time that amsacrine is not a simple intercalator; rather mixed type of DNA binding (intercalation and minor groove) takes place between amsacrine and DNA. Further, this binding is highly sensitive towards the geometries and hydration patterns of different minor grooves present in the DNA. This study shows that ligand binding to DNA could be very sensitive to DNA base composition and DNA groove structures. Results demonstrated here could have implication for understanding cytotoxic mechanism of aminoacridine based anticancer drugs and provide directions to modify these drugs for better efficacy and few side-effects.  相似文献   

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