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1.
Microcalorimetric studies of DNA duplexes and their component single strands showed that association enthalpies of unfolded complementary strands into completely folded duplexes increase linearly with temperature and do not depend on salt concentration, i.e. duplex formation results in a constant heat capacity decrement, identical for CG and AT pairs. Although duplex thermostability increases with CG content, the enthalpic and entropic contributions of an AT pair to duplex formation exceed that of a CG pair when compared at the same temperature. The reduced contribution of AT pairs to duplex stabilization comes not from their lower enthalpy, as previously supposed, but from their larger entropy contribution. This larger enthalpy and particularly the greater entropy results from water fixed by the AT pair in the minor groove. As the increased entropy of an AT pair exceeds that of melting ice, the water molecule fixed by this pair must affect those of its neighbors. Water in the minor groove is, thus, orchestrated by the arrangement of AT groups, i.e. is context dependent. In contrast, water hydrating exposed nonpolar surfaces of bases is responsible for the heat capacity increment on dissociation and, therefore, for the temperature dependence of all thermodynamic characteristics of the double helix.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structure of a hexamer duplex d(CACGTG)(2) has been determined and refined to an R-factor of 18.3% using X-ray data up to 1.2 A resolution. The sequence crystallizes as a left-handed Z-form double helix with Watson-Crick base pairing. There is one hexamer duplex, a spermine molecule, 71 water molecules, and an unexpected diamine (Z-5, 1,3-propanediamine, C(3)H(10)N(2)) in the asymmetric unit. This is the high-resolution non-disordered structure of a Z-DNA hexamer containing two AT base pairs in the interior of a duplex with no modifications such as bromination or methylation on cytosine bases. This structure does not possess multivalent cations such as cobalt hexaammine that are known to stabilize Z-DNA. The overall duplex structure and its crystal interactions are similar to those of the pure-spermine form of the d(CGCGCG)(2) structure. The spine of hydration in the minor groove is intact except in the vicinity of the T5A8 base pair. The binding of the Z-5 molecule in the minor grove of the d(CACGTG)(2) duplex appears to have a profound effect in conferring stability to a Z-DNA conformation via electrostatic complementarity and hydrogen bonding interactions. The successive base stacking geometry in d(CACGTG)(2) is similar to the corresponding steps in d(CG)(3). These results suggest that specific polyamines such as Z-5 could serve as powerful inducers of Z-type conformation in unmodified DNA sequences with AT base pairs. This structure provides a molecular basis for stabilizing AT base pairs incorporated into an alternating d(CG) sequence.  相似文献   

3.
L A Marky  D W Kupke 《Biochemistry》1989,28(26):9982-9988
The minor-groove ligand netropsin provides a sensitive probe of the hydration difference between poly(dA).poly(dT) and poly[d(AT)].poly[d(AT)]. We have measured the volume change delta V accompanying binding of netropsin to these polymers, using an improved magnetic suspension densimeter. For poly(dA).poly(dT) we find delta V = +97 mL/mol of bound netropsin at pH 7.0 and 10 mM sodium phosphate buffer. For poly[d(AT)].poly[d(AT)] we find delta V = -16 mL/mol of bound netropsin. This striking differential effect suggests that the poly(dA).poly(dT) duplex compresses more water (or is more extensively hydrated). From our enthalpy and entropy results we estimate the approximately 10 water molecules, immobilized in the minor groove of this system, are displaced by each netropsin bound. The volume increase, however, is substantially larger than can be explained by a simple melting of these immobilized water molecules in the minor groove. A decompression of at least 40 water molecules must attend the complexation to the poly(dA).poly(dT) duplex. This suggests that the conformation change attending the binding of the drug to this polymer duplex causes a further dehydration, whereas no such change in dehydration and configuration for the heteropolymer system is indicated.  相似文献   

4.
The conformational pathways and the free energy variations for base opening into the major and minor grooves of a B-DNA duplex are studied using umbrella sampling molecular dynamics simulations. We compare both GC and AT base pair opening within a double-stranded d(GAGAGAGAGAGAG)· d(CTCTCTCTCTCTC) oligomer, and we are also able to study the impact of opening on the conformational and dynamic properties of DNA and on the surrounding solvent. The results indicate a two-stage opening process with an initial coupling of the movements of the bases within the perturbed base pair. Major and minor groove pathways are energetically comparable in the case of the pyrimidine bases, but the major groove pathway is favored for the larger purine bases. Base opening is coupled to changes in specific backbone dihedrals and certain helical distortions, including untwisting and bending, although all these effects are dependent on the particular base involved. Partial opening also leads to well defined water bridging sites, which may play a role in stabilizing the perturbed base pairs.  相似文献   

5.
The introduction of cationic 5-(ω-aminoalkyl)-2′-deoxypyrimidines into duplex DNA has been shown to induce DNA bending. In order to understand the energetic and hydration contributions for the incorporation of a cationic side chain in DNA a combination of spectroscopy, calorimetry and density techniques were used. Specifically, the temperature unfolding and isothermal formation was studied for a pair of duplexes with sequence d(CGTAGUCG TGC)/d(GCACGACTACG), where U represents 2′-deoxyuridine (‘control’) or 5-(3-aminopropyl)-2′-deoxyuridine (‘modified’). Continuous variation experiments confirmed 1:1 stoichiometries for each duplex and the circular dichroism spectra show that both duplexes adopted the B conformation. UV and differential scanning calorimetry melting experiments reveal that each duplex unfolds in two-state transitions. In low salt buffer, the ‘modified’ duplex is more stable and unfolds with a lower endothermic heat and lower release of counterion and water. This electrostatic stabilization is entropy driven and disappears at higher salt concentrations. Complete thermodynamic profiles at 15°C show that the favorable formation of each duplex results from the compensation of a favorable exothermic heat with an unfavorable entropy contribution. However, the isothermal profiles yielded a differential enthalpy of 8.8 kcal/mol, which is 4.3 kcal/mol higher than the differential enthalpy observed in the unfolding profiles. This indicates that the presence of the aminopropyl chain induces an increase in base stacking interactions in the modified single strand and a decrease in base stacking interactions in the modified duplex. Furthermore, the formation of the ‘control’ duplex releases water while the ‘modified’ duplex takes up water. Relative to the control duplex, formation of the modified duplex at 15°C yielded a marginal differential ΔG° term, positive ΔΔHITC–Δ(TΔS) compensation, negative ΔΔV and a net release of counterions. The opposite signs of the differential enthalpy–entropy compensation and differential volume change terms show a net uptake of structural water around polar and non-polar groups. This indicates that incorporation of the aminopropyl chain induces a higher exposure of aromatic bases to the solvent, which may be consistent with a small and local bend in the ‘modified’ duplex.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
A possibility of using oligonucleotide conjugates with minor groove ligands as probes for hybridization microarray chips was studied. The oligonucleotide conjugates contain a hairpin ligand (MGB) composed of two tripyrrolcarboxamide residues with an aminocaproic acid residue as a linker and bound to the oligonucleotide duplex AT tract in a site-specific manner. We used as (5′-3′)-probes: GACAAGAp, GACAAAAp, GACAAGA-MGB, and GACAAAA-MGB. The oligonucleotides labeled with the Cy3 cyanine dye, Cy3-ACTAATTTTGTC and Cy3-ACTAATCTTGTC, were used as targets. The maximal MGB effect on the fluorescence level of microarray chip spots, which caused its fourfold increase as compared with the initial unmodified duplex, was observed for the duplex containing only AT pairs in the ligand binding site. The presence of AC and GT mutations in the binding site (imperfect duplexes) or a CG pair (perfect duplex) affect the change in fluorescence level to a considerably lesser degree.  相似文献   

8.
The minor groove ligand distamycin A has been used to probe the relative hydration of the minor groove of eight synthetic polynucleotides of known sequence and composition. A combination of densimetric, calorimetric, and temperature-dependent spectroscopic techniques have been used to obtain complete thermodynamic profiles (delta Gzero, delta Hzero, delta Szero, and delta Vzero) for the association of distamycin A to all polymer duplexes. In 10 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7, binding of the drug to each of the polymeric duplexes resulted in characteristic negative changes in both the volume and enthalpy. Although the binding constants were found to be identical for pairs of isomer polynucleotides having identical compositions but different sequences, the values of delta Hzero, delta Szero, and delta Vzero of each such pair were remarkably different. The entropy changes were found to roughly parallel the volume changes; no such trend was seen between delta Hzero and delta Vzero. The data support the hypothesis that the volume changes observed for these systems reflect the coulombic-hydration contribution to the entropy. The heteropolymer duplexes generated much larger exothermic contributions, less favorable entropies and larger volume contractions than did the corresponding homopolymer duplexes of identical composition, and strongly suggest that polynucleotides with homopurine sequences are more hydrated than polynucleotides with alternating purine/pyrimidine sequences. In addition, it was found that duplexes containing guanine sharply reduced the affinity for the drug, also lowering the exothermicity but raising the entropy. This may be explained by the presence of an amino group in the minor groove that prevents hydrogen bonding. Substitution of the guanine with inosine reversed this trend in the thermodynamic properties. Furthermore, substitution of poly(dA) for poly(rA) in a duplex produced a similar reduction in the affinity, while raising the exothermic contribution and greatly reducing the favorable entropy effect in agreement with an apparent increase in the hydration state.  相似文献   

9.
Interaction of the food colorant acid red 27 with double stranded DNA was investigated using spectroscopic and calorimetric methods. Absorbance and fluorescence studies suggested an intimate binding interaction between the dye and DNA. The quantum efficiency value testified an effective energy transfer from the DNA base pairs to the dye molecules. Minor groove displacement assay with Hoechst 33258 revealed that the binding occurs in the minor groove of DNA. Circular dichroism studies revealed that acid red 27 induces moderate conformational perturbations in DNA. Results of calorimetric studies suggested that the complexation process was driven largely by positive entropic contribution with a smaller favorable enthalpy contribution. The equilibrium constant of the binding was calculated to be (3.04 ± 0.09) × 104 M?1 at 298.15 K. Negative heat capacity value along with the enthalpy–entropy compensation phenomenon established the involvement of dominant hydrophobic forces in the binding process. Differential scanning calorimetry studies presented evidence for an increased thermal stability of DNA on binding of acid red 27. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
RT29 is a dicationic diamidine derivative that does not obey the classical "rules" for shape and functional group placement that are expected to result in strong binding and specific recognition of the DNA minor groove. The compound contains a benzimidazole diphenyl ether core that is flanked by the amidine cations. The diphenyl ether is highly twisted and gives the entire compound too much curvature to fit well to the shape of the minor groove. DNase I footprinting, fluorescence intercalator displacement studies, and circular dichroism spectra, however, indicate that the compound is an AT specific minor groove binding agent. Even more surprisingly, quantitative biosensor-surface plasmon resonance and isothermal titration calorimetric results indicate that the compound binds with exceptional strength to certain AT sequences in DNA with a large negative enthalpy of binding. Crystallographic results for the DNA complex of RT29 compared to calculated results for the free compound show that the compound undergoes significant conformational changes to enhance its minor groove interactions. In addition, a water molecule is incorporated directly into the complex to complete the compound-DNA interface, and it forms an essential link between the compound and base pair edges at the floor of the minor groove. The calculated DeltaCp value for complex formation is substantially less than the experimentally observed value, which supports the idea of water being an intrinsic part of the complex with a major contribution to the DeltaCp value. Both the induced fit conformational changes of the compound and the bound water are essential for strong binding to DNA by RT29.  相似文献   

12.
Sun Z  McLaughlin LW 《Biopolymers》2007,87(2-3):183-195
DNA sequences containing four types of analog nucleosides are described. All four are pyridine derivatives constructed as C-nucleosides so that they mimic the pyrimidine derivatives 2'-deoxyuridine, thymidine or 2'-deoxycytidine, but in all cases the analogs lack the corresponding O2-carbonyls that in duplex DNA are located in the minor groove. In place of the O2-carbonyl is a hydrogen atom, a polar fluorine atom, or a nonpolar methyl group. The described C-nucleosides have native-like bidentate Watson-Crick hydrogen-bonding faces and can form essentially normal W-C base pairs of varying stability with A or G. In each modified base pair, two inter-residue hydrogen bonds should be present. In spite of a common number of interstrand hydrogen bonds, the thermodynamic stabilities of the prepared duplexes, each containing two analog base pairs, vary dramatically. Most notably, base pairs containing uncompensated purine amino groups (those lacking a hydrogen-bonding partner) in the minor groove exhibit the most dramatic reductions in thermodynamic stability. Removal of such uncompensated amino groups results in increased duplex stability. Base pairs containing fluorine in the minor groove positioned adjacent to an amino group seem to enhance duplex stability marginally (relative to --H or --CH(3)), but there is little evidence to suggest that fluorine is an effective hydrogen-bonding partner in these systems. The presence of minor groove methyl groups results in the least stable duplexes in each series of sequences.  相似文献   

13.
Effects of hydrated water on protein unfolding   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The conformational stability of a protein in aqueous solution is described in terms of the thermodynamic properties such as unfolding Gibbs free energy, which is the difference in the free energy (Gibbs function) between the native and random conformations in solution. The properties are composed of two contributions, one from enthalpy due to intramolecular interactions among constituent atoms and chain entropy of the backbone and side chains, and the other from the hydrated water around a protein molecule. The hydration free energy and enthalpy at a given temperature for a protein of known three-dimensional structure can be calculated from the accessible surface areas of constituent atoms according to a method developed recently. Since the hydration free energy and enthalpy for random conformations are computed from those for an extended conformation, the thermodynamic properties of unfolding are evaluated quantitatively. The evaluated hydration properties for proteins of known transition temperature (Tm) and unfolding enthalpy (delta Hm) show an approximately linear dependence on the number of constituent heavy atoms. Since the unfolding free energy is zero at Tm, the enthalpy originating from interatomic interactions of a polypeptide chain and the chain entropy are evaluated from an experimental value of delta Hm and computed properties due to the hydrated water around the molecule at Tm. The chain enthalpy and entropy thus estimated are largely compensated by the hydration enthalpy and entropy, respectively, making the unfolding free energy and enthalpy relatively small. The computed temperature dependences of the unfolding free energy and enthalpy for RNase A, T4 lysozyme, and myoglobin showed a good agreement with the experimental ones.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
We used a combination of optical and calorimetric techniques to investigate the incorporation of deoxythymidine --> deoxyuridine (dT --> dU) substitutions in the duplex and third strand of the parallel intramolecular triplex d(A(7)C(5)T(7)C(5)T(7)) (ATT). UV and differential scanning calorimetry melting experiments show that the incorporation of two substitutions yielded triplexes with lower thermal stability and lower unfolding enthalpies. The enthalpies decrease with an increase in salt concentration, indirectly yielding a heat capacity effect, and the magnitude of this effect was lower for the substituted triplexes. The combined results indicate that the destabilizing effect is due to a decrease in the level of stacking interactions. Furthermore, the minor groove ligand netropsin binds to the minor groove and to the hydrophobic groove, created by the double chain of thymine methyl groups in the major groove of these triplexes. Binding of netropsin to the minor groove yielded thermodynamic profiles similar to that of a DNA duplex with a similar sequence. However, and relative to ATT, binding of netropsin to the hydrophobic groove has a decreased binding affinity and lower binding enthalpy. This shows that the presence of uridine bases disrupts the hydrophobic groove and lowers its cooperativity toward ligand binding. The overall results suggest that the stabilizing effect of methyl groups may arise from the combination of both hydrophobic and electronic effects.  相似文献   

15.
Fluorescence, circular dichroism and sedimentation through cesium chloride gradient techniques were performed to study the physical properties of the binding of the bisbenzimidazole dye Hoechst 33258 (H33258) to natural DNAs and synthetic polynucleotides of defined repeating units. These studies show that Hoechst 33258 exhibits at least two modes of interaction with duplex DNA: (1) a strong base pair specific mode which requires at least 4 consecutive AT base pairs and (2) a weaker mode of binding which is significantly reduced in the presence of high salt (0.4 M NaCl) and exhibits no apparent base specificity. The H33258 binding was found to be sensitive to the substitutions in the minor groove elements of a series of synthetic polynucleotides supporting the model of H33258 binding in the minor groove of the DNA with AT rich sequences. Similar mode of binding was predicted in natural DNAs by methylation of dye-DNA complexes. Footprint analysis of the complex of dye to a pBR322 fragment also supports that a minimum of 4 consecutive AT base pairs are required for H33258 binding to DNA.  相似文献   

16.
The energetic profiles of a significant number of protein-DNA systems at 20 °C reveal that, despite comparable Gibbs free energies, association with the major groove is primarily an enthalpy-driven process, whereas binding to the minor groove is characterized by an unfavorable enthalpy that is compensated by favorable entropic contributions. These distinct energetic signatures for major versus minor groove binding are irrespective of the magnitude of DNA bending and/or the extent of binding-induced protein refolding. The primary determinants of their different energetic profiles appear to be the distinct hydration properties of the major and minor grooves; namely, that the water in the A+T-rich minor groove is in a highly ordered state and its removal results in a substantial positive contribution to the binding entropy. Since the entropic forces driving protein binding into the minor groove are a consequence of displacing water ordered by the regular arrangement of polar contacts, they cannot be regarded as hydrophobic.  相似文献   

17.
The oligomer d(GCCGCAGC) can adopt two different conformations: i) a duplex with two mismatched A.C base pairs and ii) a hairpin with two C.G base pairs and a single stranded loop. We report molecular mechanics, normal mode analysis, and thermodynamic stability calculations for both structures. We show that the energy-minimized structure and harmonic-dynamics results are in complete agreement with the observed NOE spectrum and imino proton exchange data. We conclude that the high stability of the hairpin structure over the duplex at low salt concentration is due to the higher vibrational entropy contribution to the system free energy by the single stranded loop and to the lack of minor groove phosphate/phosphate electrostatic repulsions that tend to destabilize the duplex.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The interaction of the second and third AT-hooks of HMGA1 (formerly HMGI/Y), which bind selectively in the minor groove of an AT-rich DNA sequence, was studied at different temperatures and ionic strengths by spectropolarimetry, spectrofluorimetry, isothermal titration calorimetry and differential scanning calorimetry. The data show that binding of the ten amino acid core element of the two AT-hooks, which penetrates deep into the minor groove, is entropically driven: both the entropy and enthalpy of association of the peptides to the target DNA are positive up to 50 degrees C. The seven amino acid extension of the core in the second AT-hook, which extends out from the minor groove and loops over the phosphodiester backbone, adds a substantial negative enthalpic component into the binding of the 17 residue DBD2 peptide to DNA that corresponds in magnitude to the enthalpy of formation of two hydrogen bonds. The ionic strength dependence of the association constant allowed an estimation of the electrostatic component of binding and, by subtraction, the contribution of the non-electrostatic component, which results from dehydration of the contacting surfaces and makes up almost 70% of the total energy of complex formation. The exceptionally large positive entropy and enthalpy of association of the core AT-hook peptides with target DNA suggest that the water, which is removed from the minor groove of DNA upon binding, is in a highly ordered state. Acetylation of the lysine residue in the second AT-hook, which corresponds to Lys65 of HMGA1, has little effect on the DNA binding; so it appears that repression of the hIFNbeta gene, which follows this modification, is not a direct result of the abrogation of DNA binding.  相似文献   

20.
Krosky DJ  Schwarz FP  Stivers JT 《Biochemistry》2004,43(14):4188-4195
To efficiently maintain their genomic integrity, DNA repair glycosylases must exhibit high catalytic specificity for their cognate damaged bases using an extrahelical recognition mechanism. One possible contribution to specificity is the weak base pairing and inherent instability of damaged sites which may lead to increased extrahelicity of the damaged base and enhanced recognition of these sites. This model predicts that the binding affinity of the enzyme should increase as the thermodynamic stability of the lesion base pair decreases, because less work is required to extrude the base into its active site. We have tested this hypothesis with uracil DNA glycosylase (UDG) by constructing a series of DNA duplexes containing a single uracil (U) opposite a variety of bases (X) that formed from zero to three hydrogen bonds with U. Linear free energy (LFE) relationships were observed that correlated UDG binding affinity with the entropy and enthalpy of duplex melting, and the dynamic accessibility of the damaged site to chemical oxidation. These LFEs indicate that the increased conformational freedom of the damaged site brought about by enthalpic destabilization of the base pair promotes the formation of extrahelical states that enhance specific recognition by as much as 3000-fold. However, given the small stability differences between normal base pairs and U.A or U.G base pairs, relative base pair stability contributes little to the >10(6)-fold discrimination of UDG for uracil sites in cellular DNA. In contrast, the intrinsic instability of other more egregious DNA lesions may contribute significantly to the specificity of other DNA repair enzymes that bind to extrahelical bases.  相似文献   

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