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1.
The crystal structure of the DNA dodecamer duplex CATGGGCCCATG lies on a structural continuum along the transition between A- and B-DNA. The dodecamer possesses the normal vector plot and inclination values typical of B-DNA, but has the crystal packing, helical twist, groove width, sugar pucker, slide and x-displacement values typical of A-DNA. The structure shows highly ordered water structures, such as a double spine of water molecules against each side of the major groove, stabilizing the GC base pairs in an A-like conformation. The different hydration of GC and AT base pairs provides a physical basis for solvent-dependent facilitation of the A↔B helix transition by GC base pairs. Crystal structures of CATGGGCCCATG and other A/B-DNA intermediates support a ‘slide first, roll later’ mechanism for the B→A helix transition. In the distribution of helical parameters in protein–DNA crystal structures, GpG base steps show A-like properties, reflecting their innate predisposition for the A conformation.  相似文献   

2.
Molecular structure of an A-DNA decamer d(ACCGGCCGGT)   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The molecular structure of the DNA decamer d(ACCGGCCGGT) has been solved and refined by single-crystal X-ray-diffraction analysis at 0.20 nm to a final R-factor of 18.0%. The decamer crystallizes as an A-DNA double helical fragment with unit-cell dimensions of a = b = 3.923 nm and c = 7.80 nm in the space group P6(1)22. The overall conformation of this A-DNA decamer is very similar to that of the fiber model for A-DNA which has a large average base-pair tilt and hence a wide and shallow minor groove. This structure is in contrast to that of several A-DNA octamers in which the molecules all have low base-pair-tilt angles (8-12 degrees) resulting in an appearance intermediate between B-DNA and A-DNA. The average helical parameters of this decamer are typical of A-DNA with 10.9 base pairs/turn of helix, an average helical twist angle of 33.1 degrees, and a base-pair-tilt angle of 18.2 degrees. However, the CpG step in this molecule has a low local-twist angle of 24.5 degrees, similar to that seen in other A-DNA oligomers, and therefore appears to be an intrinsic stacking pattern for this step. The molecules pack in the crystal using a recurring binding motif, namely, the terminal base pair of one helix abuts the surface of the shallow minor groove of another helix. In addition, the GC base pairs have large propeller-twist angles, unlike those found most other A-DNA structures.  相似文献   

3.
A circular dichroism study was conducted on the solution structure of several different oligonucleotides, whose X-ray structures have been solved. It is suggested that in aqueous solution the oligonucleotides can form structures that maintain geometrical elements which are typical of B-DNA, A-DNA, and their intermediate forms. It is shown that 5'GGATGGGAG:5'CTCCCATCC, which forms an A-DNA helix in the crystal state (McCall et al. 1986), in aqueous solution maintains an A-DNA like structure at temperatures below 10 degrees C. At temperatures between 10 degrees C and 25 degrees C it shows a tendency to form an intermediate structure between A-DNA and B-DNA. Also, it is shown that TFE does not cause a transition from B-DNA to A-DNA helix in short DNA fragments, but instead disrupts the helix.  相似文献   

4.
The structure of the self-complementary octamer d(GGGATCCC) has been analysed by single crystal X-ray diffraction methods at a nominal resolution of 2.5 A. With acceptable stereochemistry of the model the crystallographic R factor was 16.6% after restrained least-squares refinement. In the crystal, d(GGGATCCC) forms an A-DNA double helix with slightly varying conformation of the two strands. The average displacement of the base pairs from the helix axis is unusually large and is accompanied by pronounced sliding of the base pairs along their long axes at all dinucleotide steps except for the central AT. With 12 base pairs per complete turn the helix is considerably underwound. As observed with most oligodeoxyribonucleotides analysed by X-ray crystallography so far, the octamer displays reduced base pair tilt, increased rise per base pair and a more open major groove compared with canonical A-DNA. We propose that, based on these parameters, three A-helical sub-families may be defined; d(GGGATCCC) then is a representative of the class with intermediate tilt, rise, and major groove width.  相似文献   

5.
All crystal structures of A-DNA duplexes exhibit a typical crystal packing, with the termini of one molecule abutting the shallow grooves of symmetry related neighbors, while all other forms (B, Z, and RNA) tend to form infinitely stacked helices. The A-DNA arrangement leads to the formation of shallow groove base multiples that have implications for the structure of DNA in compacted states. The characteristic packing leaves big solvent channels, which can be sometimes occupied by B-DNA duplexes. Comparisons of the structures of the same oligomer crystallizing in two different space groups and of different sequences crystallizing in the same space group show that the lattice forces dominate the A-DNA conformation in the crystals, complicating the effort to elucidate the influence of the base sequence on the structures. Nevertheless, in both alternating and nonalternating fragments some sequence effects can still be uncovered. Furthermore, several studies have started to define the minimal sequence changes or chemical modifications that can interconvert the oligomers between different double-helical conformers (A-, B-, and Z-form). Overall, it is seen that the rigid nucleotide principle applies to the oligomeric fragments. Besides the structures of the naked DNAs, their interactions with water, polyamines, and metal ions have attracted considerable attention. There are conserved patterns in the hydration, involving both the grooves and the backbone, which are different from those of B-DNA or Z-DNA. Overall, A-DNA seems to be more economically hydrated than B-DNA, particularly around the sugar-phosphate backbone. Spermine was found to be able to bind exclusively to either of the grooves or to the phosphate groups of the backbone, or exhibit a mixed binding mode. The located metal cations prefer binding to guanine bases and phosphate groups. The only mispairs investigated in A-DNA are the wobble pairs, yielding structural insight into their effects on helix stabilities and hydration. G · T wobble pairs have been determined in various sequence contexts, where they differentially affect the conformations and stableness of the duplexes. The structure of a G · m5C base pair, which surprisingly also adopted the wobble conformation, suggests that a similar geometry may transiently exist for G · C pairs. These results from the crystalline state will be compared to the solution state and discussed in relation to their relevance in biology. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Biopoly 44: 45–63, 1997  相似文献   

6.
Changes in the free energy of mutual phosphate group interactions are calculated that accompany bending of the A-, B- and Z-DNA backbones in 0.7, 2.1 and 4.2 mol/l NaCl aqueous solutions. The bending is often found to be favoured in the direction of the double helix grooves; B-DNA prefers bending into the major groove while minor groove is the preferred bending direction of A-DNA in the presence of 0.7 mol/l NaCl. Interestingly, the preferences are reversed in 4.2 mol/l NaCl. Further stabilization of A-DNA and B-DNA backbones is achieved in some cases if bending is combined with suitable local double helix twist alterations. Bending tendencies of Z-DNA backbone are generally weaker and they decrease, in contrast to B-DNA and A-DNA, with the increasing ionic strength.  相似文献   

7.
Normal vectors perpendicular to individual base pairs are a powerful tool for studying the bending behavior of B-DNA, both in the form of normal vector plots and in matrices that list angles between vectors for all possible base pair combinations. A new analysis program, FREEHELIX, has been written for this purpose, and applied to 86 examples of sequence-specific protein/DNA complexes whose coordinates are on deposit in the Nucleic Acid Data Base. Bends in this sample of 86 structures almost invariably follow from roll angles between adjacent base pairs; tilt makes no net contribution. Roll in a direction compressing the broad major groove is much more common than that which compresses the minor groove. Three distinct types of B-DNA bending are observed, each with a different molecular origin: (1) Localized kinking is produced by large roll at single steps or at two steps separated by one turn of helix. (2) Smooth, planar curvature is produced by positive and negative roll angles spaced a half-turn apart, with random side-to-side zigzag roll at intermediate points, rather than a tilt contribution that might have been expected theoretically. (3) Three-dimensional writhe results from significant roll angles at a continuous series of steps. Writhe need not change the overall direction of helix axis, if it is continued indefinitely or for an integral number of helical turns. A-DNA itself can be formally considered as possessing uniform, continuous writhe that yields no net helix bending. Smooth curvature is the most intricate deformation of the three, and is least common. Writhe is the simplest deformation and is most common; indeed, a low level of continuous writhe is the normal condition of an otherwise unbent B-DNA helix of general sequence. With one exception, every example of major kinking in this sample of 86 structures involves a pyrimidine–purine step: C–A/T–G, T–A, or C–G. Purine–purine steps, especially A–A, show the least tendency toward roll deformations. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Biopoly 44: 361–403, 1997  相似文献   

8.
9.
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   

10.
We have used the elementary generator matrices outlined in the preceding paper to examine the conformational plasticity of the nucleic acid double helix. Here we investigate kinked DNA structures made up of alternating B- and A-type helices and intrinsically curved duplexes perturbed by the intercalation of ligands. We model the B-to-A transition by the lateral translation of adjacent base pairs, and the intercalation of ligands by the vertical displacement of neighboring residues. We report a complete set of average configuration-dependent parameters, ranging from scalars (i.e., persistence lengths) to first- and second-order tensor parameters (i.e., average second moments of inertia), as well as approximations of the associated spatial distributions of the DNA and their angular correlations. The average structures of short chains (of lengths less than 100 base pairs) with local kinks or intrinsically curved sequences are essentially rigid rods. At the smallest chain lengths (10 base pairs), the kinked and curved chains exhibit similar average properties, although they are structurally perturbed compared to the standard B-DNA duplex. In contrast, at lengths of 200 base pairs, the curved and kinked chains are more compact on average and are located in a different space from the standard B- or A-DNA helix. While A-DNA is shorter and thicker than B-DNA in x-ray models, the long flexible A-DNA helix is thinner and more extended on average than its B-DNA counterpart because of more limited fluctuations in local structure. Curved polymers of 50 base pairs or longer also show significantly greater asymmetry than other DNAs (in terms of the distribution of base pairs with respect to the center of gravity of the chain). The intercalation of drugs in the curved DNA straightens and extends the smoothly deformed template. The dimensions of the average ellipsoidal boundaries defining the configurations of the intercalated polymers are roughly double those of the intrinsically curved chain. The altered proportions and orientations of these density functions reflect the changing shape and flexibility of the double helix. The calculations shed new light on the possible structural role of short A-DNA fragments in long B-type duplexes and also offer a model for understanding how GC-specific intercalative ligands can straighten naturally curved DNA. The mechanism is not immediately obvious from current models of DNA curvature, which attribute the bending of the chain to a perturbed structure in repeating tracts of A · T base pairs. © 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
The crystal structure of the self-complementary chimeric decamer duplex r(C)d(CGGCGCCG)r(G), with RNA base pairs at both termini, has been solved at 1.9 A resolution by the molecular replacement method and refined to an R value of 0.145 for 2,314 reflections. The C3'-endo sugar puckers of the terminal riboses apparently drive the entire chimeric duplex into an A-DNA conformation, in contrast to the B-DNA conformation adopted by the all-deoxy decamer of the same sequence. Five symmetry related duplexes encapsulate a spermine molecule which interacts with ten phosphate groups, both directly and through water molecules to form multiple ionic and hydrogen bonding interactions. The spermine interaction severely bends the duplexes by 31 degrees into the major groove at the fourth base pair G(4).C(17), jolts it and slides the 'base plate' into the minor groove. This base pair, together with the adjacent base pair in the top half and the corresponding pseudo two-fold related base pairs in the bottom half, form four minor groove base-paired multiples with the terminal base pairs of two neighboring duplexes.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
The minor groove of undistorted A-DNA provides a good binding site for planar, hydrophobic moieties such as unmetabolized polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and the base pairs at the ends of short oligodeoxynucleotide helices. It also accommodates the chief adduct derived from the metabolically activated form of the carcinogen benzo[a]pyrene. B-DNA lacks such a site. Computerized models have been generated for the major (N2-guanine-linked) adducts formed at this site by both + and - enantiomers of anti-benzo[a]pyrene-7,8-dihydrodiol-9,10-epoxide (anti-BPDE) with poly(dG).poly(dC) in the A-DNA conformation. The BPDE adducts lie in the shallow, relatively hydrophobic minor groove of the A-DNA after empirical potential energy minimization using the program AMBER. We term this binding mode "side-stacking." The side-stacked + anti-BPDE may constitute the chief carcinogenic lesion derived from benzo[a]pyrene.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of spermine on the A-DNA to B-DNA transition in d(CGCGAATTCGCG)(2) has been investigated by five A-start molecular dynamics simulations, using the Cornell et al. potential. In the absence of spermine an A-->B transition is initiated immediately and the DNA becomes equidistant from the A- and B-forms at 200ps. In three DNA-spermine simulations, when a spermine is located across the major groove of A-DNA in one of three different initial locations, the time taken to reach equidistance from the A- and B-forms is delayed until 800, 950 or 1000ps. In each case the A-form appears to be temporarily stabilized by spermine's electrostatic interactions with phosphates on both sides of the major groove. The onset of the A-->B transition can be correlated with the spermine losing contact with phosphates on one side of the groove and with A-like --> B-like sugar pucker transitions in the vicinity of the spermine bridge. However in the fifth trajectory, in which the spermine initially threads from the major groove via the backbone into the minor groove, the B-->A transition occurs rapidly once again and the DNA is equidistant between the A- and B-forms within 300ps. This indicates that the mere presence of spermine is insufficient to delay the transition and that major groove binding stabilizes A-DNA.  相似文献   

16.
Sequence-dependent bending of DNA and phasing of nucleosomes   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Conformational analysis has revealed anisotropic flexibility of the B-DNA double helix: it bends most easily into the grooves, being the most rigid when bent in a perpendicular direction. This result implies that DNA in a nucleosome is curved by means of relatively sharp bends ("mini-kinks") which are directed into the major and minor grooves alternatively and separated by 5-6 base pairs. The "mini-kink" model proved to be in keeping with the x-ray structure of the B-DNA dodecamer resolved later, which exhibits two "annealed kinks", also directed into the grooves. The anisotropy of B DNA is sequence-dependent: the pyrimidine-purine dimers (YR) favor bending into the minor groove, and the purine-pyrimidine dinucleotides (RY), into the minor one. The RR and YY dimers appear to be the most rigid dinucleotides. Thus, a DNA fragment consisting of the interchanging oligopurine and oligopyrimidine blocks 5-6 base pairs long should manifest a spectacular curvature in solution. Similarly, a nucleotide sequence containing the RY and YR dimers separated by a half-pitch of the double helix is the most suitable for wrapping around the nucleosomal core. Analysis of the numerous examples demonstrating the specific alignment of nucleosomes on DNA confirms this concept. So, the sequence-dependent "mechanical" properties of the double helix influence the spatial arrangement of DNA in chromatin.  相似文献   

17.
Three empirical potentials of the Lennard-Jones type taken from literature were used to calculate van der Waals contributions to the base-pair couples stacking energies in B-DNA and A-DNA type double helical conformations. The information obtained can be summarized as follows: (1) Purine-pyrimidine and purine-purine (pyrimidine-pyrimidine in the complementary strand) sequences preferred right-handed helical arrangement, whereas pyrimidine-purine sequences favoured left-handed (C-G) or unwound (T-A) stacking geometry; in the latter case this only held for B- but not A-DNA (the C-G sequence was not studied in A-DNA owing to difficulties (see below) with the G amino group in B-DNA); (2) Positive propeller twist of base-pairs was stable in both B- and A-DNA; the thymine methyl group promoted the propeller and this effect was strongest in the A-T step; (3) Tilt of base pairs occurred around zero in B-DNA and between 15-20 degrees C in A-DNA, in agreement with the experimental observations; (4) Vertical separation of base pairs was optimal within 0.33-0.34 nm for B-DNA and around 0.29 nm for A-DNA using the 9-6 potential. The 12-6 potential gave similar results with B-DNA as the 9-6 potential if, however, base pairs were separated by 0.35-0.36 nm; (5) The calculated effect of the guanine amino group was substantially stronger than expected on the basis of data derived from X-ray diffraction studies of oligonucleotide single crystals; (6) In comparison with the 9-6 potential, the 12-6 potential provided more strict energy minima. In summary, the empirical potentials reproduce, at least semiquantitatively, many but not all DNA properties; this should be taken into account whenever the potentials are used for prediction purposes.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The solution structure of the self-complementary dodecamer 5'd(CGCGPATTCGCG)2, containing a purine-thymine base pair within the hexameric canonical recognition site GAATTC for the restriction endonuclease EcoRI, is investigated by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and restrained molecular dynamics. Nonexchangeable and exchangeable protons are assigned in a sequential manner. A set of 228 approximate interproton distance restraints are derived from two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectra recorded at short mixing times. These distances are used as the basis for refinement using restrained molecular dynamics in which the interproton distance restraints are incorporated into the total energy function of the system in the form of effective potentials. Eight calculations are carried out, four starting from classical A-DNA and four from classical B-DNA. In all cases convergence to very similar B-type structures is achieved with an average atomic root mean square (rms) difference between the eight converged structures of 0.7 +/- 0.2 A, compared to a value of 6.5 A for that between the two starting structures. It is shown that the introduction of the purine-thymine mismatch does not result in any significant distortion of the structure. The variations in the helical parameters display a clear sequence dependence. The variation in helix twist and propeller twist follows Calladine's rules and can be attributed to the relief of interstrand purine-purine clash at adjacent base pairs. Overall the structure is straight. Closer examination, however, reveals that the central 5 base pair steps describe a smooth bend directed toward the major groove with a radius of curvature of approximately 38 A, which is compensated by two smaller kinks in the direction of the minor groove at base pair steps 3 and 9. These features can be explained in terms of the observed variation in roll and slide.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract

The effect of spermine on the A-DNA to B-DNA transition in d(CGCGAATTCGCG)2 has been investigated by five A-start molecular dynamics simulations, using the Cornell et al. potential. In the absence of spermine an A→B transition is initiated immediately and the DNA becomes equidistant from the A- and B-forms at 200ps. In three DNA-spermine simulations, when a spermine is located across the major groove of A-DNA in one of three different initial locations, the time taken to reach equidistance from the A- and B-forms is delayed until 800, 950 or 1000ps. In each case the A-form appears to be temporarily stabilized by spermine's electrostatic interactions with phosphates on both sides of the major groove. The onset of the A→B transition can be correlated with the spermine losing contact with phosphates on one side of the groove and with A-like → B-like sugar pucker transitions in the vicinity of the spermine bridge. However in the fifth trajectory, in which the spermine initially threads from the major groove via the backbone into the minor groove, the B→A transition occurs rapidly once again and the DNA is equidistant between the A- and B-forms within 300ps. This indicates that the mere presence of spermine is insufficient to delay the transition and that major groove binding stabilizes A-DNA.  相似文献   

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