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1.
The addition of reducing agents, i.e., ascorbic acid or sodium borohydride, to a DNA solution containing Cu2+ ions causes changes in the DNA absorption spectra which are due to a new absorption band with a maximum at 280 mμ assigned to a DNA base–Cu1+ complex. The stoichiometry of the complex is one Cu1+ ion per four bases of DNA. The DNA–Cu1+ complex has an increased melting temperature and rather different circular dichroism curve as compared with DNA itself. It is inferred that the above effects are caused by proton transfer along the hydrogen bond from guanine to cytosine under complexing of Cu1+ ions with the N7 atom of the guanine of DNA.  相似文献   

2.
Collective motion in DNA and its role in drug intercalation   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
K C Chou  B Mao 《Biopolymers》1988,27(11):1795-1815
The effects of collective motion in DNA as reflected by resonance coupling among its intact segments have been discussed for both linear and circular DNA molecules. The results indicate that due to the effects of this kind of internal collective motion, the energy will be at times highly concentrated at some spots. As a result of the overfocus of energy, the stress built up along the direction of hydrogen bonds between complementary base pairs will be dramatically increased, rupturing a series of consecutive hydrogen bonds simultaneously and resulting in a suddenly free jerk, such that the DNA molecule will undergo a local “quake.” The “hole” formed by this kind of quake-like motion will be large enough for bulky drugs to gain entrance and intercalate into DNA. Even for smaller drugs, this local quake-like motion can also provide a significant mode of entry for intercalation. Energy minimizations carried out for DNA–drug complexes indicate that, for most drugs, a distortion or disruption of 2 to 4 base pairs occurs at the intercalation site in DNA molecules.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract

We have performed a conformational analysis of DNA double helices with parallel directed backbone strands connected with the second order symmetry axis being at the same time the helix axis. The calculations were made for homopolymers poly(dA) · poly(dA), poly(dC) · poly(dC), poly(dG) poly(dG), and poly(dT) · poly(dT). All possible variants of hydrogen bonding of base pairs of the same name were studied for each polymer. The maps of backbone chain geometrical existence were constructed. Conformational and helical parameters corresponding to local minima of conformational energy of “parallel” DNA helices, calculated at atom-atom approximation, were determined. The dependence of conformational energy on the base pair and on the hydrogen bond type was analysed. Two major conformational advantageous for “parallel” DNA's do not depend much on the hydrogen-bonded base pair type were indicated. One of them coincided with the conformational region typical for “antiparallel” DNA in particular for the B-form DNA Conformational energy of “parallel” DNA depends on the base pair type and for the most part is similar to the conformational energy of “antiparallel” B-DNA.  相似文献   

4.
The crystal structure of 5-nitrouridine was determined by X-ray analysis. The pyrimidine ring is slightly non-planar, showing a shallow boat conformation. The nitro group has no influence on the C4 - O4 bond length as compared to uridine. The ribose shows the C3'-endo conformation and the base is in the anti orientation to the sugar with a torsion angle of 25.6 degrees. This conformation is stabilized by a hydrogen bond from the base to the ribosyl moiety (H6 ... 05'). Stacking interactions between neighboring bases are almost negligible in the crystal. A water molecule is involved in a bifurcated donating hydrogen bond to 04 and to 052 of the nitro group of the one base and an accepting bond from the H3 of the other base. Two more hydrogen bonds are formed between the water molecule and the ribose. The structural aspects of 5-nitrouridine are discussed with respect to the special stacking features found for 5-nitro-1-(beta-D-ribosyluronic acid)-uracil monohydrate in the crystal (1).  相似文献   

5.
Abstract

DNA interstrand cross-links are usually formed due to bidentate covalent or coordination binding of a cross-linking agent to nucleotides of different strands. However interstrand linkages can be also caused by any type of chemical modification that gives rise to a strong local stabilization of the double helix. These stabilized sites conserve their helical structure and prevent local and total strand separation at temperatures above the melting of ordinary AT and GC base pairs. This local stabilization makes DNA melting fully reversible and independent of strand concentration like ordinary covalent interstrand cross-links. The stabilization can be caused by all the types of chemical modifications (interstrand cross-links, intrastrand cross-links or monofunctional adducts) if they give rise to a strong enough local stabilization of the double helix. Our calculation demonstrates that an increase in stability by 25 to 30 kcal in the free energy of a single base pair of the double helix is sufficient for this “cross-linking effect” (i.e. conserving the helicity of this base pair and preventing strand separation after melting of ordinary base pairs). For the situation where there is more then one stabilized site in a DNA duplex (e.g., 1 stabilized site per 1000 bp), a lower stabilization per site is sufficient for the “cross-linking effect” (18–20 kcal). A substantial increase in DNA stability was found in various experimental studies for some metal-based anti-tumor compounds. These compounds may give rise to the effect described above. If ligand induced stabilization is distributed among several neighboring base pairs, a much lower minimum increase per stabilized base pair is sufficient to produce the cross-linking effect (1 bp- 24.4 kcal; 5 bp- 5.3 kcal; 10 bp- 2.9 kcal, 25 bp- 1.4 kcal; 50 bp- 1.0 kcal). The relatively weak non-covalent binding of histones or protamines that cover long regions of DNA (20–40 bp) can also cause this effect if the salt concentration of the solution is sufficiently low to cause strong local stabilization of the double helix. Stretches of GC pairs more than 25 bp in length inserted into poly(AT) DNA also exhibit properties of stabilizing interstrand cross-links.  相似文献   

6.
Graham Watson 《Ethnos》2013,78(1-2):23-30
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7.
Rapid electroelution of nucleic acids from agarose and acrylamide gels   总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19  
The alkaline/filter DNA elution technique measures single-strand DNA breaks in mammalian cells based on the DNA molecular weight dependent retention of the macromolecule on 2-μm-pore-size filters. Described here is a modification of the technique which uses [3H]thymidine-labeled DNA of γ-irradiated cells as an internal reference. Thus, an increased precision is obtained in the assessment of this type of DNA damage at biologically significant radiation doses (i.e., where cell survival occurs). The measure of DNA damage is based on the actual initial DNA elution rate, i.e., arithmetic ratio of the elution of “test” DNA (i.e., 14C-labeled DNA) relative to the elution of “reference” DNA (i.e., 3H-labeled DNA). The repair of this damage on postirradiation incubation of the cells is detected as a decrease in the rate of “test” DNA cluted relative to “reference” DNA from unincubated cells. For Chinese hamster V79–171 cells irradiated with 5 Gy (500 rads), repair can be resolved into two first-order processes having rate constants (at 24°C) of ~0.190 and ~0.017 min?1.  相似文献   

8.
The crystal structure of N-(purin-6-ylcarbamoyl)-L-threonine riboside was determined from three-dimensional x-ray diffraction data. The N6-substituent is distal (trans) to the imidazole ring, leading to a bifurcated hydrogen interaction involving two intramolecular contacts with the hydrogen on N(threonine): a hydrogen bond to N(1) of adenine and a close contact to the hydroxyl oxygen of threonine. The conformation of the molecule and the internal hydrogen bond completely block the two sites N6-H and N1 of adenine from taking part in the Watson-Crick base pairing. This inability to base pair according to the Watson-Crick scheme appears as a common structural feature in all modified bases adjacent to the 3′-end of anticodons. These results, along with Crick's hypothesis for codon recognition, suggest that the hypermodified bases adjacent to the anticodons may be important in (i) preventing the misreading of the codons by bases adjacent to anticodons and (ii) promoting a single stranded conformation for the anticodon loops.  相似文献   

9.
The pyrrolobenzodiazepine (PBD) and duocarmycin families are DNA-interactive agents that covalently bond to guanine (G) and adenine (A) bases, respectively, and that have been joined together to create synthetic dimers capable of cross-linking G–G, A–A, and G–A bases. Three G–A alkylating dimers have been reported in publications to date, with defined DNA-binding sites proposed for two of them. In this study we have used molecular dynamics simulations to elucidate preferred DNA-binding sites for the three published molecular types. For the PBD–CPI dimer UTA-6026 (1), our simulations correctly predicted its favoured binding site (i.e., 5′-C(G)AATTA-3′) as identified by DNA cleavage studies. However, for the PBD–CI molecule (‘Compound 11’, 3), we were unable to reconcile the results of our simulations with the reported preferred cross-linking sequence (5′-ATTTTCC(G)-3′). We found that the molecule is too short to span the five base pairs between the A and G bases as claimed, but should target instead a sequence such as 5′-ATTTC(G)-3′ with two less base pairs between the reacting G and A residues. Our simulation results for this hybrid dimer are also in accord with the very low interstrand cross-linking and in vitro cytotoxicity activities reported for it. Although a preferred cross-linking sequence was not reported for the third hybrid dimer (‘27eS’, 2), our simulations predict that it should span two base pairs between covalently reacting G and A bases (e.g., 5′-GTAT(A)-3′).  相似文献   

10.
Abstract

Supercoiled pEJ4 DNA (a derivative of pUC19 containing an insert with 60-bp-long homopurine · homopyrimidine tract from the sea urchin P. miliaris histone gene spacer) was investigated by electron microscopy using three different spreading techniques i.e., formamide and aqueous variants of the Kleinschmidt technique and protein-free benzyldimethyl-alkyl ammonium chloride (BAC) technique at different pHs. If the specimens for electron microscopy were prepared at pH 5.6 and pH 4.0 (i.e., under conditions where the homopurine · homopyridine tract assumes an unusual conformation) a single thick “stem” or a “denaturation bubble” in a large number of DNA molecules were observed. No such changes were found in samples prepared at neutral pH and in linearized pEJ4 DNA prepared at pH 5.6. In specimens of a control supercoiled pUC 19 DNA prepared at pH 5.6 and 4.0 practically no local changes were detected. The “denaturation bubbles” were observed by BAC techniques (probably due to secondary local DNA denaturation during the specimen preparation) while the more gentle formamide technique revealed only “stems”. The “stems” were almost always positioned at the sites where the curvature of supercoiled DNA molecules occurred. The results are in agreement with presence of a protonated triplex H-form in homopurine · homopyrimidine tract bringing the first evidence of curvature or kinking of the DNA molecule connected with the occurrence of the H-form in supercoiled DNA.  相似文献   

11.
Moore CL  Zivkovic A  Engels JW  Kuchta RD 《Biochemistry》2004,43(38):12367-12374
Human DNA primase synthesizes short RNA primers that DNA polymerase alpha further elongates. Primase readily misincorporates the natural NTPs and will generate a wide variety of mismatches. In contrast, primase exhibited a remarkable resistance to polymerizing NTPs containing unnatural bases. This included bases whose shape was almost identical to the natural bases (4-aminobenzimidazole and 4,6-difluorobenzimidazole), bases shaped very differently than a natural base [e.g., 5- and 6-(trifluoromethyl)benzimidazole], bases much more hydrophobic than a natural base [e.g., 4- and 7-(trifluoromethyl)benzimidazole], bases of similar hydrophobicity as a natural base but with the Watson-Crick hydrogen-bonding groups in unusual positions (7-beta-D-guanine), and bases capable of forming only one Watson-Crick hydrogen bond with the template base (purine and 4-aminobenzimidazole). Primase only polymerized NTP analogues containing bases capable of forming hydrogen bonds between the equivalent of both N-1 and the exocyclic group at C-6 of a purine NTP (2-fluoroadenine, 2-chloroadenine, 3-deazaadenine, and hypoxanthine) and N-3 and the exocyclic group at C-4 of a pyrimidine. These data indicate that human primase requires the formation of Watson-Crick hydrogen bonds in order to polymerize a NTP, a situation very different than what is observed with some DNA polymerases. The implications of these results with respect to current theories of how polymerases discriminate between right and wrong (d)NTPs are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Starting from the structure of ice (in which each water molecule is surrounded by other four water molecules forming a tetrahedron with a value of 4.51 Å for the edge O–O distance), and the knowledge that this value also corresponds to the O7–O12 distance of the skeleton of cholic acid, it is hypothesized that two steroid cholic acid moieties, with an appropriate steroid–steroid distance and a belly-to-belly orientation, could encapsulate a single water molecule between them. To check this hypothesis two succinyl derivatives of cholic acid (a monomer and the related head–head dimer in which the succinyl group is the linking bridge) were designed. The expected “ice-like” structure is found in the crystal of the dimer. There is a hydrogen bond synergy between those participating in the “ice-like” structure, and those in which the bridge is involved with the O7–H hydroxy group and the side chain of the steroid.  相似文献   

13.
The three-dimensional solution structure of a DNA molecule of the sequence 5'-d(GCATCGAAAAAGCTACG)-3' paired with 5'-d(CGTAGCCGATGC)-3' containing a five-adenine bulge loop (dA(5)-bulge) between two double helical stems was determined by 2D (1)H and (31)P NMR, infrared, and Raman spectroscopy. The DNA in both stems adopt a classical B-form double helical structure with Watson-Crick base pairing and C2'-endo sugar conformation. In addition, the two dG/dC base pairs framing the dA(5)-bulge loop are formed and are stable at least up to 30 degrees C. The five adenine bases of the bulge loop are localized at intrahelical positions within the double helical stems. Stacking on the double helical stem is continued for the first four 5'-adenines in the bulge loop. The total rise (the height) of these four stacked adenines roughly equals the diameter of the double helical stem. The stacking interactions are broken between the last of these four 5'-adenines and the fifth loop adenine at the 3'-end. This 3'-adenine partially stacks on the other stem. The angle between the base planes of the two nonstacking adenines (A10 and A11) in the bulge loop reflects the kinking angle of the global DNA structure. The neighboring cytosines opposite the dA(5)-bulge (being parts of the bulge flanking base pairs) do not stack on one another. This disruption of stacking is characterized by a partial shearing of these bases, such that certain sequential NOEs for this base step are preserved. In the base step opposite the loop, an extraordinary hydrogen bond is observed between the phosphate backbone of the 5'-dC and the amino proton of the 3'-dC in about two-thirds of the conformers. This hydrogen bond probably contributes to stabilizing the global DNA structure. The dA(5)-bulge induces a local kink into the DNA molecule of about 73 degrees (+/-11 degrees ). This kinking angle and the mutual orientation of the two double helical stems agree well with results from fluorescence resonance energy transfer measurements of single- and double-bulge DNA molecules.  相似文献   

14.
The crystal structure of a mutant ribonuclease T1 (Y45W) complexed with a non-cognizable ribonucleotide, 2'AMP, has been determined and refined to an R-factor of 0.159 using X-ray diffraction data at 1.7 A resolution. A specific complex of the enzyme with 2'GMP was also determined and refined to an R-factor of 0.173 at 1.9 A resolution. The adenine base of 2'AMP was found at a base-binding site that is far apart from the guanine recognition site, where the guanine base of 2'GMP binds. The binding of the adenine base is mediated by a single hydrogen bond and stacking interaction of the base with the imidazole ring of His92. The mode of stacking of the adenine base with His92 is similar to the stacking of the guanine base observed in complexes of ribonuclease T1 with guanylyl-2',5'-guanosine, reported by Koepke et al., and two guanosine bases, reported by Lenz et al., and in the complex of barnase with d(GpC), reported by Baudet & Janin. These observations suggest that the site is non-specific for base binding. The phosphate group of 2'AMP is tightly locked at the catalytic site with seven hydrogen bonds to the enzyme in a similar manner to that of 2'GMP. In addition, two hydrogen bonds are formed between the sugar moiety of 2'AMP and the enzyme. The 2'AMP molecule adopts the anti conformation of the glycosidic bond and C-3'-exo sugar pucker, whereas 2'GMP is in the syn conformation with C-3'-endo-C'-2'-exo pucker. The mutation enhances the binding of 2'GMP with conformational changes of the sugar ring and displacement of the phosphate group towards the interior of the catalytic site from the corresponding position in the wild-type enzyme complex. Comparison of two crystal structures obtained provides a solution to the problem that non-cognizable nucleotides exhibit unexpectedly strong binding to the enzyme, compared with high specificity in nucleolytic activity. The results indicate that the discrimination of the guanine base from the other nucleotide bases at the guanine recognition site is more effective than that estimated from nucleotide-binding experiments so far.  相似文献   

15.
We utilized NTP analogues containing modified bases to probe the mechanism of NTP selection by the primase activity of the herpes simplex virus 1 helicase-primase complex. Primase readily bound NTP analogues of varying base shape, hydrophobicity, and hydrogen-bonding capacity. Remarkably, primase strongly discriminated against incorporating virtually all of the analogues, even though this enzyme misincorporates natural NTPs at frequencies as high as 1 in 7. This included analogues with bases much more hydrophobic than a natural base (e.g., 4- and 7-trifluoromethylbenzimidazole), a base of similar hydrophobicity as a natural base but with the Watson-Crick hydrogen-bonding groups in unusual positions (7-beta-d-guanine), bases shaped almost identically to the natural bases (4-aminobenzimidazole and 4,6-difluorobenzimidazole), bases shaped very differently than a natural base (e.g., 5- and 6-trifluoromethylbenzimidazole), and bases capable of forming just one Watson-Crick hydrogen bond with the template base (purine and 4-aminobenzimidazole). The only analogues that primase readily polymerized into primers (ITP and 3-deaza-ATP) were those capable of forming Watson-Crick hydrogen bonds with the template base. Thus, herpes primase appears to require the formation of Watson-Crick hydrogen bonds in order to efficiently polymerize a NTP. In contrast to primase's narrow specificity for NTP analogues, the DNA-dependent NTPase activity associated with the herpes primase-helicase complex exhibited very little specificity with respect to NTPs containing unnatural bases. The implications of these results with respect to the mechanism of the helicase-primase and current fidelity models are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract

New simple atom-atom potential functions for simulating behavior of nucleic acids and their fragments in aqueous solutions are suggested. These functions contain terms which are inversely proportional to the first (electrostatics), sixth (or tenth for the atoms, forming hydrogen bonds) and twelfth (repulsion of all the atoms) powers of interatomic distance. For the refinement of the potential function parameters calculations of ice lattice energy, potential energy and configuration of small clusters consisting of water and nucleic acid base molecules as well as Monte Carlo simulation of liquid water were performed. Calculations using new potential functions give rise to more linear hydrogen bonds between water and base molecules than using other potentials. Sites of preferential hydration of five nucleic bases—uracil, thymine, cytosine, guanine and adenine as well as of 6,6,9-trimethyladenine were found. In the most energetically favourable sites water molecule interacts with two adjacent hydrophilic centres of the base. Studies of interaction of the bases with several water molecules showed that water-water interaction play an important role in the arrangement of the nearest to the base water molecules. Hydrophilic centres are connected by “bridges” formed by hydrogen bonded water molecules. The results obtained are consistent with crystallographic and mass-spectrometric data.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract

Energy of interaction between nitrogen bases of nucleic acids has been calculated as a function of parameters determining the mutual position of two bases. Refined atom-atom potential functions are suggested. These functions contain terms proportional to the first (electrostatics), sixth (or tenth for the atoms forming a hydrogen bond) and twelfth (repulsion of all atoms) powers of interatomic distance. Calculations have shown that there are two groups of minima of the base interaction energy. The minima of the first group correspond to coplanar arrangement of the base pairs and hydrogen bond formation. The minima of the second group correspond to the position of bases one above the other in almost parallel planes. There are 28 energy minima corresponding to the formation of coplanar pairs with two (three for the G:C pair) almost linear N-H … O and (or) N-H … N hydrogen bonds. The position of nitrogen bases paired by two such H-bonds in any crystal of nucleic acid component, in polynucleotide complexes and in tRNA is close to the position in one of these minima. Besides, for each pair there are energy minima corresponding to the formation of a single N-H … O or N-H … N and one C-H … O or C-H … N hydrogen bond. The form of potential surface in the vicinity of minima has been characterized. The results of calculations agree with the experimental data and with more rigorous calculations based on quantum- mechanical approach.  相似文献   

18.
Human alkyladenine glycosylase (AAG) and Escherichia coli 3-methyladenine glycosylase (AlkA) are base excision repair glycosylases that recognize and excise a variety of alkylated bases from DNA. The crystal structures of these enzymes have provided insight into their substrate specificity and mechanisms of catalysis. Both enzymes utilize DNA bending and base-flipping mechanisms to expose and bind substrate bases. Crystal structures of AAG complexed to DNA suggest that the enzyme selects substrate bases through a combination of hydrogen bonding and the steric constraints of the active site, and that the enzyme activates a water molecule for an in-line backside attack of the N-glycosylic bond. In contrast to AAG, the structure of the AlkA-DNA complex suggests that AlkA substrate recognition and catalytic specificity are intimately integrated in a S(N)1 type mechanism in which the catalytic Asp238 directly promotes the release of modified bases.  相似文献   

19.
Citrate synthase forms citrate by deprotonation of acetyl-CoA followed by nucleophilic attack of this substrate on oxaloacetate, and subsequent hydrolysis. The rapid reaction rate is puzzling because of the instability of the postulated nucleophilic intermediate, the enolate of acetyl-CoA. As alternatives, the enol of acetyl-CoA, or an enolic intermediate sharing a proton with His-274 in a “low-barrier” hydrogen bond have been suggested. Similar problems of intermediate instability have been noted in other enzymic carbon acid deprotonation reactions. Quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical calculations of the pathway of acetyl-CoA enolization within citrate synthase support the identification of Asp-375 as the catalytic base. His-274, the proposed general acid, is found to be neutral. The acetyl-CoA enolate is more stable at the active site than the enol, and is stabilized by hydrogen bonds from His-274 and a water molecule. The conditions for formation of a low-barrier hydrogen bond do not appear to be met, and the calculated hydrogen bond stabilization in the reaction is less than the gas-phase energy, due to interactions with Asp-375 at the active site. The enolate character of the intermediate is apparently necessary for the condensation reaction to proceed efficiently. Proteins 27:9–25 © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
We have refined a series of isomorphous crystal structures of the Escherichia coli DNA mismatch repair enzyme MutS in complex with G:T, A:A, C:A and G:G mismatches and also with a single unpaired thymidine. In all these structures, the DNA is kinked by ~60° upon protein binding. Two residues widely conserved in the MutS family are involved in mismatch recognition. The phenylalanine, Phe 36, is seen stacking on one of the mismatched bases. The same base is also seen forming a hydrogen bond to the glutamate Glu 38. This hydrogen bond involves the N7 if the base stacking on Phe 36 is a purine and the N3 if it is a pyrimidine (thymine). Thus, MutS uses a common binding mode to recognize a wide range of mismatches.  相似文献   

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