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1.
Structural features at extra thymidine bulge sites in DNA duplexes have been elucidated from a two-dimensional NMR analysis of through-bond and through-space connectivities in the otherwise self-complementary d(C-C-G-T-G-A-A-T-T-C-C-G-G) (GTG 13-mer) and d(C-C-G-G-A-A-T-T-C-T-C-G-G) (CTC 13-mer) duplexes in aqueous solution. These studies establish that the extra thymidine flanked by guanosines in the GTG 13-mer duplex is in a conformational equilibrium between looped out and stacked states. The looped-out state is favored at low temperature (0 degrees C), whereas the equilibrium shifts in favor of the stacked state at elevated temperatures (35 degrees C) prior to the onset of the duplex-strand transition. By contrast, the extra thymidine flanked by cytidines in the CTC 13-mer duplex is looped out independent of temperature in the duplex state. Our results demonstrate that temperature and flanking sequence modulate the equilibrium between looped-out and stacked conformations of single base thymidine bulges in DNA oligomer duplexes.  相似文献   

2.
High-resolution homonuclear and heteronuclear two-dimensional NMR studies have been carried out on the self-complementary d(C-C-G-C-G-A-A-T-T-C-C-G-G) duplex (designated GCG 13-mer) in aqueous solution. This sequence contains an extra cytidine located between residues G3 and G4 on each strand of the duplex. The exchangeable and nonexchangeable proton resonances have been assigned from an analysis of two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOESY) and correlated (COSY and relay COSY) spectra for the GCG 13-mer duplex in H2O and D2O solution. The extra cytidine at the bulge site (designated CX) results in more pronounced changes in the NOE distance connectivities for the G3-CX-G4 segment centered about the CX residue compared to the C9-C10 segment on the partner strand opposite the CX residue for the GCG 13-mer duplex at 25 degrees C. The cross-peak intensities in the short mixing time NOESY spectrum also establish that all glycosidic torsion angles including that of CX are anti in the GCG 13-mer duplex at 25 degrees C. The observed chemical shift changes for the CX base protons and the G3pCX phosphorus resonance with temperature between 0 and 40 degrees C demonstrate a temperature-dependent conformational equilibrium in the premelting transition region. The NOE and chemical shift parameters establish that the predominant conformation at low temperature (0 degree C) has the extra cytidine looped out of the helix with the flanking G3.C10 and G4.C9 base pairs stacked on each other. These results support conclusions based on earlier one-dimensional NMR studies of extra cytidine containing complementary duplexes in aqueous solution [Morden, K. M., Chu, Y. G., Martin, F. H., & Tinoco, I., Jr. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 5557-5563. Woodson, S. A., & Crothers, D. M. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 904-912]. By contrast, the chemical shift and NOE parameters demonstrate that the conformational equilibrium shifts toward a structure with a stacked extra cytidine on raising the temperature to 40 degrees C prior to the helix-coil melting transition. The most downfield shifted phosphorus resonance in the GCG 13-mer duplex has been assigned to the phosphate in the C2-G3 step, and this observation demonstrates that the perturbation in the phosphodiester backbone extends to regions removed from the (G3-CX-G4).(C9-C10) bulge site.  相似文献   

3.
Proton and phosphorus NMR studies are reported for two complementary nonanucleotide duplexes containing acyclic abasic sites. The first duplex, d(C-A-T-G-A-G-T-A-C).d(G-T-A-C-P-C-A-T-G), contains an acyclic propanyl moiety, P, located opposite a deoxyadenosine at the center of the helix (designated APP 9-mer duplex). The second duplex, d(C-A-T-G-A-G-T-A-C).d(G-T-A-C-E-C-A-T-G), contains a similarly located acyclic ethanyl moiety, E (designated APE 9-mer duplex). The ethanyl moiety is one carbon shorter than the natural carbon-phosphodiester backbone of a single nucleotide unit of DNA. The majority of the exchangeable and nonexchangeable base and sugar protons in both the APP 9-mer and APE 9-mer duplexes, including those at the abasic site, have been assigned by recording and analyzing two-dimensional phase-sensitive NOESY data sets in H2O and D2O solution between -5 and 5 degrees C. These spectroscopic observations establish that A5 inserts into the helix opposite the abasic site (P14 and E14) and stacks between the flanking G4.C15 and G6.C13 Watson-Crick base pairs in both the APP 9-mer and APE 9-mer duplexes. The helix is right-handed at and adjacent to the abasic site, and all glycosidic torsion angles are anti in both 9-mer duplexes. Proton NMR parameters for the APP 9-mer and APE 9-mer duplexes are similar to those reported previously for the APF 9-mer duplex (F = furan) in which a cyclic analogue of deoxyribose was embedded in an otherwise identical DNA sequence [Kalnik, M. W., Chang, C. N., Grollman, A. P., & Patel, D. J. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 924-931]. These proton NMR experiments demonstrate that the structures at abasic sites are very similar whether the five-membered ring is open or closed or whether the phosphodiester backbone is shortened by one carbon atom. Phosphorus spectra of the APP 9-mer and APE 9-mer duplexes (5 degrees C) indicate that the backbone conformation is similarly perturbed at three phosphodiester backbone torsion angles. These same torsion angles are also distorted in the APF 9-mer but assume a different conformation than those in the APP 9-mer and APE 9-mer duplexes.  相似文献   

4.
A series of bulge-containing and normal double-helical synthetic oligodeoxyribonucleotides, of sequence corresponding to a frame-shift mutational hot spot in the lambda C1 gene, are compared by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 500 MHz. The imino proton resonances of d(GATGGGCAG).d(CTGCCCCATC), d(GATGGGCAG).d(CTGCCCCATC), and d(GATGGGCAG).d(CTGACCCATC) are assigned by one-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy. Nonselective T1 inversion-recovery experiments are used to determine exchangeable proton lifetimes and to compare helix stability and dynamics of the three duplexes. An extra adenosine flanking the internal G.C base pairs has a strongly localized effect on helix stability, but the destabilizing effect of an extra cytidine in a C tract is delocalized over the entire G.C run. These data lead to the conclusion that the position of the bulge migrates along the run in the fast-exchange limit on the NMR time scale. Rapid migration of the bulge defect in homopolymeric sequences may help rationalize both frame-shift mutagenesis and translational frame shifting. We estimate that the unfavorable free energy of a localized bulge defect is 2.9-3.2 kcal/mol, in good agreement with earlier estimates for RNA helices.  相似文献   

5.
Two-dimensional proton NMR studies were undertaken on the d(C-G-A-G-A-A-T-T-C-C-C-G) duplex (designated A.C 12-mer) where the A at the mismatch site is flanked by G residues and the d(C-G-C-G-A-A-T-T-C-A-C-G) duplex (designated C.A 12-mer) where the A at the mismatch site is flanked by C residues in an attempt to elucidate the role of flanking base pairs on the structure of the A.C mismatch. The exchangeable and nonexchangeable proton spectra of these two dodecanucleotides have been completely characterized by two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) experiments in H2O and D2O solution at acidic pH. The NOE distance connectivities demonstrate that both A and C at the mismatch site are stacked into a right-handed helix between flanking G.C base pairs and exhibit anti-glycosidic torsion angles. The proton chemical shifts and NOE patterns are consistent with Wobble A.C pairing for the A.C 12-mer and C.A 12-mer duplexes in solution and demonstrate that the A.C mismatches introduce local conformational perturbations that do not extend to the central AATT segment. We detect that amino protons of adenosine (approximately 9.2 ppm) but not of cytidine at the A.C mismatch site in both duplexes on lowering the pH below 6.  相似文献   

6.
D Hare  L Shapiro  D J Patel 《Biochemistry》1986,25(23):7456-7464
This paper reports on features of the three-dimensional structure of the d(C-G-C-A-G-A-G-C-T-C-G-C-G) self-complementary duplex (designated adenosine 13-mer), which contains symmetrical extrahelical adenosines in the interior of the helix. The majority of the protons have been assigned from two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect (NOESY) spectra of the adenosine 13-mer in H2O and D2O solution. The measurement of NOESY cross-peak volume integrals as a function of mixing time has yielded a set of 96 short (less than 4.5-A) proton-proton distances defined by lower and upper bounds, which have served as input parameters for a distance geometry analysis of one symmetric half of the adenosine 13-mer duplex. We demonstrate that the extrahelical adenosine stacks into the duplex for all refined structures without disruption of base pairing on either side of the modification site. The distance geometry refinement yields two classes of conformations consistent with distance measurements but which differ in orientation of the stacked extrahelical adenosine at the modification site.  相似文献   

7.
Popenda L  Adamiak RW  Gdaniec Z 《Biochemistry》2008,47(18):5059-5067
The RNA single bulge motif is an unpaired residue within a strand of several complementary base pairs. To gain insight into structural changes induced by the presence of the adenosine bulge on RNA duplex, the solution structures of RNA duplex containing a single adenine bulge (5'-GCAGAAGAGCG-3'/5'-CGCUCUCUGC-3') and a reference duplex with all Watson-Crick base pairs (5'-GCAGAGAGCG-3'/5'-CGCUCUCUGC-3') have been determined by NMR spectroscopy. The reference duplex structure is a regular right-handed helix with all of the attributes of an A-type helix. In the bulged duplex, single adenine bulge stacks into the helix, and the bulge region forms a well-defined structure. Both structures were analyzed by the use of calculated helical parameters. Distortions induced by the accommodation of unpaired residue into the helical structure propagate over the entire structure and are manifested as the reduced base pairs inclination and x-displacement. Intrahelical position of bulged adenine A5 is stabilized by efficient stacking with 5'-neighboring residues G4.  相似文献   

8.
We report on proton and phosphorus high resolution NMR investigations of the self-complementary dodecanucleotide d(C1-G2-N3-G4-A5-A6-T7-T8-C9-O6meG10-C11-G12) duplexes (henceforth called O6 meG.N 12-mers), N = C, T, A and G, which contain N3.O6meG10 interactions in the interior of the helix. These sequences containing a single modified O6meG per strand were prepared by phosphoamidite synthesis and provide an excellent model for probing the structural basis for covalent carcinogenic lesions in DNA. Distance dependent nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) measurements and line widths of imino protons demonstrate that the N3 and O6meG.10 bases stack into the duplex and are flanked by stable Watson-Crick base pairs at low temperature for all four O6meG.N 12-mer duplexes. The imino proton of T3 in the O6meG.T 12-mer and G3 in the O6meG.N 12-mer helix, which are associated with the modification site, resonate at unusually high field (8.5 to 9.0 ppm) compared to imino protons in Watson-Crick base pairs (12.5 to 14.5 ppm). The nonexchangeable base and sugar protons have been assigned from two dimensional correlated (COSY) and nuclear Overhauser effect (NOESY) measurements on the O6meG.N 12-mer helices. The directionality of the distance dependent NOEs establish all O6meG.N duplexes to be right-handed helices in solution. The glycosidic torsion angles are in the anti range at the N3.O6meG10 modification site except for O6meG10 in the O6meG.G 12-mer duplex which adopts a syn configuration. This results in altered NOEs between the G3 (anti).O6meG10 (syn) pair and flanking G2.C11 and G4.C9 base pairs in the O6meG.G 12-mer duplex. We observe pattern reversal for cross peaks in the COSY spectrum linking the sugar H1' protons with the H2',2" protons at the G2 and O6meG10 residues in the O6meG.N 12-mer duplexes with the effect least pronounced for the O6meG.T 12-mer helix. The proton chemical shift and NOE data have been analyzed to identify regions of conformational perturbations associated with N3.O6meG10 modification sites in the O6meG.N 12-mer duplexes. The proton decoupled phosphorus spectrum of O6meG.T 12-mer duplex exhibits an unperturbed phosphodiester backbone in contrast to the phosphorus spectra of the O6meG.C 12-mer, O6meG.G 12-mer and O6meG.A 12-mer duplexes which exhibit phosphorus resonances dispersed over 2 ppm characteristic of altered phosphodiester backbones at the modification site. Tentative proposals are put forward for N3.O6meG10 pairing models based on the available NMR data and serve as a guide for the design of future experiments.  相似文献   

9.
M W Kalnik  B F Li  P F Swann  D J Patel 《Biochemistry》1989,28(15):6182-6192
The pairing of O6etG with C located four base pairs in from either end of the self-complementary d(C1-G2-C3-O6etG4-A5-G6-C7-T8-C9-G10-C11-G12) duplex (designated O6etG.C 12-mer) has been investigated from an analysis of proton and phosphorus two-dimensional NMR experiments. The structural consequences of increasing the alkyl group size were elucidated from a comparative study of the pairing of O6meG4 with C9 in a related sequence (designated O6meG.C 12-mer). The NMR parameters for both O6alkG-containing dodecanucleotides are also compared with those of the control sequence containing G4.C9 base pairs (designated G.C 12-mer). The NOE cross-peaks detected in the two-dimensional NOESY spectra of the O6alkG.C 12-mer duplexes in H2O solution establish that the O6etG4/O6meG4 and C9 bases at the lesion site stack into the helix between the flanking C3.G10 and A5.T8 Watson-Crick base pairs. The amino protons of C9 at the O6alkG4-C9 lesion site resonate as an average resonance at 7.78 and 7.63 ppm in the O6etG.C 12-mer and O6meG.C 12-mer duplexes, respectively. The observed NOEs between the amino protons of C9 and the CH3 protons of O6alkG4 establish a syn orientation of the O6-alkyl group with respect to the N1 of alkylated guanine. A wobble alignment of the O6alkG4.C9 base pair stablized by two hydrogen bonds, one between the amino group of C9 and N1 of O6alkG and the other between the amino group of O6alkG and N3 of C9, is tentatively proposed on the basis of the NOEs between the amino protons of C9 at the lesion site and the imino protons of flanking Watson-Crick base pairs. The proton and phosphorus chemical shift differences between the O6etG.C 12-mer and O6meG.C 12-mer duplexes are small compared to the differences between these O6alkG-containing duplexes and the control G.C 12-mer duplex.  相似文献   

10.
D J Patel  L Shapiro 《Biochimie》1985,67(7-8):887-915
We have investigated intermolecular interactions and conformational features of the netropsin complexes with d(G1-G2-A3-A4-T5-T6-C7-C8) duplex (AATT 8-mer) and the d(G1-G2-T3-A4-T5-A6-C7-C8) duplex (TATA 8-mer) by one and two-dimensional NMR studies in solution. We have assigned the amide, pyrrole and methylene protons of netropsin and the base and sugar H1' protons of the nucleic acid from an analysis of the nuclear Overhauser effect (NOESY) and correlated (COSY) spectra of the complex at 25 degrees C. The directionality of the observed distance-dependent NOEs demonstrates that the 8-mer helices remain right-handed and that the arrangement of concave and convex face protons of netropsin are retained in the complexes. The observed changes in NOE patterns and chemical shift changes on complex formation suggest small conformational changes in the nucleic acid at the AATT and TATA antibiotic binding sites and possibly the flanking G.C base pairs. We observe intermolecular NOEs between all three amide and both pyrrole protons on the concave face of the antibiotic and the minor groove adenosine H2 proton of the two central A4.T5 base pairs of the AATT 8-mer and TATA 8-mer duplexes. The concave face pyrrole protons of the antibiotic also exhibit NOEs to the sugar H1' protons of residues 5 and 6 in the AATT and TATA 8-mer complexes. We also detect intermolecular NOEs between the guanidino and propioamidino methylene protons at either end of netropsin and the adenosine H2 proton of the two flanking A3.T6 base pairs in the AATT 8-mer and T3.A6 base pairs in the TATA 8-mer duplexes. These studies establish a set of nine contacts between the concave face of the antibiotic and the minor groove AATT segment and TATA segment of the 8-mer duplexes in solution. The observed magnitude of the NOEs require that there be no intervening water molecules sandwiched between the concave face of the antibiotic and the minor groove of the DNA so that release of the minor groove spine of hydration is a prerequisite for netropsin complex formation. The observed differences in the netropsin amide proton chemical shifts in the AATT 8-mer and TATA 8-mer complexes suggest differences in the strength and/or type of intermolecular hydrogen bonds at the AATT and TATA binding sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The solution structure of an oligonucleotide containing the helix III sequence from Xenopus oocyte 5 S rRNA has been determined by NMR spectroscopy. Helix III includes two unpaired adenosine residues, flanked on either side by G:C base-pairs, that are required for binding of ribosomal protein L5. The consensus conformation of helix III in the context provided by this oligonucleotide has the two adenosine residues located in the minor groove and stacked upon the 3' flanking guanosine residue, consistent with biochemical studies of free 5 S rRNA in solution. A distinct break in stacking that occurs between the first adenosine residue of the bulge and the flanking 5' guanosine residue exposes the base of the adenosine residue in the minor groove and the base of the guanosine residue in the major groove. The major groove of the helix is widened at the site of the unpaired nucleotides and the helix is substantially bent; nonetheless, the G:C base-pairs flanking the bulge are intact. The data indicate that there may be conformational heterogeneity centered in the bulge region. The corresponding adenosine residues in the Haloarcula marismortui 50 S ribosomal subunit form a dinucleotide platform, which is quite different from the motif seen in solution. Thus, the conformation of helix III probably changes when 5 S rRNA is incorporated into the ribosome.  相似文献   

12.
Proton and phosphorus NMR studies are reported for the complementary d(C-A-T-G-A-G-T-A-C).d(G-T-A-C-F-C-A-T-G) nonanucleotide duplex (designated APF 9-mer duplex) which contains a stable abasic site analogue, F, in the center of the helix. This oligodeoxynucleotide contains a modified tetrahydrofuran moiety, isosteric with 2-deoxyribofuranose, which serves as a structural analogue of a natural apurinic/apyrimidinic site [Takeshita, M., Chang, C.N., Johnson, F., Will, S., & Grollman, A.P. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 10171-10179]. Exchangeable and nonexchangeable base and sugar protons, including those located at the abasic site, have been assigned in the complementary APF 9-mer duplex by recording and analyzing two-dimensional phase-sensitive NOESY data sets in H2O and D2O solution at low temperature (0 degrees C). These studies indicate that A5 inserts into the helix opposite the abasic site F14 and stacks with flanking G4.C15 and G6.C13 Watson-Crick base pairs. Base-sugar proton NOE connectivities were measured through G4-A5-G6 on the unmodified strand and between the base protons of C15 and the sugar protons of the 5'-flanking residue F14 on the modified strand. These studies establish that all glycosidic torsion angles are anti and that the helix is right-handed at and adjacent to the abasic site in the APF 9-mer duplex. Two of the 16 phosphodiester groups exhibit phosphorus resonances outside the normal spectral dispersion indicative of altered torsion angles at two of the phosphate groups in the backbone of the APF 9-mer duplex.  相似文献   

13.
Two-dimensional proton NMR studies are reported on the complementary d(C-A-T-G-T-G-T-A-C).d(G-T-A-C-epsilon A-C-A-T-G) nonanucleotide duplex (designated epsilon dA.dT 9-mer duplex) containing 1,N6-ethenodeoxyadenosine (epsilon dA), a carcinogen-DNA adduct, positioned opposite thymidine in the center of the helix. Our NMR studies have focused on the conformation of the epsilon dA.dT 9-mer duplex at neutral pH with emphasis on defining the alignment at the dT5.epsilon dA14 lesion site. The through-space NOE distance connectivities establish that both dT5 and epsilon dA14 adopt anti glycosidic torsion angles, are directed into the interior of the helix, and stack with flanking Watson-Crick dG4.dC15 and dG6.dC13 pairs. Furthermore, the d(G4-T5-G6).d(C13-epsilon A14-C15) trinucleotide segment centered about the dT5.epsilon dA14 lesion site adopts a right-handed helical conformation in solution. Energy minimization computations were undertaken starting from six different alignments of dT5(anti) and epsilon dA14(anti) at the lesion site and were guided by distance constraints defined by lower and upper bounds estimated from NOESY data sets on the epsilon dA.dT 9-mer duplex. Two families of energy-minimized structures were identified with the dT5 displaced toward either the flanking dG4.dC15 or the dG6.dC13 base pair. These structures can be differentiated on the basis of the observed NOEs from the imino proton of dT5 to the imino proton of dG4 but not dG6 and to the amino protons of dC15 but not dC13 that were not included in the constraints data set used in energy minimization. Our NMR data are consistent with a nonplanar alignment of epsilon dA14(anti) and dT5(anti) with dT5 displaced toward the flanking dG4.dC15 base pair within the d(G4-T5-G6).d(C13-epsilon A14-C15) segment of the epsilon dA.dT 9-mer duplex.  相似文献   

14.
S Roy  V Sklenar  E Appella  J S Cohen 《Biopolymers》1987,26(12):2041-2052
The conformation of an oligodeoxynucleotide pentadecamer, d(CGCGAAATTTACGCG), self-complementary except for an additional adenosine nucleotide at position 11, has been investigated with nmr spectroscopy. This oligomer was found to exist predominantly in the duplex form in solution rather than in the hairpin loop form, as observed previously for an analogous 13-mer sequence. Nuclear Overhauser effects indicate that the B-form conformation is disrupted by the extra A base, which forms a wedge within the duplex, producing a bent junction and an overall S-like structure. A downfield-shifted phosphate resonance was assigned using a two-dimensional 1H–31P correlation method, and was found to be P12-13. This and other results indicate that the extra A causes conformational distortions at some distance along the duplex structure.  相似文献   

15.
Structural and kinetic features of the TATA box located in the center of the alternating self-complementary d(C-G-C-G-T-A-T-A-C-G-C-G) duplex (TATA 12-mer) and d(C-G-C-G-C-G-T-A-T-A-C-G-C-G-C-G) duplex (TATA 16-mer) have been probed by high-resolution proton and phosphorus NMR spectroscopy in aqueous solution. The imino exchangeable Watson-Crick protons and the nonexchangeable base protons in the TATA box of the TATA 12-mer and TATA 16-mer duplexes have been assigned from intra and inter base pair nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) measurements. Imino proton line-width and hydrogen exchange saturation recovery measurements demonstrate that the dA X dT base pairs in the TATA box located in the center of the TATA 12-mer and TATA 16-mer duplexes are kinetically more labile than flanking dG X dC base pairs. The proton and phosphorus NMR parameters of the TATA 12-mer monitor a cooperative premelting transition in the TATA box prior to the onset of the melting transition to unstacked strands. Phosphorus NMR studies have been unable to detect any indication of a right-handed B DNA to a left-handed Z DNA transition for the TATA 12-mer duplex in saturated NaCl solution. By contrast, we do detect the onset of the B to Z transition for the TATA 16-mer in saturated NaCl solution. Proton and phosphorus NMR studies demonstrate formation of a loop conformation with chain reversal at the TATA segment for the TATA 12-mer and TATA 16-mer duplexes on lowering the DNA and counterion concentration. The imino protons (10-11 ppm) and phosphorus resonances (3.5-4.0 ppm; 4.5-5.0 ppm) of the loop segment fall in spectral windows well resolved from the corresponding markers in fully paired segments so tha it should be possible to identify loops in longer DNA helixes. The equilibrium between the loop and fully paired duplex conformations of the TATA 12-mer and TATA 16-mer is shifted toward the latter on addition of moderate salt.  相似文献   

16.
When the oligodeoxynucleotides d(A)6 and d(T)6 are mixed together in a 1:1 ratio (in 100 mM NaCl), the NH signals in the NMR spectrum gave a typical signature of Watson-Crick paired (WC) and Hoogsteen paired (H) AT base pairs. The observation indicates two schemes: Scheme I, WC and H duplexes in slow equilibrium, i.e., WC in equilibrium with H, Scheme II, the WC helix formed is unstable and that it disproportionates into a triple helix (TR) and free d(A)6. We show that (i) addition of extra d(A)6 does not change the helix composition, (ii) addition of a minor-groove specific drug Dst2 (a distamycin analogue) results in an exclusive WC helix-drug duplex, while it does not destabilize triple helix in a 1:2 mixture. In addition we have compared the melting profile, 31P NMR spectra, 1H NMR spectra and the salt dependence of the 1:1 mixture and that of a pure triple helix. All the data from the above experiments overwhelmingly favor Scheme I. However Scheme II cannot be categorically excluded. Based on 1D/2D NMR studies, we have characterized the structural properties of the Hoogsteen double helix in terms of nucleotide conformations. In addition, we computationally demonstrate that the relative stability of the WC over the H duplexes increases with increasing chain length.  相似文献   

17.
Structural features of A.C mismatches and A.O4meT pairs in the interior of oligodeoxynucleotide duplexes have been investigated by high-resolution two-dimensional proton NMR spectroscopy on the self-complementary d(C-G-C-A-A-G-C-T-C-G-C-G) duplex (designated A.C 12-mer) and and the self-complementary d(C-G-C-A-A-G-C-T-O4meT-G-C-G) duplex (designated A.O4meT 12-mer) containing A.C and A.O4meT pairs at identical positions four base pairs in from either end of and A.O4meT pairs at identical positions four base pairs in from either end of the duplex. Proton NMR shows that there are similar pH-dependent changes in the structure in the A.C 12-mer and A.O4meT 12-mer duplexes. Our studies have focused on the low-pH (pH 5.5) conformation where high-quality two-dimensional NOESY data sets were collected from the exchangeable and nonexchangeable protons in these duplexes. The spectral parameters for the A.C 12-mer and the A.O4meT 12-mer duplexes were very similar, indicating that they must have similar structures at this pH in aqueous solution. Both structures are right-handed double helices with all the bases adopting the normal anti configuration about the glycosidic bond. The same atoms are involved in hydrogen-bond pairing for the A.C mismatch and the A.O4meT pair, and these pairs have a similar spatial relationship to flanking base pairs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Lipid peroxidation products, as well as the metabolic products of vinyl chloride, react with cellular DNA producing the mutagenic adduct 3,N(4)-etheno-2'-deoxycytidine (epsilondC), along with several other exocyclic derivatives. High-resolution NMR spectroscopy and restrained molecular dynamics simulations were used to establish the solution structure of an 11-mer duplex containing an epsilondC.dC base-pair at its center. The NMR data suggested a regular right-handed helical structure having all residues in the anti orientation around the glycosydic torsion angle and Watson-Crick alignments for all canonical base-pairs of the duplex. Restrained molecular dynamics generated a three-dimensional model in excellent agreement with the spectroscopic data. The (epsilondC. dC)-duplex structure is a regular right-handed helix with a slight bend at the lesion site and no severe distortions of the sugar-phosphate backbone. The epsilondC adduct and its partner dC were displaced towards opposite grooves of the helix, resulting in a lesion-containing base-pair that was highly sheared but stabilized to some degree by the formation of a single hydrogen bond. Such a sheared base-pair alignment at the lesion site was previously observed for epsilondC.dG and epsilondC.T duplexes, and was also present in the crystal structures of duplexes containing dG.T and dG. U mismatches. These observations suggest the existence of a substrate structural motif that may be recognized by specific DNA glycosylases during the process of base excision repair.  相似文献   

19.
L S Kappen  Z Xi  I H Goldberg 《Biochemistry》2001,40(50):15378-15383
Neocarzinostatin chromophore (NCS-Chrom) induces strong cleavage at a single site (C3) in the single-stranded and 5' (32)P-end-labeled 13-mer GCCAGATTTGAGC in a reaction dependent on a thiol. By contrast, in the duplex form of the same 13-mer, strand cleavage occurs only at the T and A residues, and C3 is not cleaved. To determine the minimal structural requirement(s) for C3 cleavage in the single-stranded oligomer, several deletions and mutations were made in the 13-mer. A 10-mer (GCCAGAGAGC) derived from the 13-mer by deletion of the three T residues was also cleaved exclusively at C3 by NCS-Chrom, generating fragments having 5' phosphate ends. That the cleavage at C3 is initiated by abstraction of its 5' hydrogen is confirmed in experiments using 3' (32)P-end-labeled 10-mer. The competent 13-mer and 10-mer were assigned hairpin structures with a stem loop and a single bulged out A base, placing C3 across from and 3' to the bulge. Removal of the bulged A base from the 13-mer and the 10-mer resulted in complete loss of cutting activity, proving that it is the essential determinant in competent substrates. Studies of thiol post-activated NCS-Chrom binding to the DNA oligomers show that the drug binds to the bulge-containing 13-mer (K(d) = 0.78 microM) and the 10-mer (K(d) = 1.11 microM), much more strongly than to the 12-mer (K(d) = 20 microM) and the 9-mer (K(d) = 41 microM), lacking the single-base bulge. A mutually induced-fit between NCS-Chrom and the oligomer resulting in optimal stabilization of the drug-DNA complex is proposed to account for the site-specific cleavage at C3. These studies establish the usefulness of NCS-Chrom as a probe for single-base bulges in DNA.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract

When the oligodeoxynucleotides d(A)6 and d(T)6 are mixed together in a 1:1 ratio (in 100 mM NaCl), the NH signals in the NMR spectrum gave a typical signature of Watson-Crick paired (WC) and Hoogsteen paired (H) AT base pairs. The observation indicates two schemes: Scheme I, WC and H duplexes in slow equilibrium, i.e., WC ? H, Scheme II, the WC helix formed is unstable and that it disproportionates into a triple helix (TR) and free d(A)6. We show that (i) addition of extra d(A)6 does not change the helix composition, (ii) addition of a minor-groove specific drug Dst2 (a distamycin analogue) results in an exclusive WC helix- drug duplex, while it does not destabilize triple helix in a 1:2 mixture. In addition we have compared the melting profile, 31P NMR spectra, 1H NMR spectra and the salt dependence of the 1:1 mixture and that of a pure triple helix. All the data from the above experiments overwhelmingly favor Scheme I. However Scheme II cannot be categorically excluded.

Based on 1D/2D NMR studies, we have characterized the structural properties of the Hoogsteen double helix in terms of nucleotide conformations. In addition, we computationally demonstrate that the relative stability of the WC over the H duplexes increases with increasing chain length.  相似文献   

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