首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Certain DNA sequences are known to be unusually sensitive to nicking via the Fe2+-mediated Fenton reaction. Most notable are a purine nucleotide followed by three or more G residues, RGGG, and purine nucleotides flanking a TG combination, RTGR. Our laboratory previously demonstrated that nicking in the RGGG sequences occurs preferentially 5' to a G residue with the nicking probability decreasing from the 5' to 3'end of these sequences. Using 1H NMR to characterize Fe2+ binding within the duplex CGAGTTAGGGTAGC/GCTACCCTAACTCG and 7-deazaguanine-containing (Z) variants of it, we show that Fe2+ binds preferentially at the GGG sequence, most strongly towards its 5' end. Substitutions of individual guanines with Z indicate that the high affinity Fe2+ binding at AGGG involves two adjacent guanine N7 moieties. Binding is accompanied by large changes in specific imino, aromatic and methyl proton chemical shifts, indicating that a locally distorted structure forms at the binding site that affects the conformation of the two base pairs 3' to the GGG sequence. The binding of Fe2+ to RGGG contrasts with that previously observed for the RTGR sequence, which binds Fe2+ with negligible structural rearrangements.  相似文献   

2.
The cancer chemotherapeutic agent, bleomycin, cleaves DNA at specific sites. For the first time, the genome-wide DNA sequence specificity of bleomycin breakage was determined in human cells. Utilising Illumina next-generation DNA sequencing techniques, over 200 million bleomycin cleavage sites were examined to elucidate the bleomycin genome-wide DNA selectivity. The genome-wide bleomycin cleavage data were analysed by four different methods to determine the cellular DNA sequence specificity of bleomycin strand breakage. For the most highly cleaved DNA sequences, the preferred site of bleomycin breakage was at 5′-GT* dinucleotide sequences (where the asterisk indicates the bleomycin cleavage site), with lesser cleavage at 5′-GC* dinucleotides. This investigation also determined longer bleomycin cleavage sequences, with preferred cleavage at 5′-GT*A and 5′- TGT* trinucleotide sequences, and 5′-TGT*A tetranucleotides. For cellular DNA, the hexanucleotide DNA sequence 5′-RTGT*AY (where R is a purine and Y is a pyrimidine) was the most highly cleaved DNA sequence. It was striking that alternating purine–pyrimidine sequences were highly cleaved by bleomycin. The highest intensity cleavage sites in cellular and purified DNA were very similar although there were some minor differences. Statistical nucleotide frequency analysis indicated a G nucleotide was present at the ?3 position (relative to the cleavage site) in cellular DNA but was absent in purified DNA.  相似文献   

3.
2,7-Diaminomitosene (2,7-DAM), the major metabolite of the antitumor antibiotic mitomycin C, forms DNA adducts in tumor cells. 2,7-DAM was reacted with the deoxyoligonucleotide d(GTGGTATACCAC) under reductive alkylation conditions. The resulting DNA adduct was characterized as d(G-T-G-[M]G-T-A-T-A-C-C-A-C) (5), where [M]G stands for a covalently modified guanine, linked at its N7-position to C10 of the mitosene. The adducted oligonucleotide complements with itself, retaining 2-fold symmetry in the 2:1 drug-duplex complex, and provides well-resolved NMR spectra, amenable for structure determination. Adduction at the N7-position of G4 ([M]G, 4) is characterized by a downfield shift of the G4(H8) proton and separate resonances for G4(NH(2)) protons. We assigned the exchangeable and nonexchangeable proton resonances of the mitosene and the deoxyoligonucleotide in adduct duplex 5 and identified intermolecular proton-proton NOEs necessary for structural characterization. Molecular dynamics computations guided by 126 intramolecular and 48 intermolecular distance restraints were performed to define the solution structure of the 2,7-DAM-DNA complex 5. A total of 12 structures were computed which exhibited pairwise rmsd values in the 0.54-1.42 A range. The 2,7-DAM molecule is anchored in the major groove of DNA by its C10 covalently linked to G4(N7) and is oriented 3' to the adducted guanine. The presence of 2,7-DAM in the major groove does not alter the overall B-DNA helical structure. Alignment in the major groove is a novel feature of the complexation of 2,7-DAM with DNA; other known major groove alkylators such as aflatoxin, possessing aromatic structural elements, form intercalated complexes. Thermal stability properties of the 2,7-DAM-DNA complex 5 were characteristic of nonintercalating guanine-N7 alkylating agents. Marked sequence selectivity of the alkylation by 2,7-DAM was observed, using a series of oligonucleotides incorporating variations of the 5'-TGGN sequence as substrates. The selectivity correlated with the sequence specificity of the negative molecular electrostatic potential of the major groove, suggesting that the alkylation selectivity of 2,7-DAM is determined by sequence-specific variation of the reactivity of the DNA. The unusual, major groove-aligned structure of the adduct 5 may account for the low cytotoxicity of 2,7-DAM.  相似文献   

4.
M W Kalnik  B F Li  P F Swann  D J Patel 《Biochemistry》1989,28(15):6170-6181
High-resolution two-dimensional NMR studies are reported on the self-complementary d-(C1-G2-C3-O6etG4-A5-G6-C7-T8-T9-G10-C11-G12) duplex (designated O6etG.T 12-mer) containing two symmetrically related O6etG.T lesion sites located four base pairs in from either end of the duplex. Parallel studies were undertaken on a related sequence containing O6meG.T lesion sites (designated O6meG.T 12-mer) in order to evaluate the influence of the size of the alkyl substituent on the structure of the duplex and were undertaken on a related sequence containing G.T mismatch sites (designated G.T 12-mer duplex), which served as the control duplex. The exchangeable and nonexchangeable proton and the phosphorus nuclei have been assigned from an analysis of two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) and correlated spectra of the O6etG.T 12-mer, O6meG.T 12-mer, and G.T 12-mer duplexes in H2O and D2O solutions. The distance connectivities observed in the NOESY spectra of the O6alkG.T 12-mer duplexes establish that the helix is right-handed and all of the bases adopt an anti conformation of the glycosidic torsion angle including the O6alkG4 and T9 bases at the lesion site. The imino proton of T9 at the O6alkG.T lesion sites resonates at 8.85 ppm in the O6etG.T 12-mer duplex and at 9.47 ppm in the O6meG.T 12-mer duplex. The large upfield shift of the T9 imino proton resonance at the O6alkG4.T9 lesion site relative to that of the same proton in the G4.T9 wobble pair (11.99 ppm) and the A4.T9 Watson-Crick pair (13.95 ppm) in related sequences establishes that the hydrogen bonding of the imino proton of T9 to O6alkG4 is either very weak or absent. The imino proton of T9 develops NOEs to the CH3 protons of the O6etG and O6meG alkyl groups across the base pair, as well as to the imino and H5 protons of the flanking C3.G10 base pair and the imino and CH3 protons of the flanking A5.T8 base pair in the O6alkG.T 12-mer duplexes. These observations establish that the O6alkG4 and T9 residues are stacked into the duplex and that the O6CH3 and O6CH2CH3 groups of O6alkG4 adopt a syn orientation with respect to the N1 of the alkylated guanine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Proton and phosphorus two-dimensional NMR studies are reported for the complementary d(C1-A2-T3-G4-X5-G6-T7-A8-C9).d(G10-T11-A12-C13-A14-C15-A 16-T17-G18) nonanucleotide duplex (designated X.A 9-mer) that contains a 1,N2-propanodeoxyguanosine exocyclic adduct, X5, opposite deoxyadenosine A14 in the center of the helix. The NMR studies detect a pH-dependent conformational transition; this paper focuses on the structure present at pH 5.8. The two-dimensional NOESY studies of the X.A 9-mer duplex in H2O and D2O solution establish that X5 adopts a syn orientation while A14 adopts an anti orientation about the glycosidic bond at the lesion site. The large downfield shift of the amino protons of A14 demonstrates protonation of the deoxyadenosine base at pH 5.8 such that the protonated X5(syn).A14(anti) pair is stabilized by two hydrogen bonds at low pH. At pH 5.8, the observed NOE between the H8 proton of X5 and the H2 proton of A14 in the X.A 9-mer duplex demonstrates unequivocally the formation of the protonated X5(syn).A14(anti) pair. The 1,N2-propano bridge of X5(syn) is located in the major groove. Selective NOEs from the exocyclic methylene protons of X5 to the major groove H8 proton of flanking G4 but not G6 of the G4-X5-G6 segment provide additional structural constraints on the local conformation at the lesion site. A perturbation in the phosphodiester backbone is detected at the C13-A14 phosphorus located at the lesion site by 31P NMR spectroscopy. The two-dimensional NMR studies have been extended to the related complementary X.G 9-mer duplex that contains a central X5.G14 lesion in a sequence that is otherwise identical with the X.A 9-mer duplex. The NMR experimental parameters are consistent with formation of a pH-independent X5(syn).G14(anti) pair stabilized by two hydrogen bonds with the 1,N2-propano exocyclic adduct of X5(syn) located in the major groove.  相似文献   

6.
Hybrid quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) calculations using restricted and unrestricted Hartree-Fock and B3LYP ab initio (QM) and Amber force field (MM), respectively, have been applied to study the catalytic site of papain in both free and substrate bonded forms. Ab initio geometry optimizations have been performed for the active site of papain and the N-methyl-acetamide (NMA)-papain complex within the molecular mechanical treatment of the protein environment. A covalent tetrahedral intermediate structure could be obtained only when the amide N atom of the substrate molecule was protonated through a proton transfer from the His-159 in the catalytic site. Our results support the previous assumption that a proton transfer from His-159 to the amide N atom of the substrate occurs prior to or concerted with the nucleophilic attack of the Cys-25 sulfur atom to the carbonyl group of the substrate. The electron correlation effect will reduce the proton transfer barrier. Therefore, this proton transfer can be easily observed in the B3LYP/6-31G* calculations. The HF/6-31G* method overestimates the reaction barrier against this proton transfer. The sulfur atom of Cys-25 and the imidazole ring of His-159 are found to be coplanar in the free form of the enzyme. However, the rotation of the imidazole ring of His-159 was observed during the formation of the tetrahedral intermediate. Without the papain environment, the coplanar thiolate-imidazolium ion pair RS-...ImH+ is much less stable than the neutral form of RSH....Im. Within the protein environment, however, the thiolate-imidazolium ion pair becomes more stable than its neutral form by 4.1 and 0.4 kcal/mol in HF/6-31G* and B3LYP/6-31G* calculations, respectively. The barrier of proton transfer from S-H group of Cys-25 to the imidazole ring of His-159 was reduced from 22.0 kcal/mol to 15.2 kcal/mol by the protein environment in HF/6-31G* calculations. This barrier is found to be much smaller (2.5 kcal/mol) in B3LYP/6-31G* calculations.  相似文献   

7.
The solution conformation of the DNA duplex d(C1G2C3A4C5L6C7A8C9G10C11).d(G12C13G14T15G16T17G18T19G20C21G22 ) containing the 2'-deoxyribonolactone lesion (L6) in the middle of the sequence has been investigated by NMR spectroscopy and restrained molecular dynamics calculations. Interproton distances have been obtained by complete relaxation matrix analysis of the NOESY cross-peak intensities. These distances, along with torsion angles for sugar rings and additional data derived from canonical A- and B-DNA, have been used for structure refinement by restrained molecular dynamics (rMD). Six rMD simulations have been carried out starting from both regular A- and B-DNA forms. The pairwise rms deviations calculated for each refined structure are <1 A, indicating convergence to essentially the same geometry. The accuracy of the rMD structures has been assessed by complete relaxation matrix back-calculation. The average sixth-root residual index (Rx = 0.052 +/- 0.003) indicated that a good fit between experimental and calculated NOESY spectra has been achieved. Detailed analysis revealed a right-handed DNA conformation for the duplex in which both the T17 nucleotide opposite the abasic site and the lactone ring are located inside the helix. No kinking is observed for this molecule, even at the abasic site step. This structure is compared to that of the oligonucleotide with the identical sequence containing the stable tetrahydrofuran abasic site analogue that we reported previously [Coppel, Y., Berthet, N., Coulombeau, C., Coulombeau, Ce., Garcia, J., and Lhomme, J. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 4817-4830].  相似文献   

8.
E V Scott  G Zon  L G Marzilli  W D Wilson 《Biochemistry》1988,27(20):7940-7951
One- and two-dimensional NMR studies on the oligomer dA1T2G3C4G5C6A7T8, with and without actinomycin D (ActD), were conducted. Analysis of the NMR data, particularly 2D NOE intensities, revealed that the free oligonucleotide is a duplex in a standard right-handed B form. At the ratio of 1 ActD/duplex (R = 1), 1D NMR studies indicate that two 1:1 unsymmetric complexes form in unequal proportions with the phenoxazone ring intercalated at a GpC site, in agreement with previous studies [Scott, E.V., Jones, R.L., Banville, D.L., Zon, G., Marzilli, L.G., & Wilson, W.D. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 915-923]. The 2D COSY data also confirm this interpretation since eight cytosine H6 to H5 and two ActD H8 to H7 cross-peaks are observed. At R = 2, both COSY and NOESY spectra confirm the formation of a unique 2:1 species with C2 symmetry. The oligomer remains in a right-handed duplex but undergoes extreme conformational changes both at and adjacent to the binding site. The deoxyribose conformation of T2, C4, and C6 shifts from primarily C2'-endo in the free duplex to an increased amount of C3'-endo in the 2:1 complex as revealed by the greater intensity of the base H6 to 3' NOE cross-peak relative to the intensity of the H6 to H2' NOE cross-peak. This conformational change widens the minor groove and should help alleviate the steric crowding of the ActD peptides. The orientation of the ActD molecules at R = 2 has the quinoid portion of the phenoxazone ring at the G3pC4 site and the benzenoid portion of the phenoxazone ring at the G5pC6 site on the basis of NOE cross-peaks from ActD H7 and H8 to G5H8 and C6H6. All base pairs retain Watson-Crick type H-bonding, unlike echinomycin complexes [e.g., Gao, X., & Patel, D.J. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 1744-1751] where Hoogsteen base pairs have been observed. In contrast to previous studies on ActD, we were able to distinguish the two peptide chains.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
10.
M Skaugen 《Plasmid》1989,22(2):175-179
The complete nucleotide sequence of a cryptic plasmid isolated from a Lactobacillus plantarum strain has been determined. The plasmid, designated pC30i1, has a molecular size of 2140 bp and a GC content of 37%. The sequence contains one major open reading frame (ORF R) of 951 bp, encoding a basic polypeptide of 317 amino acids, and a molecular weight of 36,956. ORF R shows extensive sequence similarity with genes coding for replication-associated proteins in a group of gram-positive plasmids known to replicate via single-stranded intermediates (ssDNA plasmids), and a stretch of 9 amino acids in the translation of ORF R closely matches a conserved region in these proteins, as well as the active site of the phi X174 Rep protein. Sequences similar to the ssDNA plasmid origins of replication are also present in the pC30i1 sequence, strengthening the hypothesis that pC30i1 belongs to the ssDNA plasmid family. The other main feature of the pC30i1 sequence is a noncoding region consisting of 14 direct, imperfect repeats of a 17-bp sequence, which may have an incompatibility function.  相似文献   

11.
Solution structure of the nogalamycin-DNA complex   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
X L Zhang  D J Patel 《Biochemistry》1990,29(40):9451-9466
The nogalamycin-d(A-G-C-A-T-G-C-T) complex (two drugs per duplex) has been generated in aqueous solution and its structure characterized by a combined application of two-dimensional NMR experiments and molecular dynamics calculations. Two equivalents of nogalamycin binds to the self-complementary octanucleotide duplex with retention of 2-fold symmetry in solution. We have assigned the proton resonances of nogalamycin and the d(A1-G2-C3-A4-T5-G6-C7-T8) duplex in the complex and identified the intermolecular proton-proton NOEs that define the alignment of the antitumor agent at its binding site on duplex DNA. The analysis was greatly aided by a large number of intermolecular NOEs involving exchangeable protons on both the nogalamycin and the DNA in the complex. The molecular dynamics calculations were guided by 274 intramolecular nucleic acid distance constraints, 90 intramolecular nogalamycin distance constraints, and 104 intermolecular distance constraints between nogalamycin and the nucleic acid protons in the complex. The aglycon chromophore intercalates at (C-A).(T-G) steps with the long axis of the aglycon approximately perpendicular to the long axis of the flanking C3.G6 and A4.T5 base pairs. The aglycon selectively stacks over T5 and G6 on the T5-G6-containing strand with the aglycon edge containing OH-4 and OH-6 substituents directed toward the C3-A4-containing strand. The C3.G6 and A4.T5 base pairs are intact but buckled at the intercalation site with a wedge-shaped alignment of C3 and A4 on the C3-A4 strand compared to the parallel alignment of T5 and G6 on the T5-G6 strand in the complex. The nogalose sugar in a chair conformation, the aglycon ring A in a half-chair conformation, and the COOCH3-10 side chain form a continuous domain that is sandwiched within the walls of the minor groove and spans the three base pair (G2-C3-A4).(T5-G6-C7) segment. The nogalose ring is positioned in the minor groove such that its nonpolar face is directed toward the G6-C7 sugar-phosphate backbone while its polar face containing OCH3 groups is directed toward the G2-C3 sugar-phosphate backbone in the complex. The intermolecular contacts include a nonpolar patch of aglycon (CH3-9) and nogalose (CH3-3') methyl groups forming van der Waals contacts with the base-sugar residues in the minor groove and intermolecular hydrogen bonds involving the amino groups of G2 and G6 with the ether oxygens OCH3-3' and O7, respectively, on the nogalose sugar.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Four chloramphenicol resistance (Cm) and four tetracycline resistance (Tc) plasmids from Staphylococcus aureus were characterized by restriction endonuclease mapping. All four Tc plasmids had molecular masses of 2.9 megadaltons (Mdaltons) and indistinguishable responses to seven different restriction endonucleases. The four Cm plasmids (pCW6, pCW7, pCW8, and pC221) had molecular masses of 2.6, 2.8, 1.9, and 2.9 Mdaltons, respectively. The four Cm plasmids also differed both in the level of resistance to Cm and in susceptibility to retriction endonucleases. Single restriction endonuclease sites contained within each plasmid included the following: in pCW6 for HindIII, XbaI, HpaII, and BstEII; in pCW7 for HindIII, BstEII, BglII, HaeIII, and HpaII; in pCW8 for HindIII, HaeIII, and HpaII; in pC221 for HindIII, BstEII, and EcoRI. The molecular cloning capabilities of pCW8 and pC221 were determined. Cm and erythromycin resistance (Em) recombinant plasmids pCW12, PCW13, and pCW14 were constructed and used to transform S. aureus 8325-4. A 2.8-Mdalton HindIII fragment from plasmid pI258 was found to encode Em resistance and contain single sites for the retriction endonucleases BglII, PstI, HaeIII, and HpaII. The largest EcoRI fragment (8 Mdaltons) from pI258 contained the HindIII fragment encoding Em resistance intact. Cloning of DNA into the BglII site of pCW14 did not alter Em resistance. Cloning of DNA into the HindIII site of pCW8 and the HindIII and EcoRI sites of pC221 did not disrupt either plasmid replication of Cm resistance.  相似文献   

13.
We have designed and synthesized a series of novel DNA photocleaving agents which break DNA with high sequence specificity. These compounds contain the non-diffusible photoactive p-nitrobenzoyl group covalently linked via a dimethylene (or tetramethylene) spacer to thiazole analogues of the DNA binding portion of the antibiotic bleomycin A2. By using a variety of 5' or 3' 32P-end labeled restriction fragments from plasmid pBR322 as substrate, we have shown that photoactive bithiazole compounds bind DNA at the consensus sequence 5'-AAAT-3' and induce DNA cleavage 3' of the site. Analysis of cleavage sites on the complementary DNA strand and inhibition of DNA breakage by distamycin A indicates these bithiazole derivatives bind and attack the minor groove of DNA. A photoactive unithiazole compound was less specific inducing DNA breakage at the degenerate site 5'-(A/T)(AA/TT)TPu(A/T)-3'. DNA sequence recognition of these derivatives appears to be determined by the thiazole moiety rather than the p-nitrobenzoyl group: use of a tetramethylene group in place of a dimethylene spacer shifted the position of DNA breakage by one base pair. Moreover, much less specific DNA photocleavage was observed for a compound in which p-nitrobenzoyl was linked to the intercalator acridine via a sequence-neutral hexamethylene spacer. The 5'-AAAT-3' specificity of photoactive bithiazole derivatives contrasts with that of bleomycin A2 which cleaves DNA most frequently at 5'-GPy-3' sequences. These results suggest that the cleavage specificity exhibited by bleomycin is not simply determined by its bithiazole/sulphonium terminus, and the contributions from other features, e.g. its metal-chelating domain, must be considered. The novel thiazole-based DNA cleavage agents described here should prove useful as reagents for probing DNA structure and for elucidating the molecular basis of DNA recognition by bleomycin and other ligands.  相似文献   

14.
J H Lee  K Z Chang  V Patel  C J Jeffery 《Biochemistry》2001,40(26):7799-7805
Phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI, EC 5.3.1.9) catalyzes the interconversion of D-glucose 6-phosphate (G6P) and D-fructose 6-phosphate (F6P) and plays important roles in glycolysis and gluconeogenesis. Biochemical characterization of the enzyme has led to a proposed multistep catalytic mechanism. First, the enzyme catalyzes ring opening to yield the open chain form of the substrate. Then isomerization proceeds via proton transfer between C2 and C1 of a cis-enediol(ate) intermediate to yield the open chain form of the product. Catalysis proceeds in both the G6P to F6P and F6P to G6P directions, so both G6P and F6P are substrates. X-ray crystal structure analysis of rabbit and bacterial PGI has previously identified the location of the enzyme active site, and a recent crystal structure of rabbit PGI identified Glu357 as a candidate functional group for transferring the proton. However, it was not clear which active site amino acid residues catalyze the ring opening step. In this paper, we report the X-ray crystal structure of rabbit PGI complexed with the cyclic form of its substrate, D-fructose 6-phosphate, at 2.1 A resolution. The location of the substrate relative to the side chains of His388 suggest that His388 promotes ring opening by protonating the ring oxygen. Glu216 helps to position His388, and a water molecule that is held in position by Lys518 and Thr214 accepts a proton from the hydroxyl group at C2. Comparison to a structure of rabbit PGI with 5PAA bound indicates that ring opening is followed by loss of the protonated water molecule and conformational changes in the substrate and the protein so that a helix containing amino acids 513-520 moves in toward the substrate to form additional hydrogen bonds with the substrate.  相似文献   

15.
Zhang H  Fountain MA  Krugh TR 《Biochemistry》2001,40(33):9879-9886
The binding region of the Escherichia coli S2 ribosomal protein contains a conserved UUAAGU hairpin loop. The structure of the hairpin formed by the oligomer r(GCGU4U5A6A7G8U9CGCA), which has an r(UUAAGU) hairpin loop, was determined by NMR and molecular modeling techniques as part of a study aimed at characterizing the structure and thermodynamics of RNA hairpin loops. Thermodynamic data obtained from melting curves for this RNA oligomer show that it forms a hairpin in solution with the following parameters: DeltaH degrees = -42.8 +/- 2.2 kcal/mol, DeltaS degrees = -127.6 +/- 6.5 eu, and DeltaG degrees (37) = -3.3 +/- 0.2 kcal/mol. Two-dimensional NOESY WATERGATE spectra show an NOE between U imino protons, which suggests that U4 and U9 form a hydrogen bonded U.U pair. The U5(H2') proton shows NOEs to both the A6(H8) proton and the A7(H8) proton, which is consistent with formation of a "U" turn between nucleotides U5 and A6. An NOE between the A7(H2) proton and the U9(H4') proton shows the proximity of the A7 base to the U9 sugar, which is consistent with the structure determined for the six-nucleotide loop. In addition to having a hydrogen-bonded U.U pair as the first mismatch and a U turn, the r(UUAAGU) loop has the G8 base protruding into the solvent. The solution structure of the r(UUAAGU) loop is essentially identical to the structure of an identical loop found in the crystal structure of the 30S ribosomal subunit where the guanine in the loop is involved in tertiary interactions with RNA bases from adjacent regions [Wimberly, B. T., Brodersen, D. E., Clemons, W. M., Morgan-Warren, R. J., Carter, A. P., Vonrhein, C., Hartsch, T., and Ramakrishnan, V. (2000) Nature 407, 327-339]. The similarity of the solution and solid-state structures of this hairpin loop suggests that formation of this hairpin may facilitate folding of 16S RNA.  相似文献   

16.
2D NMR has been used to examine the structure and dynamics of a 12-mer DNA duplex, d(T(1)A(2)G(3)T(4)C(5)A(6)A(7)G(8)G(9)G(10)C(11)A(12))-d(T(13)G(14)C( 15)C(16)C(17)T(18)T(19)G(20)A(21)C(22)T(23)A(24)), containing a 10R adduct at dA(7) that corresponds to trans addition of the N(6)-amino group of dA(7) to (-)-(7S,8R,9R,10S)-7,8-dihydroxy-9, 10-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene [(-)-(S,R,R,S)-BP DE-2]. This DNA duplex contains the base sequence for the major dA mutational hot spot in the HPRT gene when Chinese hamster V79 cells are given low doses of the highly carcinogenic (+)-(R,S,S,R)-BP DE-2 enantiomer. NOE data indicate that the hydrocarbon is intercalated on the 5'-side of the modified base as has been seen previously for other oligonucleotides containing BP DE-2 (10R)-dA adducts. 2D chemical exchange-only experiments indicate dynamic behavior near the intercalation site especially at the 10R adducted dA, such that this base interconverts between the normal anti conformation and a less populated syn conformation. Ab initio molecular orbital chemical shift calculations of nucleotide and dinucleotide fragments in the syn and anti conformations support these conclusions. Although this DNA duplex containing a 10R dA adduct exhibits conformational flexibility as described, it is nevertheless more conformationally stable than the corresponding 10S adducted duplex corresponding to trans opening of the carcinogenic isomer (+)-(R,S,S, R)-BP DE-2, which was too dynamic to permit NMR structure determination. UV and imino proton NMR spectral observations indicated pronounced differences between these two diastereomeric 12-mer duplexes, consistent with conformational disorder at the adduct site and/or an equilibrium with a nonintercalated orientation of the hydrocarbon in the duplex containing the 10S adduct. The existence of conformational flexibility around adducts may be related to the occurrence of multiple mutagenic outcomes resulting from a single DE adduct.  相似文献   

17.
The interaction of propidium with three self-complementary oligodeoxyribonucleotides has been investigated by 1H- (base-pair imino proton assigned by 1D NOE and saturation transfer methods) and 31P-nmr as a function of ratio of propidium to oligomer (from zero to saturation) and temperature. The three oligomers are dTATATGCGCATATA (1), dTATATGTGCATATA (2), which has the same sequence as 1 except for the mismatched base pair at position 7, and dTATGTGCATA (3), which is a shortened version of 2. The imino proton chemical-shift changes of 1 on titration with propidium can be explained by the effects of the ring-current anisotropy of propidium at intercalation (3.4 Å) and next-neighbor sites (6.8 Å). The results indicate that propidium binds with neighbor exclusion but with no significant specificity for any intercalation site in the sequence of 1. The addition of propidium to 1 results in general downfield shifts of all 31P signals, as expected for a nonspecific intercalator. Imino and 31P-nmr spectra for 2 indicate that this oligomer forms a hydrogen-bonded G · T base pair at position 7 with little change in base pairing and stacking of base pairs 1–6 compared to 1. The results for addition of propidium to 2 and 3 are quite different than with 1. At low ratio only secondary shifts (6.8 Å) are seen for the G and T imino protons of base-pair 7 on addition of propidium. At higher ratios of propidium, the signals for these G and T protons are lost in 2 and severely broadened in 3, even at low temperature. The other potential intercalation sites in 2 and 3 appear to bind propidium strongly and without significant specificity as with 1. 31P spectra of 2 in the presence of propidium show the expected downfield shifts and broadening. Thus, the minor differences in local helix geometry in 1, and in 2 and 3, away from the G · T base pair do not significantly affect propidium intercalation specificity. Having one or two G · T base pairs at a site, however, makes intercalation in the standard manner significantly less favorable.  相似文献   

18.
A model for the interaction of 31 amino acid fragment (protein) from DNA binding domain of human estrogen receptor (hER) with a five base pair DNA sequence 5'GGTCA 3' from estrogen regulatory element (ERE) has been obtained using a step-wise procedure based on structural data on model peptides, DNA binding domain of hER, steric constrains imposed by tetrahedral coordination of the Cys sulphurs with zinc ion and classical secondary structural elements. Structure of the protein as well as its complex with DNA is obtained by energy minimization followed by refinement by molecular mechanics. The complex is stabilized by H-bonds between Lys22, Lys26 and Arg27 with DNA bases G2, T3 and T6. Lys22 also made H-bond with the backbone of G2. The backbone of Cys18 H-bonded with N7 of G1. DNA was in distorted B form and showed evidence of protein-induced conformational changes.  相似文献   

19.
The DNA of Col E1 replicates from a unique origin located at a distance of 17-19% of the genome length from the single Eco RI clevage site. The nucleotide sequence about this site has been determined by a combination of RNA and DNA sequencing techniques. The principal features of the sequence are two palindromes, one of which resembles a palindrome located in the intercistronic region of 0X174. The sequence also contains stretches of purine and pyrimidine clusters of the following compositions: pAT5G, pC2T5G, pGT5G. The origin sequence demonstrates that initiation of DNA replication takes place in an intercistronic region of Col E1DNA, although the possibility that this region makes small polypeptides 30-40 residues long cannot be strictly eliminated at this time.  相似文献   

20.
Two-dimensional homonuclear and heteronuclear NMR and minimized potential energy calculations have been combined to define the structure of the antitumor agent mitomycin C (MC) cross-linked to deoxyguanosines on adjacent base pairs in the d(T1-A2-C3-G4-T5-A6).d(T7-A8-C9-G10-T11-A12) duplex. The majority of the mitomycin and nucleic acid protons in the MC-X 6-mer complex have been assigned from through-bond and through-space two-dimensional proton NMR studies in aqueous solution at 5 and 20 degrees C. The C3.G10 and G4.C9 base pairs are intact at the cross-link site and stack on each other in the complex. The amino protons of G4 and G10 resonate at 9.36 and 8.87 ppm and exhibit slow exchange with solvent H2O. The NMR experimental data establish that the mitomycin is cross-linked to the DNA through the amino groups of G4 and G10 and is positioned in the minor groove. The conformation of the cross-link site is defined by a set of NOEs between the mitomycin H1" and H2" protons and the nucleic acid imino and amino protons of G4 and the H2 proton of A8 and another set of NOEs between the mitomycin geminal H10" protons and the nucleic acid imino and amino protons of G10 and the H2 proton of A2. Several phosphorus resonances of the d(T-A-C-G-T-A) duplex shift dramatically on mitomycin cross-link formation and have been assigned from proton-detected phosphorus-proton two-dimensional correlation experiments. The proton chemical shifts and NOEs establish fraying at the ends of the d(T-A-C-G-T-A) duplex, and this feature is retained on mitomycin cross-link formation. The base-base and base-sugar NOEs exhibit similar patterns for symmetry-related steps on the two nucleic acid strands in the MC-X 6-mer complex, while the proton and phosphorus chemical shifts are dramatically perturbed at the G10-T11 step on cross-link formation. The NMR distance constraints have been included in minimized potential energy computations on the MC-X 6-mer complex. These computations were undertaken with the nonplanar five-membered ring of mitomycin in each of two pucker orientations. The resulting low-energy structures MX1 and MX2 have the mitomycin cross-linked in a widened minor groove with the chromophore ring system in the vicinity of the G10-T11 step on one of the two strands in the duplex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号