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 15 毫秒
1.
We have studied the conformation of two hexanucleotides d(GGATCC) and d(GGm6ATCC) using proton nuclear magnetic resonance. Nuclear Overhauser effect measurements show that d(GGATCC) assumes a normal right handed B helix. The single and double strand resonances are in fast exchange on a proton nuclear magnetic resonance time scale. For d(GGm6ATCC), up to the Tm separate resonances are observed for each state, indicating slow exchange, though above the Tm it becomes more rapid. The orientation of the adenosine methyl-amino group, preferentiallycis to N1, hinders base pair formation.The connectivities of the resonances of the two states were established by saturation transfer experiments. At 0°C irradiation of the m6 A-T imino proton gives an nuclear Overhauser effect to AH2 showing that base pairing is Watson-Crick. Intra and interresidue nuclear Overhauser effects starting from the 3′ terminus show that the helix is right handed and in the B-form.The results on the two oligomers demonstrate that adenosine methylation induces little or no change in the conformation of the helix, but reduces the Tm from 45° to 32°C and slows the opening and closing of the m6A.T base pair by a factor of about 100.  相似文献   

2.
J Feigon  W A Denny  W Leupin  D R Kearns 《Biochemistry》1983,22(25):5930-5942
A variety of one-dimensional proton NMR methods have been used to investigate the properties of two synthetic DNA decamers, d(ATATCGATAT) and d(ATATGCATAT). These results, in conjunction with the results of two-dimensional NMR experiments, permit complete assignment of the base proton resonances. Low-field resonances were assigned by sequential "melting" of the A . T base pairs and by comparison of the spectra of the two decamers. Below 20 degree C spin-lattice relaxation is dominated by through-space dipolar interactions. A substantial isotope effect on the G imino proton relaxation is observed in 75% D2O, confirming the importance of the exchangeable amino protons in the relaxation process. A somewhat smaller isotope effect is observed on the T imino proton relaxation. At elevated temperatures spin-lattice relaxation of the imino protons is due to proton exchange with solvent. Apparent activation energies for exchange vary from 36 kcal/base pair for base pairs (3,8) to 64 kcal/mol for the most interior base pairs (5,6), indicating that disruption of part, or all, of the double helix contributes significantly to the exchange of the imino protons in these decamers. By contrast, single base pair opening events are the major low-temperature pathways for exchange from A X T and G X C base pairs in the more stable higher molecular weight DNA examined in other studies. The temperature dependence of the chemical shifts and line widths of certain aromatic resonances indicates that the interconversion between the helix and coil states is not in fast exchange below the melting temperature, Tm. Within experimental error, no differential melting of base pairs was found in either molecule, and both exhibited melting points Tm = 50-52 degrees C. Spin-spin and spin-lattice relaxation rates of the nonexchangeable protons (TH6, AH8, and AH2) are consistent with values calculated by using an isotropic rotor model with a rotational correlation time of 6 ns and interproton distances appropriate for B-family DNA. The faster decay of AH8 compared with GH8 is attributed to an interaction between the thymine methyl protons and the AH8 protons in adjacent adenines (5'ApT3'). The base protons (AH8, GH8, and TH6) appear to be located close (1.9-2.3 A) to sugar H2',2" protons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
A two-dimensional 500-MHz 1H-NMR study of two oligonucleotides, d(GGATATCC) and d(GGm6ATATCC), is presented in which we have investigated the effects of adenine methylation. The two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser spectra (NOESY) show that both oligonucleotides adopt a normal right-handed B-type helix and one-dimensional nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) studies demonstrate that any difference in conformation must be small. However methylation drastically slows down the helix in equilibrium coil exchange which becomes slow on a proton NMR time scale. While d(GGATATCC) fits a two-site exchange model, d(GGm6ATATCC) does not and we invoke the presence of a third species which may be an intermediate in helix formation. NMR and ultraviolet spectroscopy show that methylation destabilizes the helix, measured by the melting temperature and enthalpy of dissociation.  相似文献   

4.
Y Wang  D J Patel 《Biochemistry》1992,31(35):8112-8119
We report below on proton NMR studies of the G-quadruplex structure formed by the human telomere sequence d(T2AG3) and the tetrahymena telomere sequence d(T2G4) in K cation containing solution. We observe well-resolved proton NMR spectra corresponding to a G-quadruplex monomer conformation predominant at 50 mM K cation concentration and a G-quadruplex dimer conformation predominant at 300 mM K cation concentration. By contrast, d(T2AG3T) and d(T2G4T) form only the G-quadruplex monomer structures independent of K cation concentration as reported previously [Sen, D., & Gilbert, W. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 65-70]. We detect well-resolved resonances for the exchangeable guanine imino and amino protons involved in G-tetrad formation with the hydrogen-bonded and exposed amino protons separated by up to 3.5 ppm. The observed NOEs between the amino and H8 protons on adjacent guanines within individual G-tetrads support the Hoogsteen pairing alignment around the tetrad. The imino protons of the internal G-tetrads exchange very slowly with solvent H2O in the d(T2AG3) and d(T2G4) quadruplexes. The nature and intensity of the observed NOE patterns establish formation of parallel-stranded right-handed G-quadruplexes with all anti guanine glycosidic torsion angles. A model for the parallel-stranded G-quadruplex is proposed which is consistent with the experimental NOE data on the d(T2AG3) and d(T2G4) quadruplexes in solution.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
All exchangeable protons in a short DNA helix, d(CG)3 sodium salt, have been studied by proton nuclear magnetic resonance. The cytidine and guanosine amino protons have been assigned for the first time. As a function of temperature the cytidine amino protons and the imino protons behave very similarly, their relaxation is dominated by exchange with solvent above 30 degrees C. The guanosine amino protons, however, show that helix opening can only be described by a multistate model. The most rapid process observed is probably a twist about the helix axis which lengthens or breaks the guanosine amino hydrogen bond and allows rotation of the amino group. The second fastest process is a scissor opening into the major groove which gives rise to solvent exchange with the imino and cytidine amino protons. The slowest process observed is the complete base pair opening in which the guanosine amino protons also exchange with solvent. For the ammonium salt of the oligonucleotide, a specific ammonium ion complex is observed which at low temperature may catalyze exchange of the guanosine amino protons with the protons of the ammonium ion, but retards exchange with solvent. The complex appears to be specific for the sequence d(CpG).  相似文献   

6.
A Pardi  K M Morden  D J Patel  I Tinoco 《Biochemistry》1982,21(25):6567-6574
The relaxation lifetimes of imino protons from individual base pairs were measured in (I) a perfect helix, d(C-G-C-G-A-A-T-T-C-G-C-G), (II) this helix with a G . C base pair replaced with a G . T base pair, d(C-G-T-G-A-A-T-T-C-G-C-G), and (III) the perfect helix with an extra adenine base in a mismatch, d(C-G-C-A-G-A-A-T-T-C-G-C-G). The lifetimes were measured by saturation recovery proton nuclear magnetic resonance experiments performed on the imino protons of these duplexes. The measured lifetimes of the imino protons were shown to correspond to chemical exchange lifetimes at higher temperatures and spin-lattice relaxation times at lower temperatures. Comparison of the lifetimes in these duplexes showed that the destabilizing effect of the G . T base pair in II affected the opening rate of only the nearest-neighbor base pairs. For helix III, the extra adenine affected the opening rates of all the base pairs in the helix and thus was a larger perturbation for opening of the base pairs than the G . T base pair. The temperature dependence of the exchange rates of the imino proton in the perfect helix gives values of 14-15 kcal/mol for activation energies of A . T imino protons. These relaxation rates were shown to correspond to exchange involving individual base pair opening in this helix, which means that one base-paired imino proton can exchange independent of the others. For the other two helices that contain perturbations, much larger activation energies for exchange of the imino protons were found, indicating that a cooperative transition involving exchange of at least several base pairs was the exchange mechanism of the imino protons. The effects of a perturbation in a helix on the exchange rates and the mechanisms for exchange of imino protons from oligonucleotide helices are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) has been used to monitor the conformation and dynamics of the d-(C1-G2-A3-G4-A5-A6-T6-T5-C4-G3-C2-G1) self-complementary dodecanucleotide (henceforth called 12-mer GA) that contains a dG X dA purine-purine mismatch at position 3 in the sequence. These results are compared with the corresponding d(C-G-C-G-A-A-T-T-C-G-C-G) dodecamer duplex (henceforth called 12-mer) containing standard Watson-Crick base pairs at position 3 [Patel, D.J., Kozlowski, S.A., Marky, L.A., Broka, C., Rice, J.A., Itakura, K., & Breslauer, K.J. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 428-436]. The dG X dA interaction at position 3 was monitored at the guanosine exchangeable H-1 and nonexchangeable H-8 protons and the nonexchangeable adenosine H-2 proton. We demonstrate base-pair formation between anti orientations of the guanosine and adenosine rings on the basis of nuclear Overhauser effects (NOE) observed between the H-2 proton of adenosine 3 and the imino protons of guanosine 3 (intra base pair) and guanosines 2 and 4 (inter base pair). The dG(anti) X dA(anti) pairing should result in hydrogen-bond formation between the guanosine imino H-1 and carbonyl O-6 groups and the adenosine N-1 and NH2-6 groups, respectively. The base pairing on either side of the dG X dA pair remains intact at low temperature, but these dG X dC pairs at positions 2 and 4 are kinetically destabilized in the 12-mer GA compared to the 12-mer duplex. We have estimated the hydrogen exchange kinetics at positions 4-6 from saturation-recovery measurements on the imino protons of the 12-mer GA duplex between 5 and 40 degrees C. The measured activation energies for imino proton exchange in the 12-mer GA are larger by a factor of approximately 2 compared to the corresponding values in the 12-mer duplex. This implies that hydrogen exchange in the 12-mer GA duplex results from a cooperative transition involving exchange of several base pairs as was previously reported for the 12-mer containing a G X T wobble pair at position 3 [Pardi, A., Morden, K.M., Patel, D.J., & Tinoco, I., Jr. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 6567-6574]. We have assigned the nonexchangeable base protons by intra and inter base pair NOE experiments and monitored these assigned markers through the 12-mer GA duplex to strand transition.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
L J Rinkel  I Tinoco  Jr 《Nucleic acids research》1991,19(13):3695-3700
One- and two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments were used to study the conformation of the DNA hexadecanucleotide d(CACGTGTGTGCGTGCA) in aqueous solution. NMR spectra were recorded for the compound in D2O and in H2O/D2O (90/10) over the temperature range 1 degree C-60 degrees C. Assignments of imino proton resonances and of non-exchangeable proton resonances (except for some H4', H5' and H5" resonances) are given. The 1H-NMR spectra indicate that below about 20 degrees C, the compound exists as a single monomolecular species. Between 20 degrees C and 55 degrees C the oligonucleotide occurs as a mixture of structures in fast exchange on the NMR time scale, except for the temperature region 30 degrees - 34 degrees C, where substantial line broadening indicates intermediate exchange; above 60 degrees C the single strand predominates. The imino proton spectra, chemical shift values, and scalar coupling and NOE data reveal that the monomeric form, which is exclusively present below 20 degrees C, consists of a structure with a B-DNA double helix region of six base pairs, both ends of which are closed by hairpin loops of only two nucleotides, giving the molecule a dumbbell-like structure: [sequence: see text].  相似文献   

9.
The amino 1H resonances of oligonucleotide helices: d(CGCG)   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
An examination of the 1H NMR assignments and exchange properties of the amino resonances of the self-complementary tetramer, d(CGCG) was undertaken with regard to buffer effects, transfer of saturation from the water resonance and temperature dependence of amino 1H line shape and chemical shift. The lack of buffer effect on visible exchangeable proton resonances is evidence for the stringent requirement for nucleo-base protonation at pH values below neutrality, which is greatly reduced in the helical state. For this reason, sharp resonances are observed for both Watson-Crick and non-Watson-Crick cytosine amino protons for base-paired regions. Considerations of monomeric exchange mechanisms for the cytosine and guanine amino protons formed the basis for successful assignment and isolation of their resonances in the helical state by presaturation of the water resonance at selected pH values. Preirradiation of the water resonance at pH less than 6 would isolate the guanine amino 1H resonances of any self-complementary oligonucleotide, to exploit its high sensitivity as a useful proble of helix in equilibrium coil premelting.  相似文献   

10.
The oligodeoxynucleotide d(TTCTGT) was covalently attached to the 9-amino group of 2-methoxy-6-chloro-9-aminoacridine (Acr) through its 3'-phOsphate via a pentamethylene linker (m5). In order to avoid its hydrolysis by nucleases inside the cel., one of its phosphates (TpT) was substituTed with a neopentyl group. Complex formation between each of the two purified isomers and the complementary strand d(GCACAGAA) was investigated by nuclear magnetic resonance. The COSY and NOESY connectivities allowed us to assign all the proton resonances of the bases, the sugars (except the overlapping 5'-5' resonances), the acridine, and the pentamethylene chain. Structural information derived from the relative intensity of COSY and NOESY maps revealed that the duplex d(T*TCTGT).d(GCACAGAA) adopts a B-type conformation and that the deoxyriboses preferentially adopt a 2'-endo conformation. The NOE connectivities observed between the protons of the bases or the sugars and the protons of the dye show the intercalation of the acridine between the base pairs. NOE connectivities as well as imino proton resonances show that, at room temperature, the C7 base and the G8 base belonging to two different duplexes are paired. The pseudoaxial and pseudoequatorial isomers were assigned, and the differences in stability of their complex with the complementary strand are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract

An examination of the 1H NMR assignments and exchange properties of the amino resonances of the self-complementary tetramer, d(CGCG) was undertaken with regard to buffer effects, transfer of saturation from the water resonance and temperature dependence of amino 1H line shape and chemical shift. The lack of buffer effect on visible exchangeable proton resonances is evidence for the stringent requirement for nucleo-base protonation at pH values below neutrality, which is greatly reduced in the helical state. For this reason, sharp resonances are observed for both Watson-Crick and non-Watson-Crick cytosine amino protons for base-paired regions. Considerations of monomeric exchange mechanisms for the cytosine and guanine amino protons formed the basis for successful assignment and isolation of their resonances in the helical state by presaturation of the water resonance at selected pH values. Preirradiation of the water resonance at pH <6 would isolate the guanine amino 1H resonances of any self-complementary oligonucleotide, to exploit its high sensitivity as a useful proble of helix ? coil premelting.  相似文献   

12.
S H Chou  D R Hare  D E Wemmer  B R Reid 《Biochemistry》1983,22(13):3037-3041
Using solid-phase phosphite triester methods, we have synthesized both strands of the phage lambda OR3 DNA sequence, reannealed them, and studied the native operator duplex by high-resolution NMR at 500 MHz. At 7 degrees C the imino protons of the two terminal base pairs at each end have disappeared from the spectrum by exchange broadening. The 13 detectable imino resonances have been assigned to their respective base pairs in the duplex by using sequential nearest-neighbor NOE connectivity methods described previously. In cases where two imino protons overlap in the spectrum, spin diffusion was used to drive the cross-saturation further afield in order to produce second-order next-nearest-neighbor effects. The results show that the imino connectivity method can be used to unambiguously assign the imino proton spectrum of operator DNAs containing one to two full turns of the helix.  相似文献   

13.
The structures of d(GCAATTGC)2 and its complex with berenil in solution were analyzed by two-dimensional 1H NMR spectroscopy. Intra- and internucleotide nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) connectivities demonstrate that the octanucleotide duplex is primarily in the B conformation. Binding with berenil stabilizes the duplex with respect to thermal denaturation by about 10 degrees C, based on the appearance of the imino proton signals. The berenil-d(GCAATTGC)2 system is in fast exchange on the NMR time scale. The two-dimensional NMR data reveal that berenil binds in the minor groove of d(GCAATTGC)2. The aromatic drug protons are placed within 5 A of the H2 proton of both adenines, the H1', H5', and H5" of both thymidines, and the H4', H5', and H5" of the internal guanosine. The amidine protons on berenil are also close to the H2 proton of both adenines. The duplex retains an overall B conformation in the complex with berenil. At 18 degrees C, NOE contacts at longer mixing times indicate the presence of end-to-end association both in the duplex alone and also in its complex with berenil. These intermolecular contacts either vanished or diminished substantially at 45 degrees C. Two molecular models are proposed for the berenil-(GCAATTGC)2 complex; one has hydrogen bonds between the berenil amidine protons and the carbonyl oxygen, O2, of the external thymines, and the other has hydrogen bonds between the drug amidine protons and the purine nitrogen, N3, of the internal adenines. Quantitative analysis of the NOE data favors the second model.  相似文献   

14.
We report relaxation time measurements by semi-selective and totally selective NMR techniques on the thymidine imino protons of d(GGATATCC) and d(GGm6ATATCC). For these oligonucleotides helix fraying, rather than single base pair opening, is the major exchange mechanism even 25 degrees C below the Tm. We have therefore applied a new saturation transfer technique to measure exchange rates at temperatures where fraying has a very small or negligible contribution. Measurements of exchange rates as a function of temperature give significantly different activation energies for base pairs 3 and 4 in d(GGATATCC). Adenine methylation results in a slowing down of the opening rate for the m6A-T base pair but surprisingly has an even greater effect upon the adjacent non-methylated A-T base pair.  相似文献   

15.
We reported previously on NMR studies of (Y+)n.(R+)n(Y-)n DNA triple helices containing one oligopurine strand (R)n and two oligopyrimidine strands (Y)n stabilized by T.AT and C+.GC base triples [de los Santos, C., Rosen, M., & Patel, D. J. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 7282-7289]. Recently, it has been established that guanosine can recognize a thymidine.adenosine base pair to form a G.TA triple in an otherwise (Y+)n.(R+)n(Y-)n triple-helix motif. [Griffin, L. C., & Dervan, P. B. (1989) Science 245, 967-971]. The present study extends the NMR research to the characterization of structural features of a 31-mer deoxyoligonucleotide that folds intramolecularly into a 7-mer (Y+)n.(R+)n(Y-)n triplex with the strands linked through two T5 loops and that contains a central G.TA triple flanked by T.AT triples. The G.TA triplex exhibits an unusually well resolved and narrow imino and amino exchangeable proton and nonexchangeable proton spectrum in H2O solution, pH 4.85, at 5 degrees C. We have assigned the imino protons of thymidine and amino protons of adenosine involved in Watson-Crick and Hoogsteen pairing in T.AT triples, as well as the guanosine imino and cytidine amino protons involved in Watson-Crick pairing and the protonated cytidine imino and amino protons involved in Hoogsteen pairing in C+.GC triples in the NOESY spectrum of the G.TA triplex. The NMR data are consistent with the proposed pairing alignment for the G.TA triple where the guanosine in an anti orientation pairs through a single hydrogen bond from one of its 2-amino protons to the 4-carbonyl group of thymidine in the Watson-Crick TA pair.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
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   

18.
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) has been used to monitor the conformation and dynamics of the d(C1-G2-A3-T4-T5-A6-T6-A5-A4-T3-C2-G1) self-complementary dodecanucleotide duplex (henceforth called Pribnow 12-mer), which contains a TATAAT Pribnow box and a central core of eight dA X dT base pairs. The exchangeable imino and nonexchangeable base protons have been assigned from one-dimensional intra and inter base pair nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) measurements. Premelting conformational changes are observed at all the dA X dT base pairs in the central octanucleotide core in the Pribnow 12-mer duplex with the duplex to strand transition occurring at 55 degrees C in 0.1 M phosphate solution. The magnitude of the NOE measurements between minor groove H-2 protons of adjacent adenosines demonstrates that the base pairs are propeller twisted with the same handedness as observed in the crystalline state. The thymidine imino proton hydrogen exchange at the dA X dT base pairs has been measured from saturation recovery measurements as a function of temperature. The exchange rates and activation barriers show small variations among the four different dA X dT base pairs in the Pribnow 12-mer duplex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
D J Patel 《Biopolymers》1976,15(3):533-558
The Watson–Crick imino and amino exchangeable protons, the nonexchangeable base and sugar protons, and the backbone phosphates for d-CpG(pCpG)n, n = 1 and 2, have been monitored by high-resolution nmr spectroscopy in aqueous solution over the temperature range 0°–90°C. The temperature dependence of the chemical shifts of the tetramer and hexamer resonances is consistent with the formation of stable duplexes at low temperature in solution. Comparison of the spectral characteristics of the tetranucleotide with those of the hexanucleotide with temperature permits the differentiation and assignment of the cytosine proton resonances on base pairs located at the end of the helix from those in an interior position. There is fraying at the terminal base pairs in the tetranucleotide and hexanucleotide duplexes. The Watson–Crick ring imino protons exchange at a faster rate than the Watson–Crick side-chain amino protons, with exchange occurring by transient opening of the double helix. The structure of the d-CpG(pCpG)n double helices has been probed by proton relaxation time measurements, sugar proton coupling constants, and the proton chemical shift changes associated with the helix–coil transition. The experimental data support a structural model in solution, which incorporates an anti conformation about the glycosyl bonds, C(3) exo sugar ring pucker, and base overlap geometries similar to the B-DNA helix. Rotational correlation times of 1.7 and 0.9 × 10?9 sec have been computed for the hexanucleotide and tetranucleotide duplexes in 0.1 M salt, D2O, pH 6.25 at 27°C. The well-resolved 31P resonances for the internucleotide phosphates of the tetramer and hexamer sequences at superconducting fields shift upfield by 0.2–0.5 ppm on helix formation. These shifts reflect a conformational change about the ω,ω′ phosphodiester bonds from gauche-gauche in the duplex structure to a distribution of gauche-trans states in the coil structure. Significant differences are observed in the transition width and midpoint of the chemical shift versus temperature profiles plotted in differentiated form for the various base and sugar proton and internucleotide phosphorous resonances monitoring the d-CpG(pCpG)n helix–coil transition. The twofold symmetry of the d-CpGpCpG duplex is removed on complex formation with the antibiotic actinomycin-D. Two phosphorous resonances are shifted downfield by ~2.6 ppm and ~1.6 ppm on formation of the 1:2 Act-D:d-CpGpCpG complex in solution. Model studies on binding of the antibiotic to dinucleotides of varying sequence indicate that intercalation of the actinomycin-D occurs at the GpC site in the d-CpGpCpG duplex and that the magnitude of the downfield shifts reflects strain at the O-P-O backbone angles and hydrogen bonding between the phenoxazone and the phosphate oxygens. Actinomycin-D is known to bind to nucleic acids that exhibit a B-DNA conformation; this suggests that the d-CpG(pCpG)n duplexes exhibit a B-DNA conformation in solution.  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