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1.
The complex between cobalt hexammine and decadeoxyoligomer d(CGTACGTACG) crystallizes into the space group P65 with unit cell constants a = b = 17.93A, and c = 43.41A. The molecules have the helix axis coincident with the crystal c-axis. The decamers stack on top of each other and form a quasi-continuous helix. The structure is disordered. The asymmetric unit is a dimer (pPyr-pPur)2 with each base pair 60% of the time a C-G and 40% of the time a T-A. Restrainted least-squares refinement led to an R-factor of 25.5% for 506 observed reflections above the two-sigma level. The structure was found to have one strand in the ZI-conformation and the other in the ZII-conformation. The cobalt hexammine binds to two ZII-chains of symmetrically related molecules. On one ZII chain, two ammonia molecules of the cobalt hexammine bind to the N7 nitrogen and 06 oxygen atoms of the guanine bases and a third ammonia to the phosphate anionic oxygen atom of the preceding pyrimidine base, resulting in an "external" binding mode. On the other ZII chain, one ammonia molecule of the cobalt hexammine binds only to the anionic oxygens of the phosphate group of the guanine bases, leading to an "internal" binding mode. Thus, the basis of the stabilization of Z-DNA by [Co(NH3)6]3+ is its binding to only guanine nucleotides. It is surmised that statistical disordering of deoxyoligonucleotide structures which take a Z conformation, depends on the length of the oligomer. That is to say, octamers and decamers (which cannot use an integral number of molecules for a 12 base pair repeat) form disordered structures whereas tetramers and hexamers form well ordered structures.  相似文献   

2.
Alternating self-complementary oligonucleotides starting with a 5'-pyrimidine usually form left-handed Z-DNA; however, with a 5'-purine start sequence they form the right-handed A-DNA. Here we report the crystal structure of the decamer d(GCGCGCGCGC) with a 5'-purine start in the Z-DNA form. The decamer crystallizes in the hexagonal space group P6(5)22, unit cell dimensions a = b = 18.08 and c = 43.10 A, with one of the following four dinucleotide diphosphates in the asymmetric unit: d(pGpC)/d(GpCp)/d(pCpG)/d(CpGp). The molecular replacement method, starting with d(pGpC) of the isomorphous Z-DNA hexamer d(araC-dG)3 without the 2'-OH group of arabinose, was used in the structure analysis. The method gave the solution only after the sugar-phosphate conformation of the GpC step was manipulated. The refinement converged to a final R value of 18.6% for 340 unique reflections in the resolution range 8.0-1.9 A. A result of the sequence alternation is the alternation in the nucleotide conformation; guanosine is C3'-endo, syn, and cytidine is C2'-endo, anti. The CpG step phosphodiester conformation is the same as ZI or ZII, whereas that of the GpC step phosphodiester is "intermediate" in the sense that zeta (O3'-P bond) is the same as ZII but alpha (P-O5' bond) is the same as ZI. The duplexes generated from the dinucleotide asymmetric unit are stacked one on top of the other in the crystal to form an infinite pseudocontinuous helix. This renders it a quasi-polymerlike structure that has assumed the Z-DNA conformation further strengthened by the long inner Z-forming stretch d(CG)4. An interesting feature of the structure is the presence of water strings in both the major and the minor grooves. In the minor groove the cytosine carbonyl oxygen atoms of the GpC and CpG steps are cross-bridged by water molecules that are not themselves hydrogen bonded but are enclosed by the water rings in the mouth of the minor groove. In the major groove three independent water molecules form a zigzagging continuous water string that runs throughout the duplex.  相似文献   

3.
The crystal and molecular structure of the sodium salt of deoxycytidylyl-(3H-5H)-deoxyguanosine has been determined from X-ray diffraction data. The crystal, obtained from an aqueous gamma-butyrolactone solution at pH = 5.3 are orthorhombic, P212121, a = 10.640(2), b = 11.184(2) and c = 44.618(4)A. The structure was refined to an R = 0.041. The d(CpG) structure is similar to the ammonium salt solved by Cruse et al.(1). Both structures form a parallel self base paired mini-double helix. In d(CpG).Na+ one of the two paired cytosines is protonated on N(3). The cytosines form 3 hydrogen bonds while the guanines form only 2. The Na+ ion is coordinated with five groups: two water molecules, O(6) of guanine A, N(7) of guanine B and 0(5') of cytosine B, forming a square pyramid. The hydration shell around the mini-helix is analysed and compared with that of the ammonium salt, d(CpG).Na+ is the second d(CpG) oligonucleotide found with a self base pairing arrangement despite of the fact that the crystallization conditions and counterion were different in both cases. The hypothesis that self base pairing is not only a crystallization artifact but may play a role under physiological conditions as a source of transversion mutations is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The structure of the complex formed between d(CGTACG)(2) and the antitumor agent 9-amino-[N-(2-dimethylamino)ethyl]acridine-4-carboxamide has been solved to a resolution of 1.6 A using X-ray crystallography. The complex crystallized in space group P6(4) with unit cell dimensions a = b = 30.2 A and c = 39.7 A, alpha = beta = 90 degrees, gamma = 120 degrees. The asymmetric unit contains a single strand of DNA, 1. 5 drug molecules, and 29 water molecules. The final structure has an overall R factor of 19.3%. A drug molecule intercalates between each of the CpG dinucleotide steps with its side chain lying in the major groove, and the protonated dimethylamino group partially occupies positions close to ( approximately 3.0 A) the N7 and O6 atoms of guanine G2. A water molecule forms bridging hydrogen bonds between the 4-carboxamide NH and the phosphate group of the same guanine. Sugar rings adopt the C2'-endo conformation except for cytosine C1 which moves to C3'-endo, thereby preventing steric collision between its C2' methylene group and the intercalated acridine ring. The intercalation cavity is opened by rotations of the main chain torsion angles alpha and gamma at guanines G2 and G6. Intercalation perturbs helix winding throughout the hexanucleotide compared to B-DNA, steps 1 and 2 being unwound by 8 degrees and 12 degrees, respectively, whereas the central TpA step is overwound by 17 degrees. An additional drug molecule, lying with the 2-fold axis in the plane of the acridine ring, is located at the end of each DNA helix, linking it to the next duplex to form a continuously stacked structure. The protonated N,N-dimethylamino group of this "end-stacked" drug hydrogen bonds to the N7 atom of guanine G6. In both drug molecules, the 4-carboxamide group is internally hydrogen bonded to the protonated N-10 atom of the acridine ring. The structure of the intercalated complex enables a rationalization of the known structure-activity relationships for inhibition of topoisomerase II activity, cytotoxicity, and DNA-binding kinetics for 9-aminoacridine-4-carboxamides.  相似文献   

5.
The structure of the complex between the minor groove binder netropsin and d(GGCCAATTGG) was determined via single-crystal X-ray techniques. The structure was refined to completion using refmac5.1.24, resulting in a residual R-factor of 20.0% (including 68 water molecules). Using crystal engineering and cryocooling techniques, the resolution could be enhanced to 1.75 A, resulting in an unambiguous determination of the drug conformation and orientation. As previously noticed, bifurcated hydrogen bonds are formed between the amide nitrogen atoms of the drug and the N3 and O2 atoms of A and T base pairs, respectively, clearly cataloging the structure to class I. As the bulky NH2 group on guanine was believed to prevent binding of the drug in the minor groove, the detailed nature of several of the amidinium and guanidinium end contacts were further investigated by ab initio quantum chemical methods.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Ordered water structure in an A-DNA octamer at 1.7 A resolution   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The crystal structure of the deoxyoctamer d(G-G-Br U-A-BrU-A-C-C) was refined to a resolution of 1.7 A using combined diffractometer and synchrotron data. The analysis was carried out independently in two laboratories using different procedures. Although the final results are identical the comparison of the two approaches highlights potential problems in the refinement of oligonucleotides when only limited data are available. As part of the analysis the positions of 84 solvent molecules in the asymmetric unit were established. The DNA molecule is highly solvated, particularly the phosphate-sugar back-bone and the functional groups of the bases. The major groove contains, in the central BrU-A-BrU-A region, a ribbon of water molecules forming closed pentagons with shared edges. These water molecules are linked to the base O and N atoms and to the solvent chains connecting the O-1 phosphate oxygen atoms on each strand. The minor groove is also extensively hydrated with a continuous network in the central region and other networks at each end. The pattern of hydration is briefly compared with that observed in the structure of a B-dodecamer.  相似文献   

8.
The crystal and molecular structure of the title compound, an analogue of the DNA binding region of bleomycin A2, has been determined by X-ray crystallography. All the three independent molecules in an asymmetric unit are approximately planar with fully extended side chains. A computer graphics model-building study has shown that the phenyl group and the second thiazole ring can be intercalated between the base pairs of the double-stranded deoxydinucleoside phosphate d(CpG), and also that the sulphonium cation can interact with a backbone phosphate group. This model is in accord with NMR spectral data.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract

The crystal structure of the deoxyoctamer d(G-G-Br U-A-BrU-A-C-C) was refined to a resolution of 1.7Å using combined diffractometer and synchrotron data. The analysis was carried out independently in two laboratories using different procedures. Although the final results are identical the comparison of the two approaches highlights potential problems in the refinement of oligonucleotides when only limited data are available.

As part of the analysis the positions of 84 solvent molecules in the asymmetric unit were established. The DNA molecule is highly solvated, particularly the phosphate-sugar backbone and the functional groups of the bases. The major groove contains, in the central BrU-A-BrU-A region, a ribbon of water molecules forming closed pentagons with shared edges. These water molecules are linked to the base O and N atoms and to the solvent chains connecting the O-1 phosphate oxygen atoms on each strand. The minor groove is also extensively hydrated with a continuous network in the central region and other networks at each end. The pattern of hydration is briefly compared with that observed in the crystal structure of a B-dodecamer.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract

The crystal and molecular structure of the sodium salt of deoxycytidylyl-{3′ ?5′)-deoxyguanosine has been determined from X-ray diffraction data. The crystals, obtained from an aqueous y- butyrolactone solution at pH = 5.3, are orthorhombic, P212121, a= 10.640(2), b= 11.184(2) and c=44.618(4) A. The structure was refined to an R = 0.041. The d(CpG) structure is similar to the ammonium salt solved by Cruse et al.(1). Both structures form a parallel self base paired mini-double helix. In d(CpG).Na+, one of the two paired cytosines is protonated on N(3). The cytosines form 3 hydrogen bonds while the guanines form only 2. The Na+ ion is coordinated with five groups: two water molecules, 0(6) of guanine A, N(7) of guanine B and 0(5′) of cytosine B, forming a square pyramid. The hydration shell around the mini-helix is analysed and compared with that of the ammonium salt. d(CpG).Na+ is the second d(CpG) oligonucleotide found with a self base pairing arrangement despite of the fact that the crystallization conditions and counterion were different in both cases. The hypothesis that self base pairing is not only a crystallization artifact but may play a role under physiological conditions as a source of transversion mutations is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
12.
A H Wang  G Ughetto  G J Quigley  A Rich 《Biochemistry》1987,26(4):1152-1163
The crystal structure of a daunomycin-d(CGTACG) complex has been solved by X-ray diffraction analysis and refined to a final R factor of 0.175 at 1.2-A resolution. The crystals are in a tetragonal crystal system with space group P4(1)2(1)2 and cell dimensions of a = b = 27.86 A and c = 52.72 A. The self-complementary DNA forms a six base pair right-handed double helix with two daunomycin molecules intercalated in the d(CpG) sequences at either end of the helix. Daunomycin in the complex has a conformation different from that of daunomycin alone. The daunomycin aglycon chromophore is oriented at right angles to the long dimension of the DNA base pairs, and the cyclohexene ring A rests in the minor groove of the double helix. Substituents on this ring have hydrogen-bonding interactions to the base pairs above and below the intercalation site. O9 hydroxyl group of the daunomycin forms two hydrogen bonds with N3 and N2 of an adjacent guanine base. Two bridging water molecules between the drug and DNA stabilize the complex in the minor groove. In the major groove, a hydrated sodium ion is coordinated to N7 of the terminal guanine and the O4 and O5 of daunomycin with a distorted octahedral geometry. The amino sugar lies in the minor groove without bonding to the DNA. The DNA double helix is distorted with an asymmetrical rearrangement of the backbone conformation surrounding the intercalator drug. The sugar puckers are C1,C2'-endo, G2,C1'-endo, C11,C1'-endo, and G12,C3'-exo. Only the C1 residue has a normal anti-glycosyl torsion angle (chi = -154 degrees), while the other three residues are all in the high anti range (average chi = -86 degrees). This structure allows us to identify three principal functional components of anthracycline antibiotics: the intercalator (rings B-D), the anchoring functions associated with ring A, and the amino sugar. The structure-function relationships of daunomycin binding to DNA as well as other related anticancer drugs are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The structures of the complexes formed between 9-amino-[N-(2-dimethyl-amino)butyl]acridine-4-carboxamide and d(CG5BrUACG)2 and d(CGTACG)2 have been solved by X-ray crystallography using MAD phasing methodology and refined to a resolution of 1.6 Å. The complexes crystallised in space group C222. An asymmetric unit in the brominated complex comprises two strands of DNA, one disordered drug molecule, two cobalt (II) ions and 19 water molecules (31 in the native complex). Asymmetric units in the native complex also contain a sodium ion. The structures exhibit novel features not previously observed in crystals of DNA/drug complexes. The DNA helices stack in continuous columns with their central 4 bp adopting a B-like motif. However, despite being a palindromic sequence, the terminal GC base pairs engage in quite different interactions. At one end of the duplex there is a CpG dinucleotide overlap modified by ligand intercalation and terminal cytosine exchange between symmetry-related duplexes. A novel intercalation complex is formed involving four DNA duplexes, four ligand molecules and two pairs of base tetrads. The other end of the DNA is frayed with the terminal guanine lying in the minor groove of the next duplex in the column. The structure is stabilised by guanine N7/cobalt (II) coordination. We discuss our findings with respect to the effects of packing forces on DNA crystal structure, and the potential effects of intercalating agents on biochemical processes involving DNA quadruplexes and strand exchanges. NDB accession numbers: DD0032 (brominated) and DD0033 (native).  相似文献   

14.
The crystal structure of the DNA decamer C-G-A-T-C-G-A-T-C-G has been solved to a resolution of 1.5 A, with a final R-factor of 16.1% for 5,107 two-sigma reflections. Crystals are orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), with cell dimensions a = 38.93 A, b = 39.63 A, c = 33.30 A, and 10 base pairs/asymmetric unit. The final structure contains 404 DNA atoms, 142 water molecules treated as oxygen atoms, and two Mg(H2O)6(2+) complexes. Decamers stack atop one another to simulate continuous helical columns through the crystal, as with three previously solved monoclinic decamers, but the lateral contacts between columns are quite different in the orthorhombic and monoclinic cells. Narrow and wide regions of the minor groove exhibit a single spine or two ribbons of hydration, respectively, and the minor groove is widest when BII phosphate conformations are opposed diagonally across the groove. Phosphate conformation, in turn, appears to have a base sequence dependence. Twist, rise, cup, and roll are linked as has been observed in the three monoclinic decamers and can be characterized by high or low twist profiles. In all five known decamer crystal structures and eight representative dodecamers, a high twist profile is observed with G-C and G-A steps whereas all other R-R steps are low twist profiles (R = purine). A-T and A-C steps are intermediate in character whereas C-A and C-G exhibit behavior that is strongly influenced by the profiles of the preceding and following steps. When sufficient data are in hand, sequence/structure relationships for all helix parameters probably should be considered in a 4-base pair context. At this stage of limited information the problem is compounded because there are 136 unique 4-base steps x-A-B-y in a double helix as compared with only 10 2-base steps A-B.  相似文献   

15.
Hydration of transfer RNA molecules: a crystallographic study   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
E Westhof  P Dumas  D Moras 《Biochimie》1988,70(2):145-165
Four crystal structures of transfer RNA molecules were refined at 3 A resolution with the inclusion of the solvent molecules found in the difference maps: yeast tRNA-phe in the orthorhombic form, yeast tRNA-phe in the monoclinic form and yeast tRNA-asp in the A and B forms. Over 100 solvent molecules were located in each tRNA crystal. Several hydration schemes are found repeatedly in the 4 crystals. The tertiary interactions in the corner of the L-shaped molecule attract numerous solvent molecules which bridge the ribose hydroxyl O(2') atoms, base exocyclic atoms and phosphate anionic oxygen atoms. Conservation of bases leads to conservative localized hydration patterns. Several solvent molecules are found stabilizing unusual base pairs like the G-U pairs and those involving the pseudouridine base. Water bridges between the O(2') and the exocyclic atom O2 of pyrimidines or the N3 atom of purines are common. Water bridges occur frequently between successive anionic oxygen atoms of each strand as well as between N7 or other exocyclic atoms of successive bases in the major groove. Magnesium ions or spermine molecules are found to bind in the major groove of tRNA helices without specific interactions.  相似文献   

16.
The X-ray crystal structure of the complex between the anthracycline idarubicin and d(CGATCG) has been solved by molecular replacement and refined to a resolution of 2.0 A. The final R-factor is 0.19 for 3768 reflections with Fo > or = 2 sigma (Fo). The complex crystallizes in the trigonal space group P31 with unit cell parameters a = b = 52.996(4), c = 33.065(2) A, alpha = beta = 90 degree, gamma = 120 degree. The asymmetric unit consists of two duplexes, each one being complexed with two idarubicin drugs intercalated at the CpG steps, one spermine and 160 water molecules. The molecular packing underlines major groove-major groove interactions between neighbouring helices, and an unusually low value of the occupied fraction of the unit cell due to a large solvent channel of approximately 30 A diameter. This is the first trigonal crystal form of a DNA-anthracycline complex. The structure is compared with the previously reported structure of the same complex crystallizing in a tetragonal form. The geometry of both the double helices and the intercalation site are conserved as are the intramolecular interactions despite the different crystal forms.  相似文献   

17.
We present the structure of the decanucleotide d(CGTATATACG) determined by single crystal X-ray diffraction at 1.58 A resolution. A netropsin drug is found in the minor groove with guanine stacked on a pyrrole ring of the drug, a feature described here for the first time. The stacked guanine is an extra-helical base coming from the end of a neighbour oligonucleotide. This observation may open the way to the development of minor groove binding drugs with a higher sequence selectivity. The oligonucleotide is in the B-conformation, but the terminal base-pairs are disrupted: the cytosine residues are disordered while the guanine residues penetrate into the minor groove of neighbouring duplexes. Four hydrated Ni ions with octahedral co-ordination are found associated with the N7 atoms of each guanine. The high affinity of these ions with guanine suggests that they may be used as probes for specific guanine residues.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The crystal structure of the dodecamer, d(CGCIAATTCGCG), has been determined at 2.4 A resolution by molecular replacement, and refined to an R-factor of 0.174. The structure is isomorphous with that of the B-DNA dodecamer, d(CGCGAATTCGCG), in space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) with cell dimensions of a = 24.9, b = 40.4, and c = 66.4 A. The initial difference Fourier maps clearly indicated the presence of inosine instead of guanine. The structure was refined with 44 water molecules, and compared to the parent dodecamer. Overall the two structures are very similar, and the I:C forms Watson-Crick base pairs with similar hydrogen bond geometry to the G:C base pairs. The propeller twist angle is low for I4:C21 and relatively high for the I16:C9 base pair (-3.2 degrees compared to -23.0 degrees), and the buckle angles alter, probably due to differences in the contacts with symmetry related molecules in the crystal lattice. The central base pairs of d(CGCIAATTCGCG) show the large propeller twist angles, and the narrow minor groove that characterize A-tract DNA, although I:C base pairs cannot form the major groove bifurcated hydrogen bonds that are possible for A:T base pairs.  相似文献   

20.
Vlieghe D  Sponer J  Van Meervelt L 《Biochemistry》1999,38(50):16443-16451
The single-crystal X-ray structure of the complex between the minor groove binder 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and d(GGCCAATTGG) reveals a novel way of off-centered binding, with an unique hydrogen bond between the minor groove binder and a CG base pair. Application of crystal engineering and cryocooling techniques helped to extend the resolution to 1.9 A, resulting in an unambiguous determination of drug conformation and orientation. The structure was refined to completion using SHELXL-93, resulting in a residual factor R of 18. 0% for 3562 reflections with F(o) > 4sigma(F(o)) including 81 water molecules. As the bulky NH(2)-group on guanine is believed to prevent drug binding in the minor groove, the nature and stability of the CG-DAPI contact was further addressed in full detail using ab initio quantum chemical methods. The amino groups involved in the guanine-drug interaction are substantially nonplanar, resulting in an energy gain of about 5 kcal/mol. The combined structural and theoretical data suggest that the guanine NH(2)-group does not destabilize the drug binding to an extent that it prevents complexation.  相似文献   

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