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.
The contributions of various interactions in the GGCGCAAGCC hairpin containing a GCAA tetraloop were studied by computer simulations using the substitutions of functional groups. The guanosine (G) in the first tetraloop position or in the C-G closing base pair was replaced by 2-aminopurine (AP), and the individual tetraloop's adenosines (A) were replaced by purine (PUR). These substitutions eliminated particular hydrogen bonds thought to stabilize the GCAA tetraloop. For each substitution, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were carried out in an aqueous solution with sodium counterions, using the CHARMM27 force field. The MD simulations showed that the substitutions in the first (G-->AP) and the third (A-->PUR) position of the GCAA tetraloop did not significantly influence the conformation of the hairpin. A long-lived bridging water molecule observed in the GCAA loop was present in both modified loops. The substitutions made in the last loop position (A-->PUR) or in the C-G base pair closing the tetraloop (G-->AP) to some extent influenced the loop structure and dynamics. These loops did not display the long-lived bridging water molecules. When the second A in the GCAA loop was replaced by PUR, the first A in the loop was observed in the anti or in the syn orientation about the glycosyl bond. The G to AP substitution in C-G base pair led to a change of their arrangement from the Watson-Crick to wobble. The MD simulations of the hairpin with C-AP wobble closing base pair showed increased conformational dynamics of the hairpin. The changes of hairpin formation free energy associated with the substitutions of individual bases were calculated by the free energy perturbation method. Our theoretical estimates suggest a larger destabilization for the G to AP substitutions in GCAA loop than for the substitutions of individual A's by PUR, which is in accordance with experimental tendency. The calculations predicted a similar free energy change for G to AP substitutions in the GCAA tetraloop and in the C-G closing base pair.  相似文献   

2.
Contributions of individual interactions in the GGCGCAAGCC hairpin containing a GCAA tetraloop were studied by computer simulations using base substitutions. The G in the first tetraloop position was replaced by inosine (I) or adenosine (A), and the G in the C-G basepair closing the tetraloop was replaced by I. These substitutions eliminate particular hydrogen bonds proposed in the nuclear magnetic resonance model of the GCAA tetraloop. Molecular dynamics simulations of the GCAA tetraloop in aqueous solvent displayed a well-defined hydrogen pattern between the first and last loop nucleotides (G and A) stabilized by a bridging water molecule. Substitution of G-->I in the basepair closing the tetraloop did not significantly influence the loop structure and dynamics. The ICAA loop maintained the overall structure, but displayed variation in the hydrogen-bond network within the tetraloop itself. Molecular dynamics simulations of the ACAA loop led to conformational heterogeneity of the resulting structures. Changes of hairpin formation free energy associated with substitutions of individual bases were calculated by the free energy perturbation method. The calculated decrease of the hairpin stability upon G-->I substitution in the C-G basepair closing the tetraloop was in good agreement with experimental thermodynamic data. Our theoretical estimates for G-->I and G-->A mutations located in the tetraloop suggest larger loop destabilization than corresponding experimental results. The extent of conformational sampling of the structures resulting from base substitutions and its impact on the calculated free energy was discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Intramolecular dynamics of a 14-mer RNA hairpin including GCAA tetraloop was investigated by (13)C NMR relaxation. R(1) and R(1rho) relaxation rates were measured for all protonated base carbons as well as for C1' carbons of ribose sugars at several magnetic field strengths. The data has been interpreted in the framework of modelfree analysis [G. Lipari and A. Szabo. J Am Chem Soc 104, 4546-4559 (1982); G. Lipari and A. Szabo. J Am Chem Soc 104, 4559-4570 (1982)] characterizing the internal dynamics of the molecule by order parameters and correlation times for fast motions on picosecond to nanosecond time scale and by contributions of the chemical exchange. The fast dynamics reveals a rather rigid stem and a significantly more flexible loop. The cytosine and the last adenine bases in the loop as well as all the loop sugars exhibit a significant contribution of conformational equilibrium on microsecond to millisecond time scale. The high R(1rho) values detected on both base and sugar moieties of the loop indicate coordinated motions in this region. A semiquantitative analysis of the conformational equilibrium suggests the exchange rates on the order of 10(4) s(-1). The results are in general agreement with dynamics studies of GAAA loops by NMR relaxation and fluorescent spectroscopy and support the data on the GCAA loop dynamics obtained by MD simulations.  相似文献   

4.
Experimental and computational studies of the G[UUCG]C RNA tetraloop   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
In prokaryotic ribosomal RNAs, most UUCG tetraloops are closed by a C-G base-pair. However, this preference is greatly reduced in eukaryotic rRNA species where many UUCG tetraloops are closed by G-C base-pairs. Here, biophysical properties of the C[UUCG]G and G[UUCG]C tetraloops are compared, using experimental and computational methods. Thermal denaturation experiments are used to derive thermodynamic parameters for the wild-type G[UUCG]C tetraloop and variants containing single deoxy substitutions in the loop. A comparison with analogous experiments on the C[UUCG]G motif shows that the two RNA species exhibit similar patterns in response to the substitutions, suggesting that their loop structures are similar. This conclusion is supported by NMR data that suggest that the essential UUCG loop structure is maintained in both tetraloops. However, NMR results show that the G[UUCG]C loop structure is disrupted prior to melting of the stem; this behavior is in contrast to the two-state behavior of the C[UUCG]G molecule. Stochastic dynamics simulations using the GB/SA continuum solvation model, run as a function of temperature, show rare conformational transitions in several G[UUCG]C simulations. These results lead to the conclusion that substitution of a G-C for a C-G closing base-pair increases the intrinsic flexibility of the UUCG loop.  相似文献   

5.
Hairpin loops belong to the most important structural motifs in folded nucleic acids. The d(GNA) sequence in DNA can form very stable trinucleotide hairpin loops depending, however, strongly on the closing base pair. Replica-exchange molecular dynamics (REMD) were employed to study hairpin folding of two DNA sequences, d(gcGCAgc) and d(cgGCAcg), with the same central loop motif but different closing base pairs starting from single-stranded structures. In both cases, conformations of the most populated conformational cluster at the lowest temperature showed close agreement with available experimental structures. For the loop sequence with the less stable G:C closing base pair, an alternative loop topology accumulated as second most populated conformational state indicating a possible loop structural heterogeneity. Comparative-free energy simulations on induced loop unfolding indicated higher stability of the loop with a C:G closing base pair by ~3 kcal mol(-1) (compared to a G:C closing base pair) in very good agreement with experiment. The comparative energetic analysis of sampled unfolded, intermediate and folded conformational states identified electrostatic and packing interactions as the main contributions to the closing base pair dependence of the d(GCA) loop stability.  相似文献   

6.
Du Z  Yu J  Andino R  James TL 《Biochemistry》2003,42(15):4373-4383
Stable RNA tetraloop motifs are found frequently in biologically active RNAs. These motifs carry out a wide variety of functions in RNA folding, in RNA-RNA and RNA-protein interactions. A great deal of knowledge about the structures and functions of tetraloop motifs has accumulated largely due to intensive theoretical, biochemical, and biophysical studies on three most frequently occurring families of tetraloop sequences, namely, the cUNCGg, the cGNRAg, and the gCUUGc sequences. Our knowledge surely is not exhaustive, and efforts are still being made to gain a better understanding. Here we report the NMR structure of a uCACGg tetraloop that occurs naturally within the cloverleaf RNA structure of the 5'-UTR of coxsackievirus B3. This tetraloop is the major determinant for interaction between the cloverleaf RNA and viral 3C protease, which is an essential part of a ribonucleoprotein complex that plays a critical role in the regulation of viral translation and replication. Our structure shows that the CACG tetraloop is closed by a wobble U.G base pair. The structure of the CACG tetraloop is stabilized by extensive base stacking and hydrogen bonding interactions strikingly similar to those previously reported for the cUUCGg tetraloop. Identification of these hallmark structural features strongly supports the existence of an extended YNCG tetraloop family. The U.G base pair closing the stem and the A residue in the loop introduce some small structural and themodynamic distinctions from the canonical cUUCGg tetraloop that may be important for recognition by the viral 3C protease.  相似文献   

7.
We report a detailed all-atom simulation of the folding of the GCAA RNA tetraloop. The GCAA tetraloop motif is a very common and thermodynamically stable secondary structure in natural RNAs. We use our simulation methods to study the folding behavior of a 12-base GCAA tetraloop structure with a four-base helix adjacent to the tetraloop proper. We implement an all-atom Monte Carlo (MC) simulation of RNA structural dynamics using a Go potential. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of RNA and protein has realistic energetics and sterics, but is extremely expensive in terms of computational time. By coarsely treating non-covalent energetics, but retaining all-atom sterics and entropic effects, all-atom MC techniques are a useful method for the study of protein and now RNA. We observe a sharp folding transition for this structure, and in simulations at room temperature the state histogram shows three distinct minima: an unfolded state (U), a more narrow intermediated state (I), and a narrow folded state (F). The intermediate consists primarily of structures with the GCAA loop and some helix hydrogen bonds formed. Repeated kinetic folding simulations reveal that the number of helix base-pairs forms a simple 1D reaction coordinate for the I-->N transition.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Binding of Escherichia coli signal recognition particle (SRP) to its receptor, FtsY, requires the presence of 4.5S RNA, although FtsY alone does not interact with 4.5S RNA. In this study, we report that the exchange of the GGAA tetraloop sequence in domain IV of 4.5S RNA for UUCG abolishes SRP-FtsY interaction, as determined by gel retardation and membrane targeting experiments, whereas replacements with other GNRA-type tetraloops have no effect. A number of other base exchanges in the tetraloop sequence have minor or intermediate inhibitory effects. Base pair disruptions in the stem adjacent to the tetraloop or replacement of the closing C-G base pair with G-C partially restored function of the otherwise inactive UUCG mutant. Chemical probing by hydroxyl radical cleavage of 4.5S RNA variants show that replacing GGAA with UUCG in the tetraloop sequence leads to structural changes both within the tetraloop and in the adjacent stem; the latter change is reversed upon reverting the C-G closing base pair to G-C. These results show that the SRP-FtsY interaction is strongly influenced by the structure of the tetraloop region of SRP RNA, in particular the tetraloop stem, and suggest that both SRP RNA and Ffh undergo mutual structural adaptation to form SRP that is functional in the interaction with the receptor, FtsY.  相似文献   

10.
The NMR structure of the 3' stem-loop (3'SL) from human U4 snRNA was determined to gain insight into the structural basis for conservation of this stem-loop sequence from vertebrates. 3'SL sequences from human, rat, mouse and chicken U4 snRNA each consist of a 7 bp stem capped by a UACG tetraloop. No high resolution structure has previously been reported for a UACG tetraloop. The UACG tetraloop portion of the 3'SL was especially well defined by the NMR data, with a total of 92 NOE-derived restraints (about 15 per residue), including 48 inter-residue restraints (about 8 per residue) for the tetraloop and closing C-G base pair. Distance restraints were derived from NOESY spectra using MARDIGRAS with random error analysis. Refinement of the 20mer RNA hairpin structure was carried out using the programs DYANA and miniCarlo. In the UACG tetraloop, U and G formed a base pair stabilized by two hydrogen bonds, one between the 2'-hydroxyl proton of U and carbonyl oxygen of G, another between the imino proton of G and carbonyl oxygen O2 of U. In addition, the amino group of C formed a hydrogen bond with the phosphate oxygen of A. G adopted a syn orientation about the glycosidic bond, while the sugar puckers of A and C were either C2'-endo or flexible. The conformation of the UACG tetraloop was, overall, similar to that previously reported for UUCG tetraloops, another member of the UNCG class of tetraloops. The presence of an A, rather than a U, at the variable position, however, presents a distinct surface for interaction of the 3'SL tetraloop with either RNA or protein residues that may stabilize interactions important for active spliceosome formation. Such tertiary interactions may explain the conservation of the UACG tetraloop motif in 3'SL sequences from U4 snRNA in vertebrates.  相似文献   

11.
Expression of replication-dependent histone genes requires a conserved hairpin RNA element in the 3' untranslated regions of poly(A)-less histone mRNAs. The 3' hairpin element is recognized by the hairpin-binding protein or stem-loop-binding protein (HBP/SLBP). This protein-RNA interaction is important for the endonucleolytic cleavage generating the mature mRNA 3' end. The 3' hairpin and presumably HBP/SLBP are also required for nucleocytoplasmic transport, translation, and stability of histone mRNAs. RNA 3' processing and mRNA stability are both regulated during the cell cycle. Here, we have determined the three-dimensional structure of a 24-mer RNA comprising a mammalian histone RNA hairpin using heteronuclear multidimensional NMR spectroscopy. The hairpin adopts a novel UUUC tetraloop conformation that is stabilized by base stacking involving the first and third loop uridines and a closing U-A base pair, and by hydrogen bonding between the first and third uridines in the tetraloop. The HBP interaction of hairpin RNA variants was analyzed in band shift experiments. Particularly important interactions for HBP recognition are mediated by the closing U-A base pair and the first and third loop uridines, whose Watson-Crick functional groups are exposed towards the major groove of the RNA hairpin. The results obtained provide novel structural insight into the interaction of the histone 3' hairpin with HBP, and thus the regulation of histone mRNA metabolism.  相似文献   

12.
Solution structure of a GAAA tetraloop receptor RNA.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
S E Butcher  T Dieckmann    J Feigon 《The EMBO journal》1997,16(24):7490-7499
The GAAA tetraloop receptor is an 11-nucleotide RNA sequence that participates in the tertiary folding of a variety of large catalytic RNAs by providing a specific binding site for GAAA tetraloops. Here we report the solution structure of the isolated tetraloop receptor as solved by multidimensional, heteronuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The internal loop of the tetraloop receptor has three adenosines stacked in a cross-strand or zipper-like fashion. This arrangement produces a high degree of base stacking within the asymmetric internal loop without extrahelical bases or kinking the helix. Additional interactions within the internal loop include a U. U mismatch pair and a G.U wobble pair. A comparison with the crystal structure of the receptor RNA bound to its tetraloop shows that a conformational change has to occur upon tetraloop binding, which is in good agreement with previous biochemical data. A model for an alternative binding site within the receptor is proposed based on the NMR structure, phylogenetic data and previous crystallographic structures of tetraloop interactions.  相似文献   

13.
Tetraloops are very abundant structural elements of RNA that are formed by four nucleotides in a hairpin loop which is closed by a double stranded helical stem with some Watson-Crick base pairs. A tetraloop r(GCGAAGGC) was identified from the crystal structure of the central domain of 16S rRNA (727-730) in the Thermus thermophilus 30S ribosomal complex. The crystal structure of the 30S complex includes a total of 104 nucleotides from the central domain of the 16S rRNA and three ribosomal proteins S6, S15 and S18. Independent biochemical experiments have demonstrated that protein S15 plays the role in initiating the formation of the central domain of this complex. In the crystal, the tetraloop interacts with the protein S15 at two sites: one of them is associated with hydrogen bond interactions between residue His50 and nucleotide G730, and the other is associated with the occurrence of residue Arg53 beside A728. This paper uses molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to investigate the protein-dependent structural stability of the tetraloop and demonstrates the folding pathway of this tetraloop via melting denaturation and its subsequent refolding. Three important results are derived from these simulations: (i) The stability of nucleotide A728 appears to be protein dependent. Without the interaction with S15, A728 flips away from stacking with A729. (ii) The melting temperature demonstrated by the simulations is analogous to the results of thermodynamic experiments. In addition, the simulated folding of the tetraloop is stepwise: the native shape of the backbone is formed first; this is then followed by the formation of the Watson- Crick base pairs in the stem; and finally the hydrogen bonds and base stacking in the loop are formed. (iii) The tetraloop structure is similar to the crystal structure at salt concentrations of 0.1 M and 1.0 M used for the simulations, but the refolded structure at 0.1 M salt is more comparable to the crystal structure than at 1.0 M. The results from the simulations using both the Generalized Born continuum model and explicit solvent model (Particle Mesh Ewald) generate a similar pathway for unfolding/refolding of the tetraloop.  相似文献   

14.
Thermodynamics of 2'-ribose substitutions in UUCG tetraloops   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The ribose 2'-hydroxyl group confers upon RNA many unique molecular properties. To better appreciate its contribution to structure and stability and to monitor how substitutions of the 2' hydroxyl can alter an RNA molecule, each loop pyrimidine ribonucleotide in the UUCG tetraloop was substituted with a nucleotide containing either a fluorine (2'-F), hydrogen (2'-H), amino (2'-NH2), or methoxy (2'-OCH3) group, in the context of both the C:G and G:C loop-closing base pair. The thermodynamic parameters of these tetraloop variants have been determined and NMR experiments used to monitor the structural changes resulting from the substitutions. The modified riboses are better tolerated in the G[UUCG]C tetraloop, which may be due to its increased loop flexibility relative to the C[UUCG]G loop. Even for these simple substitutions, the free-energy change reflects a complex interplay of hydrogen bonding, solvation effects, and intrinsic pucker preferences of the nucleotides.  相似文献   

15.
Osmolytes have the potential to affect the stability of secondary structure motifs and alter preferences for conserved nucleic acid sequences in the cell. To contribute to the understanding of the in vivo function of RNA we observed the effects of different classes of osmolytes on the UNCG tetraloop motif. UNCG tetraloops are the most common and stable of the RNA tetraloops and are nucleation sites for RNA folding. They also have a significant thermodynamic preference for a CG closing base pair. The thermal denaturation of model hairpins containing UUCG loops was monitored using UV-Vis spectroscopy in the presence of osmolytes with different chemical properties. Interestingly, all of the osmolytes tested destabilized the hairpins, but all had little effect on the thermodynamic preference for a CG base pair, except for polyethylene glycol (PEG) 200. PEG 200 destabilized the loop with the CG closing base pair relative to the loop with a GC closing base pair. The destabilization was linear with increasing concentrations of PEG 200, and the slope of this relationship was not perturbed by changes in the hairpin stem outside of the closing pair. This result suggests that in the presence of PEG 200, the UUCG loop with a GC closing base pair may retain some preferential interactions with the cosolute that are lost in the presence of the CG closing base pair. These results reveal that relatively small structural changes may influence how osmolytes tune the stability, and thus the function of a secondary structure motif in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
The hepatitis delta virus (HDV) ribozyme uses both metal ion and nucleobase catalysis in its cleavage mechanism. A reverse G·U wobble was observed in a recent crystal structure of the precleaved state. This unusual base pair positions a Mg(2+) ion to participate in catalysis. Herein, we used molecular dynamics (MD) and X-ray crystallography to characterize the conformation and metal binding characteristics of this base pair in product and precleaved forms. Beginning with a crystal structure of the product form, we observed formation of the reverse G·U wobble during MD trajectories. We also demonstrated that this base pair is compatible with the diffraction data for the product-bound state. During MD trajectories of the product form, Na(+) ions interacted with the reverse G·U wobble in the RNA active site, and a Mg(2+) ion, introduced in certain trajectories, remained bound at this site. Beginning with a crystal structure of the precleaved form, the reverse G·U wobble with bound Mg(2+) remained intact during MD simulations. When we removed Mg(2+) from the starting precleaved structure, Na(+) ions interacted with the reverse G·U wobble. In support of the computational results, we observed competition between Na(+) and Mg(2+) in the precleaved ribozyme crystallographically. Nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann calculations revealed a negatively charged patch near the reverse G·U wobble. This anionic pocket likely serves to bind metal ions and to help shift the pK(a) of the catalytic nucleobase, C75. Thus, the reverse G·U wobble motif serves to organize two catalytic elements, a metal ion and catalytic nucleobase, within the active site of the HDV ribozyme.  相似文献   

17.
The partly self-complementary DNA octamer d(m5C-G-m5C-G-T-G-m5C-G) was investigated by NMR spectroscopy in solution. It is demonstrated that this peculiar DNA fragment, under suitable conditions of concentration, salt and temperature, exclusively prefers to adopt a monomeric hairpin form with a stem of three Watson-Crick type base pairs and a loop of two residues. At high single strand concentration (8 mM DNA) and low temperature (i.e. below 295 K) the hairpin occurs in slow equilibrium with a B-dimer structure. At high ionic strength (greater than or equal to 100 mM Na+) and/or in the presence of methanol a third species appears, which is assigned to a Z-like dimer. In the B form, as well as in the Z dimer, the two central base pairs form G.T wobble pairs with the bases as major tautomers.  相似文献   

18.
The cleavage site of the Neurospora VS RNA ribozyme is located in a separate hairpin domain containing a hexanucleotide internal loop with an A-C mismatch and two adjacent G-A mismatches. The solution structure of the internal loop and helix la of the ribozyme substrate hairpin has been determined by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The 2 nt in the internal loop, flanking the cleavage site, a guanine and adenine, are involved in two sheared G.A base pairs similar to the magnesium ion-binding site of the hammerhead ribozyme. Adjacent to the tandem G.A base pairs, the adenine and cytidine, which are important for cleavage, form a noncanonical wobble A+-C base pair. The dynamic properties of the internal loop and details of the high-resolution structure support the view that the hairpin structure represents a ground state, which has to undergo a conformational change prior to cleavage. Results of chemical modification and mutagenesis data of the Neurospora VS RNA ribozyme can be explained in context with the present three-dimensional structure.  相似文献   

19.
The structure of the L3 central hairpin loop isolated from the antigenomic sequence of the hepatitis delta virus ribozyme with the P2 and P3 stems from the ribozyme stacked on top of the loop has been determined by NMR spectroscopy. The 26 nt stem-loop structure contains nine base pairs and a 7 nt loop (5'-UCCUCGC-3'). This hairpin loop is critical for efficient catalysis in the intact ribozyme. The structure was determined using homonuclear and heteronuclear NMR techniques on non-labeled and15N-labeled RNA oligonucleotides. The overall root mean square deviation for the structure was 1.15 A (+/- 0.28 A) for the loop and the closing C.G base pair and 0.90 A (+/- 0.18 A) for the loop and the closing C.G base pair but without the lone purine in the loop, which is not well defined in the structure. The structure indicates a U.C base pair between the nucleotides on the 5'- and 3'-ends of the loop. This base pair is formed with a single hydrogen bond involving the cytosine exocyclic amino proton and the carbonyl O4 of the uracil. The most unexpected finding in the loop is a syn cytidine. While not unprecedented, syn pyrimidines are highly unusual. This one can be confidently established by intranucleotide distances between the ribose and the base determined by NMR spectroscopy. A similar study of the structure of this loop showed a somewhat different three-dimensional structure. A discussion of differences in the two structures, as well as possible sites of interaction with the cleavage site, will be presented.  相似文献   

20.
The conformational behavior of DNA minihairpin loops is sensitive to the directionality of the base pair that closes the loop. Especially tailored circular dumbbells, consisting of a stem of three Watson–Crick base pairs capped on each side with a minihairpin loop, serve as excellent model compounds by means of which deeper insight is gained into the relative stability and melting properties of hairpin loops that differ only in directionality of the closing pair: C-G vs G-C. For this reason the thermodynamic properties of the circular DNA decamers 5′-d〈pCGC-TT-GCG-TT〉-3′( I ) and reference compounds 5′-d〈pGGC-TT-GCC-TT≤-3′( II ) and 5′-d(GCG-TC-CGC)-3′( III ) are studied by means of nmr spectroscopy. Molecules I and II adopt dumbbell structures closed on both sides by a two-membered hairpin hop. At low temperature I consists of a mixture of two slowly exchanging forms, denoted L2L2 and L2L4 . The low-temperature L2L2 form is the fully intact minihairpin structure with three Watson–Crick C-G base pairs. The high-temperature form, L2L4 ,contains a partially disrupted closing G-C base pair in the 5′-GTTC-3′ loop, with the cytosine base placed in a syn orientation. The opposite 5′-CTTG-3′ loop remains stable. A study of the noncircular hairpin structure III shows similar conformational behavior for the 5′-GTTC-3′ loop as found in I a syn orientation for C(6) and two slowly exchanging imino proton signals for G(3). The melting point Tm of II was estimated to lie above 365 K. The Tm value of the duplex stem and the 5′-CTTG-3′ loop of the L2L4 form ofIis 352 ± 2 K. The ΔH° is calculated as ?89 ± 10 kJ/mol. The Tm value determined for the individual residues of the 5′-GTTC-3′ loop lies 4°–11° lower. The enthalpy ΔH° of melting the thymine residues in the 5′-GTTC-3′ loop is calculated to be -61± 7 kJ/mol. Thermodynamic data of the equilibrium between the slowly exchanging two- and four-membered loop conformers of I reveal an upper limit for ΔH° of +30 kJ/mol in going from a two-memberedto a four-membered loop, in agreement with the enthalpy difference of +28 k.j/mol between the two loops at the Tm midpoint. For hairpin III the upper limit for ΔH° going from a two-membered to a four-membered loop amounts to ±21 kJ/mol. The mutual exchange rate between the L2 and L4 form in III is estimated as 13.6 s?1. Our results clearly suggest that small four-way DNA junctions(model for immobilized Holliday junctions) can be designed that consist of a single DNA strandthat features -CTTG-caps on three of the four arms of the junction. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  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