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1.
UV-absorption spectrophotometry and molecular modeling have been used to study the influence of the chemical nature of sugars (ribose or deoxyribose) on triple helix stability. For the Pyrimidine.purine* Pyrimidine motif, all eight combinations were tested with each of the three strands composed of either DNA or RNA. The chemical nature of sugars has a dramatic influence on triple helix stability. For each double helix composition, a more stable triple helix was formed when the third strand was RNA rather than DNA. No stable triple helix was detected when the polypurine sequence was made of RNA with a third strand made of DNA. Energy minimization studies using the JUMNA program suggested that interactions between the 2'-hydroxyl group of the third strand and the phosphates of the polypurine strand play an important role in determining the relative stabilities of triple-helical structures in which the polypyrimidine third strand is oriented parallel to the polypurine sequence. These interactions are not allowed when the third strand adopts an antiparallel orientation with respect to the target polypurine sequence, as observed when the third strand contains G and A or G and T/U. We show by footprinting and gel retardation experiments that an oligoribonucleotide containing G and A or G and U fails to bind double helical DNA, while the corresponding DNA oligomers form stable triple-helical complexes.  相似文献   

2.
F Gago  W G Richards 《FEBS letters》1989,242(2):270-274
A single strand of oligonucleotide can bind to double helical DNA under certain conditions. This must involve some unwinding of the original double helix in a process leading to the formation of a three-stranded region. The free energy for such an entropically unlikely reaction may come from a change in the degree of supercoiling of the original DNA. The conformation of the triple strand is investigated here using computer graphics and molecular mechanics calculations. It is suggested that on binding the oligonucleotide (strand 3) to two paired strands (1 and 2) in a supercoiled DNA molecule, strand 2 might adopt a left-handed conformation whilst strand 1 and strand 3 pair in the normal Watson-Crick B-configuration.  相似文献   

3.
The supertwisted, double-stranded, replicative intermediate of øX174 DNA (RFI) has been used to determine whether one of the two strands of the double helix is uniquely sensitive to induction of single-strand breaks by ionizing radiation. This could result from a particularly sensitive base sequence or a transfer of energy to a specific location of the DNA molecule. The results indicate that both strands of the double helix are equally broken, even though their base compositions are significantly different. If there are “hot spots” in the strands, then they are present in equal amounts in each strand.  相似文献   

4.
Initiation of DNA replication of the papillomavirus genome is a multi-step process involving the sequential loading of viral E1 protein subunits onto the origin of replication. Here we have captured structural snapshots of two sequential steps in the assembly process. Initially, an E1 dimer binds to adjacent major grooves on one face of the double helix; a second dimer then binds to another face of the helix. Each E1 monomer has two DNA-binding modules: a DNA-binding loop, which binds to one DNA strand and a DNA-binding helix, which binds to the opposite strand. The nature of DNA binding suggests a mechanism for the transition between double- and single-stranded DNA binding that is implicit in the progression to a functional helicase.  相似文献   

5.
We have studied the conformation of a 17 base-pair homopyrimidine.homopurine triple helix formed on a fragment of duplex DNA derived from Simian Virus SV40. Gel retardation assays indicate that an 80 base-pair fragment has an altered conformation when the triple helix is formed, which is most likely to result from an induced bend in the DNA. Investigation of the detailed conformation of the double helix-triple helix junctions has been performed by means of molecular modelling. Bending on the 5' and 3' sides of the third strand oligonucleotide are not located at equivalent positions with respect to the junctions, which is explained in terms of base stacking. The junction effects on DNA structure, induced by the requirement for cytosine protonation in the Hoogsteen-bonded strand to form CGC+ base triplets, are also discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Two triple helix structures (15-mers containing only T.A-T triplets or containing mixed T.A-T and C.G-C triplets) have been studied by uranyl mediated DNA photocleavage to probe the accessibility of the phosphates of the DNA backbone. Whereas the phosphates of the pyrimidine strand are at least as accessible as in double stranded DNA, in the phosphates of the purine strand are partly shielded and more so at the 5'-end of the strand. With the homo A/T target increased cleavage is observed towards the 3'-end on the pyrimidine strand. These results show that the third strand is asymmetrically positioned along the groove with the tightest triple strand double strand interactions at the 5'-end of the third strand. The results also indicate that homo-A versus mixed A/G 'Hoogsteen-triple helices' have different structures.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract

DNA interstrand cross-links are usually formed due to bidentate covalent or coordination binding of a cross-linking agent to nucleotides of different strands. However interstrand linkages can be also caused by any type of chemical modification that gives rise to a strong local stabilization of the double helix. These stabilized sites conserve their helical structure and prevent local and total strand separation at temperatures above the melting of ordinary AT and GC base pairs. This local stabilization makes DNA melting fully reversible and independent of strand concentration like ordinary covalent interstrand cross-links. The stabilization can be caused by all the types of chemical modifications (interstrand cross-links, intrastrand cross-links or monofunctional adducts) if they give rise to a strong enough local stabilization of the double helix. Our calculation demonstrates that an increase in stability by 25 to 30 kcal in the free energy of a single base pair of the double helix is sufficient for this “cross-linking effect” (i.e. conserving the helicity of this base pair and preventing strand separation after melting of ordinary base pairs). For the situation where there is more then one stabilized site in a DNA duplex (e.g., 1 stabilized site per 1000 bp), a lower stabilization per site is sufficient for the “cross-linking effect” (18–20 kcal). A substantial increase in DNA stability was found in various experimental studies for some metal-based anti-tumor compounds. These compounds may give rise to the effect described above. If ligand induced stabilization is distributed among several neighboring base pairs, a much lower minimum increase per stabilized base pair is sufficient to produce the cross-linking effect (1 bp- 24.4 kcal; 5 bp- 5.3 kcal; 10 bp- 2.9 kcal, 25 bp- 1.4 kcal; 50 bp- 1.0 kcal). The relatively weak non-covalent binding of histones or protamines that cover long regions of DNA (20–40 bp) can also cause this effect if the salt concentration of the solution is sufficiently low to cause strong local stabilization of the double helix. Stretches of GC pairs more than 25 bp in length inserted into poly(AT) DNA also exhibit properties of stabilizing interstrand cross-links.  相似文献   

8.
DNA interstrand cross-links are usually formed due to bidentate covalent or coordination binding of a cross-linking agent to nucleotides of different strands. However interstrand linkages can be also caused by any type of chemical modification that gives rise to a strong local stabilization of the double helix. These stabilized sites conserve their helical structure and prevent local and total strand separation at temperatures above the melting of ordinary AT and GC base pairs. This local stabilization makes DNA melting fully reversible and independent of strand concentration like ordinary covalent interstrand cross-links. The stabilization can be caused by all the types of chemical modifications (interstrand cross-links, intrastrand cross-links or monofunctional adducts) if they give rise to a strong enough local stabilization of the double helix. Our calculation demonstrates that an increase in stability by 25 to 30 kcal in the free energy of a single base pair of the double helix is sufficient for this "cross-linking effect" (i.e. conserving the helicity of this base pair and preventing strand separation after melting of ordinary base pairs). For the situation where there is more then one stabilized site in a DNA duplex (e.g., 1 stabilized site per 1000 bp), a lower stabilization per site is sufficient for the "cross-linking effect" (18 - 20 kcal). A substantial increase in DNA stability was found in various experimental studies for some metal-based anti-tumor compounds. These compounds may give rise to the effect described above. If ligand induced stabilization is distributed among several neighboring base pairs, a much lower minimum increase per stabilized base pair is sufficient to produce the cross-linking effect (1 bp- 24.4 kcal; 5 bp- 5.3 kcal; 10 bp- 2.9 kcal, 25 bp- 1.4 kcal; 50 bp- 1.0 kcal). The relatively weak non-covalent binding of histones or protamines that cover long regions of DNA (20- 40 bp) can also cause this effect if the salt concentration of the solution is sufficiently low to cause strong local stabilization of the double helix. Stretches of GC pairs more than 25 bp in length inserted into poly(AT) DNA also exhibit properties of stabilizing interstrand cross-links.  相似文献   

9.
The Mre11–Rad50 nuclease–ATPase is an evolutionarily conserved multifunctional DNA double‐strand break (DSB) repair factor. Mre11–Rad50's mechanism in the processing, tethering, and signaling of DSBs is unclear, in part because we lack a structural framework for its interaction with DNA in different functional states. We determined the crystal structure of Thermotoga maritima Rad50NBD (nucleotide‐binding domain) in complex with Mre11HLH (helix‐loop‐helix domain), AMPPNP, and double‐stranded DNA. DNA binds between both coiled‐coil domains of the Rad50 dimer with main interactions to a strand‐loop‐helix motif on the NBD. Our analysis suggests that this motif on Rad50 does not directly recognize DNA ends and binds internal sites on DNA. Functional studies reveal that DNA binding to Rad50 is not critical for DNA double‐strand break repair but is important for telomere maintenance. In summary, we provide a structural framework for DNA binding to Rad50 in the ATP‐bound state.  相似文献   

10.
The proposed mechanism of type IA DNA topoisomerase I includes conformational changes by the single enzyme polypeptide to allow binding of the G strand of the DNA substrate at the active site, and the opening or closing of the "gate" created on the G strand of DNA to the passing single or double DNA strand(s) through the cleaved G strand DNA. The shifting of an alpha helix upon G strand DNA binding has been observed from the comparison of the type IA DNA topoisomerase crystal structures. Site-directed mutagenesis of the strictly conserved Gly-194 at the N terminus of this alpha helix in Escherichia coli DNA topoisomerase I showed that flexibility around this glycine residue is required for DNA cleavage and relaxation activity and supports a functional role for this hinge region in the enzyme conformational change.  相似文献   

11.
Deducing the structure of the DNA double helix in 1953 implied the mode of its replication: Watson-Crick (WC) base pairing might instruct an enzyme, now known as the DNA polymerase, during the synthesis of a daughter stand complementary to a single strand of the parental double helix. What has become increasingly clear in the last 60 years, however, is that adducted and oxidatively generated DNA bases are ubiquitous in physiological DNA, and all organisms conserve multiple DNA polymerases specialized for DNA synthesis opposite these damaged templates. Here, we review recent crystal structures depicting replicative and bypass DNA polymerases encountering two typical lesions arising from the oxidation of DNA: abasic sites, which block the replication fork, and the miscoding premutagenic lesion 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG).  相似文献   

12.
Abstract

A theoretical method is developed for calculation of melting curves of covalent complexes of DNA with antitumor drugs. The method takes into account all the types of chemical modifications of the double helix caused by platinum compounds and DNA alkylating agents: 1) monofunctional adducts bound to one nucleotide; 2) intrastrand cross-links which appear due to bidentate binding of a drug molecule to two nucleotides that are included into the same DNA strand; 3) interstrand cross-links caused by bidentate binding of a molecule to two nucleotides of different strands. The developed calculation method takes into account the following double helix alterations at sites of chemical modifications: 1) a change in stability of chemically modified base pairs and neighboring ones, that is caused by all the types of chemical modifications; 2) a change in the energy of boundaries between helical and melted regions at sites of chemical modification (local alteration of the factor of cooperativity of DNA melting), that is caused by all the types of chemical modifications, too; 3) a change in the loop entropy factor of melted regions that include interstrand cross-links; 4) the prohibition of divergence of DNA strands in completely melted DNA molecules, which is caused by interstrand cross-links only. General equations are derived, and three calculation methods are proposed to calculate DNA melting curves and the parameters that characterize the helix-coil transition.  相似文献   

13.
A theoretical method is developed for calculation of melting curves of covalent complexes of DNA with antitumor drugs. The method takes into account all the types of chemical modifications of the double helix caused by platinum compounds and DNA alkylating agents: 1) monofunctional adducts bound to one nucleotide; 2) intrastrand cross-links which appear due to bidentate binding of a drug molecule to two nucleotides that are included into the same DNA strand; 3) interstrand cross-links caused by bidentate binding of a molecule to two nucleotides of different strands. The developed calculation method takes into account the following double helix alterations at sites of chemical modifications: 1) a change in stability of chemically modified base pairs and neighboring ones, that is caused by all the types of chemical modifications; 2) a change in the energy of boundaries between helical and melted regions at sites of chemical modification (local alteration of the factor of cooperativity of DNA melting), that is caused by all the types of chemical modifications, too; 3) a change in the loop entropy factor of melted regions that include interstrand cross-links; 4) the prohibition of divergence of DNA strands in completely melted DNA molecules, which is caused by interstrand cross-links only. General equations are derived, and three calculation methods are proposed to calculate DNA melting curves and the parameters that characterize the helix-coil transition.  相似文献   

14.
Tethering of BBZPNH2, an analogue of the Hoechst 33258, with a 14 nucleotide long DNA sequence with the help of succinimidyl-4-(N-maleimidomethyl)cyclohexane-1-carboxylate (SMCC), a heterobifunctional crosslinking reagent, using DMF/ water as solvent yields a conjugate which effectively stabilizes the triple helix. The above conjugate was hybridized with 26 bp long double stranded (ds) DNA having 14 bp long polypurine-polypyrimidine stretch to form a pyrimidine motif triple helix. The above conjugate increases the thermal stability of both the transitions, that is, triple helix to double helix by 12 degrees C and double helix to single strand transition by 16 degrees C for the triple helix formed with conjugated TFO over the triple helix made from non-conjugated TFO. Fluorescence and circular dichroism spectra recorded at different temperatures confirm the presence of minor groove binding bisbenzimidazole in the AT-rich minor groove of dsDNA even after the major groove bound TFO separates out.  相似文献   

15.
It was found that Gramicidin S (GS) with intramolecular antiparallel beta-sheet structure could bind to and thermally stabilize double and triple stranded DNA. UV melting study revealed that GS stabilized mixed sequence dsDNA in the presence of Mg2+ (deltaTm = +6.0) but it stabilized dsDNA with homosequence only in the absence of Mg2+. It should be pointed out that GS specifically stabilized the third strand (Hoogsteen base pair) but not double strand (Watson-Crick base pair) in triple helix DNA.  相似文献   

16.
The double helix is known to form as a result of hybridization of complementary nucleic acid strands in aqueous solution. In the helix the negatively charged phosphate groups of each nucleic acid strand are distributed helically on the outside of the duplex and are available for interaction with cationic groups. Cation-coated glass surfaces are now widely used in biotechnology, especially for covalent attachment of cDNAs and oligonucleotides as surface-bound probes on microarrays. These cationic surfaces can bind the nucleic acid backbone electrostatically through the phosphate moiety. Here we describe a simple method to fabricate DNA microarrays based upon adsorptive rather than covalent attachment of oligonucleotides to a positively charged surface. We show that such adsorbed oligonucleotide probes form a densely packed monolayer, which retains capacity for base pair-specific hybridization with a solution state DNA target strand to form the duplex. However, both strand dissociation kinetics and the rate of DNase digestion suggest, on symmetry grounds, that the target DNA binds to such adsorbed oligonucleotides to form a highly asymmetrical and unwound duplex. Thus, it is suggested that, at least on a charged surface, a non-helical DNA duplex can be the preferred structural isomer under standard biochemical conditions.  相似文献   

17.
Homopyrimidine oligodeoxynucleotides recognize the major groove of the DNA double helix at homopurine.homopyrimidine sequences by forming local triple helices. The oligonucleotide is bound parallel to the homopurine strand of the duplex. This binding can be revealed by a footprinting technique using copper-phenanthroline as a cleaving reagent. Oligonucleotide binding in the major groove prevents cleavage by copper-phenanthroline. The cleavage patterns on opposite strands of the duplex at the boundaries of the triple helix are asymmetric. They are shifted to the 3'-side, indicating that the copper-phenanthroline chelate binds in the minor groove of the duplex structure. Binding of the chelate at the junction between the triple and the double helix is not perturbed on the 5'-side of the bound homopyrimidine oligonucleotide. In contrast, a strong enhancement of cleavage is observed on the purine-containing strand at the triplex-duplex junction on the 3'-side of the homopyrimidine oligonucleotide.  相似文献   

18.
Oligodeoxynucleotides can be synthesized by using the alpha anomers of nucleoside units. Oligo-alpha-deoxynucleotides are resistant to nucleases and could be used to regulate gene expression in vivo. Theoretical calculations were carried out to determine the conformational energy of an oligomeric alpha-beta duplex (dA)5.(dT)5 where the adenosine strand contains natural beta-deoxyribonucleotides and the thymidine strand contains synthetic alpha-deoxyribonucleotides. These calculations predict that in the more stable B-like conformation the two strands of the double helix should run parallel to each other whereas in the more stable A-like conformation the two strands should adopt an antiparallel orientation. In order to test these predictions 1,10-phenanthroline was covalently attached to the 5'-end of an alpha-octathymidylate. In the presence of copper ions and a reducing agent (beta-mercaptopropionic acid), the (phenanthroline)2-copper complex generates OH. radicals that cleave phosphodiester bonds in the complementary sequence to which the alpha-octathymidylate is bound. By use of a 27mer oligo-beta-deoxynucleotide containing an octadeoxyadenylate sequence as a target for the phenanthroline-substituted alpha-(dT)8, cleavage was observed on the 5'-side of the (dA)8 sequence, demonstrating that the alpha-beta DNA-DNA hybrid formed a double helix with parallel orientation of the two strands. The same result was obtained when alpha-(dT)8 was bound to beta-(dA)n with n = 8 or 10. When a beta-oligoriboadenylate was used as a target, cleavage occurred exclusively on the 3'-side of the (rA)8 or (rA)10 sequence, indicating that the alpha-beta DNA-RNA hybrid formed a double helix with an antiparallel orientation of the two strands. When a phenanthroline-substituted beta-octathymidylate was used instead of the alpha-octathymidylate, an antiparallel double helix was formed independently of whether the target beta sequence was a DNA or an RNA.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract

Two types of physical models have been developed for treating DNA molecules whose topology is of interest The two model motifs combine jacks-and-straws molecular representations with flexible tubing in different proportions. Both motifs present a low-resolution construct of DNA that retains helix axes, strand individuality and the distinguishabiity of the major and minor grooves. Molecules whose double helix axes are branched are modelled by stiff double helices and flexible branch sites. Supercoiled and knotted DNA molecules are modelled on a smaller scale, in a system in which a flexible backbone is supported by a series of stiff helical struts; removal of this scaffolding immediately reveals the linking of the strands. The models are light and easy to construct. They may be used either for demonstrations or as a research tool that assists the interpretation data.  相似文献   

20.
A scenario is proposed by which non-enzymatic self-replication of short RNA molecules could occur. The hypothesis is illustrated for the self-replication of an oligopyrimidine (Y) strand. The successful replication of Y requires a series of plausible steps. The first, experimentally feasible, step involves the template-directed polynucleotide synthesis, based on Watson-Crick base pairing, of an oligopurine (R) strand using Y as the template, and chemically activated mononucleotides as the building blocks. This step will result in the formation of an oligopyrimidine.oligopurine (YR) double helix. The second step requires the use of the double helix as the template for the synthesis of a second oligopyrimidine (Y') strand from activated pyrimidine monomers. This synthesis could be facilitated by the binding of the monopyrimidines in the major groove of the YR double helix, via Hoogsteen-type base pairing with the R strand, establishing in that sense triple helix recognition. This step, if successful, should result in the formation of a new strand, Y', that runs parallel to the oligopurine strand. Y' differs from Y in that all 3'-5' phosphodiester linkages in Y are replaced by 5'-3' linkages in Y'. The resulting triple helix (YRY') is in dynamic equilibrium with YR and free Y'. In subsequent steps, unassociated Y' directs the synthesis of the complementary oligopurine (R') strand forming a new double helix Y'R' that may direct the synthesis of an oligopyrimidine strand, Y, that is expected to be identical to the first strand that started the whole sequence. An attempt is made to generalize the above hypothesis to mixed oligonucleotides containing all four bases and identify the limitations of this hypothesis.  相似文献   

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