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Free energy of imperfect nucleic acid helices. 3. Small internal loops resulting from mismatches
Authors:J Gralla  D M Crothers
Affiliation:Department of Chemistry Yale University New Haven, Conn. 06520, U.S.A.
Abstract:Physical studies of enzymioally synthesized oligoribonucleotides of defined sequence are used to evaluate quantitatively the destabilizing influence of mismatched bases in a double helix. The series (A-)4G(-C)n(-U)4, N = 1 to 6, exist as imperfect dimer helices when N is equal to or less than 4, and as monomolecular hairpin helices when N is 5 and 6. Internal loops become progressively more destabilizing as their size increases from 2 to 4 to 6 nucleotides resulting from 1, 2 and 3 consecutive mismatched base pairs. However, the stability of a helix will generally be greater if a given number of mismatched pairs occur consecutively rather than in isolation from one another.These data may be used for improved calculations of stability of RNA secondary structure, to estimate the frequency of structural fluctuations in a double helix and to assess the stability of modified polynucleotide helices. An unmodified double helix of one million randomly arranged base pairs should contain on the time average approximately 10 G.C and 500 A.U pairs in non-hydrogen bonded, unstacked conformations at 25 °C. Our estimate of the effect of mismatching on Tm values of high polymers is less precise because of the long temperature extrapolation required. However, we estimate that DNA or RNA treated with mutagens which interrupt up to 20% of the nucleotide pairs will show a drop of about 1.2 deg. C in melting temperature with each unit per cent of modification.
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