Abstract: | DNA-RNA and DNA-DNA duplexes are even more polymorphic than observed previously. DNA-RNA hybrids can have secondary structures like A-DNA or A-RNA, but double helices of the synthetic DNA-RNA hybrids poly(dA) X poly(rU) and poly(dI) X poly(rC), respectively, form 11-fold and 10-fold double-helical structures in which the two chains have quite different conformations. Extensive X-ray fiber diffraction analyses show that in both structures the DNA chains have C-2'-endo-puckered furanose rings, while the anti-parallel RNA chains have C-3'-endo-puckered rings. The bidirectional properties of such duplexes may be important in the transfer of biological information from nucleic acids. |