| Literature DB >> 29250441 |
Ewan K S McRae1, Evan P Booy1, Gay Pauline Padilla-Meier1, Sean A McKenna1,2,3.
Abstract
Guanine quadruplexes (G4s) are four-stranded secondary structures of nucleic acids which are stabilized by noncanonical hydrogen bonding systems between the nitrogenous bases as well as extensive base stacking, or pi-pi, interactions. Formation of these structures in either genomic DNA or cellular RNA has the potential to affect cell biology in many facets including telomere maintenance, transcription, alternate splicing, and translation. Consequently, G4s have become therapeutic targets and several small molecule compounds have been developed which can bind such structures, yet little is known about how G4s interact with their native protein binding partners. This review focuses on the recognition of G4s by proteins and small peptides, comparing the modes of recognition that have thus far been observed. Emphasis will be placed on the information that has been gained through high-resolution crystallographic and NMR structures of G4/peptide complexes as well as biochemical investigations of binding specificity. By understanding the molecular features that lead to specificity of G4 binding by native proteins, we will be better equipped to target protein/G4 interactions for therapeutic purposes.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29250441 PMCID: PMC5700478 DOI: 10.1155/2017/9675348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nucleic Acids ISSN: 2090-0201
Figure 1Side view of the human telomere guanine quadruplex in parallel (a) and antiparallel (b) conformations. Space filling models (c) for parallel (left) and antiparallel (right) quadruplexes. PDBs 1KF1 (a) and 143D (b). Guanines shown in green, thymines shown in blue, adenines shown in red, and the phosphoribose backbone shown in grey.
Figure 2X-ray structures of HD22-27mer (a) and RE31 (b) guanine quadruplex-containing aptamers bound to thrombin, for ease of differentiating the thrombin binding sites: shown in red ribbon is the light chain of thrombin and shown in grey ribbon is the heavy chain of thrombin with the C-terminal nub of the heavy chain shown in red. DNA aptamers are shown in blue. PDBs 4I7Y (a) and 5CMX (b).
Figure 3RGGGGR peptide bound to SC1 RNA quadruplex-duplex junction. Comparison of peptide conformations between X-ray (green) and NMR (yellow) structures shown in (a). Hydrogen bonding pattern between peptide and nucleic acids shown in (b). Space filling model shown in (c), with peptide shown as a magenta ribbon. PDBs 5DEA (X-ray) and 2LA5 (NMR).
Figure 4NMR structure of 16-amino-acid peptide (pink) from DHX36 bound to a DNA guanine quadruplex (green and blue). Amino acids that stack on the face of the guanine tetrad are labelled in (a) and charged amino acids that interact with the backbone of the quadruplex are shown in (b). Small-angle X-ray scattering data of a 52-amino-acid fragment of DHX36 (turquoise) bound to an RNA quadruplex (blue) shown in (c). Transparent space filling diagram of the 16-amino-acid DHX36 peptide bound to DNA quadruplex. PDB 2N21 (NMR) and SAX structure [30].