| Literature DB >> 3390442 |
M H Sarma1, G Gupta, R H Sarma.
Abstract
Intrinsic DNA bending is caused by specific DNA sequences. The decamer d(GA4T4C)2, when it repeats in a synthetic polymer or in kinetoplast DNA, results in a macroscopic bending of the molecule as a whole. We employed high-resolution two-dimensional NMR methods to examine the intrinsic structural properties of the d(GA4T4C)2 duplex in solution. Examination of the NOESY data at 50- and 100-ms mixing times indicated that the kinds of observed NOEs can originate if each of the ten nucleotidyl residues belongs to the B-DNA family, i.e., C2'-endo,anti. However, the degree of observed NOE intensities from the A-T junction as well as the observed AH2-AH2 cross-peaks from adjacent AT pairs could not be rationalized on the basis of a straight B-DNA model but could be explained by only a B-DNA model with some structural discontinuity at the A-T junction--the site of 2-fold symmetry in the molecule. In view of the fact that the degree of observed NOE intensities can be complicated by spin diffusion and by fine structural distortion, we have resorted to the use of quantitative theoretical NOESY simulation (which takes into account primary, secondary, and higher orders of NOE) to delineate the structural discontinuity at the A-T junction and to arrive at a structure for the duplex d(GA4T4C)2. We propose a "junction B-DNA model" which can quantitatively explain the 2D NOESY data at 100- and 50-ms mixing times. In this model the two structural blocks in the molecule, i.e., d(GA4).d(T4C) and d(T4C).d(GA4), are conformationally equivalent and are connected at the A-T junction where the base pairs are stably stacked, but the two local structural frames do not coincide in space. This model can create an overall bending of 10 degrees with a center of curvature 50 A away from the center of the duplex. It is the thesis of this paper that the observed bending in polymers with a repeat of d(GA4T4C)2 and the bending in natural DNAs where AnTn.AnTn repeats are present originate at the oligonucleotide repeat level.Entities:
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Year: 1988 PMID: 3390442 DOI: 10.1021/bi00409a045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochemistry ISSN: 0006-2960 Impact factor: 3.162