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1.
Reverse Watson–Crick DNA with parallel‐strand orientation (ps DNA) has been constructed. Pyrrolo‐dC (PyrdC) nucleosides with phenyl and pyridinyl residues linked to the 6 position of the pyrrolo[2,3‐d]pyrimidine base have been incorporated in 12‐ and 25‐mer oligonucleotide duplexes and utilized as silver‐ion binding sites. Thermal‐stability studies on the parallel DNA strands demonstrated extremely strong silver‐ion binding and strongly enhanced duplex stability. Stoichiometric UV and fluorescence titration experiments verified that a single 2pyPyrdC–2pyPyrdC pair captures two silver ions in ps DNA. A structure for the PyrdC silver‐ion base pair that aligns 7‐deazapurine bases head‐to‐tail instead of head‐to‐head, as suggested for canonical DNA, is proposed. The silver DNA double helix represents the first example of a ps DNA structure built up of bidentate and tridentate reverse Watson–Crick base pairs stabilized by a dinuclear silver‐mediated PyrdC pair.  相似文献   

2.
The oligonucleotide d(TX)9, which consists of an octadecamer sequence with alternating non‐canonical 7‐deazaadenine (X) and canonical thymine (T) as the nucleobases, was synthesized and shown to hybridize into double‐stranded DNA through the formation of hydrogen‐bonded Watson–Crick base pairs. dsDNA with metal‐mediated base pairs was then obtained by selectively replacing W‐C hydrogen bonds by coordination bonds to central silver(I) ions. The oligonucleotide I adopts a duplex structure in the absence of Ag+ ions, and its stability is significantly enhanced in the presence of Ag+ ions while its double‐helix structure is retained. Temperature‐dependent UV spectroscopy, circular dichroism spectroscopy, and ESI mass spectrometry were used to confirm the selective formation of the silver(I)‐mediated base pairs. This strategy could become useful for preparing stable metallo‐DNA‐based nanostructures.  相似文献   

3.
The structure and biological function of the DNA double helix are based on interactions recognizing sequence complementarity between two single strands of DNA. A single DNA strand can also recognize the double helix sequence by binding in its groove and forming a triplex. We now find that sequence recognition occurs between intact DNA duplexes without any single-stranded elements as well. We have imaged a mixture of two fluorescently tagged, double helical DNA molecules that have identical nucleotide composition and length (50% GC; 294 base pairs) but different sequences. In electrolytic solution at minor osmotic stress, these DNAs form discrete liquid-crystalline aggregates (spherulites). We have observed spontaneous segregation of the two kinds of DNA within each spherulite, which reveals that nucleotide sequence recognition occurs between double helices separated by water in the absence of proteins, consistent with our earlier theoretical hypothesis. We thus report experimental evidence and discuss possible mechanisms for the recognition of homologous DNAs from a distance.  相似文献   

4.
The structure of the hexitol nucleic acid (HNA) h(GCGCTTTTGCGC) was determined by NMR spectroscopy. This unnatural nucleic acid was developed as a mimic for A‐RNA. In solution, the studied sequence is forming a symmetric double‐stranded structure with four central consecutive T⋅T wobble pairs flanked by G⋅C Watson‐Crick base pairs. The stem regions adopt an A‐type helical structure. Discrete changes in backbone angles are altering the course of the helix axis in the internal loop region. Two H‐bonds are formed in each wobble pair, and base stacking is preserved in the duplex, explaining the stability of the duplex. This structure elucidation provides information about the influence of a (T)4 fragment on local helix geometries as well as on the nature of the T⋅T mismatch base pairing in a TTTT tract.  相似文献   

5.
Hydrogen-bonding and stacking interactions between nucleobases are considered to be the major noncovalent interactions that stabilize the DNA and RNA double helices. In recent work we found that one or multiple biphenyl pairs, devoid of any potential for hydrogen bond formation, can be introduced into a DNA double helix without loss of duplex stability. We hypothesized that interstrand stacking interactions of the biphenyl residues maintain duplex stability. Here we present an NMR structure of the decamer duplex d(GTGACXGCAG) d(CTGCYGTCAC) that contains one such X/Y biaryl pair. X represents a 3',5'-dinitrobiphenyl- and Y a 3',4'-dimethoxybiphenyl C-nucleoside unit. The experimentally determined solution structure shows a B-DNA duplex with a slight kink at the site of modification. The biphenyl groups are intercalated side by side as a pair between the natural base pairs and are stacked head to tail in van der Waals contact with each other. The first phenyl rings of the biphenyl units each show tight intrastrand stacking to their natural base neighbors on the 3'-side, thus strongly favoring one of two possible interstrand intercalation structures. In order to accommodate the biphenyl units in the duplex the helical pitch is widened while the helical twist at the site of modification is reduced. Interestingly, the biphenyl rings are not static in the duplex but are in dynamic motion even at 294 K.  相似文献   

6.
Heterochiral DNA with hydrogen-bonded and silver-mediated base pairs have been constructed using complementary strands with nucleosides with α-d or β-d configuration. Anomeric phosphoramidites were employed to assemble the oligonucleotides. According to the Tm values and thermodynamic data, the duplex stability of the heterochiral duplexes was similar to that of homochiral DNA, but mismatch discrimination was better in heterochiral DNA. Replacement of purines by 7-deazapurines resulted in stable parallel duplexes, thereby confirming Watson–Crick-type base pairing. When cytosine was facing cytosine, thymine or adenine residues, duplex DNA formed silver-mediated base pairs in the presence of silver ions. Although the CD spectra of single strands with α-d configuration display mirror-like shapes to those with the β-d configuration, the CD spectra of the hydrogen-bonded duplexes and those with a limited number of silver pairs show a B-type double helix almost indistinguishable from natural DNA. Nonmelting silver ion–DNA complexes with entirely different CD spectra were generated when the number of silver ions was equal to the number of base pairs.  相似文献   

7.
Molecular dynamics simulations were performed to investigate GC and AT base opening events in DNA. Calculated equilibrium constants between the base open (or flipped) and closed states were shown to be in good agreement with experimental data from NMR imino proton exchange experiments. Analysis of the computed results indicates that the equilbrium constants are dominated by the opening of the A and G bases in the AT and GC base pairs, respectively. Thus, the present results predict that NMR imino proton exchange experiments of base opening are primarily monitoring the opening of purine bases.  相似文献   

8.
Uracil DNA glycosylase (UNG) locates uracil and its structural congener thymine in the context of duplex DNA using a base flipping mechanism. NMR imino proton exchange measurements were performed on free and UNG-bound DNA duplexes in which a single thymine (T) was paired with a series of adenine analogues (X) capable of forming one, two, or three hydrogen bonds. The base pair opening equilibrium for the free DNA increased 55-fold as the number of hydrogen bonds decreased, but the opening rate constants were nearly the same in the absence and presence of UNG. In contrast, UNG was found to slow the base pair closing rate constants (kcl) compared to each free duplex by a factor of 3- to 23-fold. These findings indicate that regardless of the inherent thermodynamic stability of the TX pair, UNG does not alter the spontaneous opening rate. Instead, the enzyme holds the spontaneously expelled thymine (or uracil) in a transient extrahelical sieving site where it may partition forward into the enzyme active site (uracil) or back into the DNA base stack (thymine).  相似文献   

9.
Using density functional theory calculations, we investigated the structural, energetic, electronic, and optical properties of recently synthesized duplex DNA containing metal‐mediated base pairs. The studied duplex DNA consists of three imidazole (Im) units linked through metal (Im‐M‐Im, M=metal) and four flanking A:T base pairs (two on each side). We examined the role of artificial base pairing in the presence of two distinctive metal ions, diamagnetic Ag+ and magnetic Cu2+ ions, on the stability of duplex DNA. We found that metal‐mediated base pairs form stable duplex DNA by direct metal ion coordination to the Im bases. Our results suggest a higher binding stability of base pairing mediated by Cu2+ ions than by Ag+ ions, which is attributed to a larger extent of orbital hybridization. We furthermore found that DNA modified with Im‐Ag+‐Im shows the low‐energy optical absorption characteristic of π–π*orbital transition of WC A:T base pairs. On the other hand, we found that the low‐energy optical absorption peaks for DNA modified with Im‐Cu2+‐Im originate from spin–spin interactions. Additionally, this complex exhibits weak ferromagnetic coupling between Cu2+ ions and strong spin polarization, which could be used for memory devices. Moreover, analyzing the role of counter ions (Na+) and the presence of explicit water molecules on the structural stability and electronic properties of the DNA duplex modified with Im‐Ag+‐Im, we found that the impact of these two factors is negligible. Our results are fruitful for understanding the experimental data and suggest a potential route for constructing effective metal‐mediated base pairs in duplex DNA for optoelectronic applications.  相似文献   

10.
An urocanamide nucleoside designed and previously tested as its protected ribose derivative in aprotic solvents for binding a cytosine-guanine (CG) Watson-Crick base pair was successfully incorporated into a triplex forming oligonucleotide. Binding affinity and specificity of this nonnatural nucleoside were studied in a triple helix with duplex targets containing all four possible Watson-Crick base pairs opposite the nucleoside analog in the third strand. UV melting experiments indicate the formation of a well-defined triplex with specific binding of the urocanamide analog to a CG inversion of the homopurine-homopyrimidine target. However, binding affinities in the triplex are weak and much lower when compared to the canonical base triads.  相似文献   

11.
We describe the NMR-derived solution structure of the double-helical form of a designed eight-base genetic pairing system, termed xDNA. The benzo-homologous xDNA design contains base pairs that are wider than natural DNA pairs by ca. 2.4 A (the width of a benzene ring). The eight component bases of this xDNA helix are A, C, G, T, xA, xT, xC, and xG. The structure was solved in aqueous buffer using 1D and 2D NMR methods combined with restrained molecular dynamics. The data show that the decamer duplex is right-handed and antiparallel, and hydrogen-bonded in a way analogous to that of Watson-Crick DNA. The sugar-phosphate backbone adopts a regular conformation similar to that of B-form DNA, with small dihedral adjustments due to the larger circumference of the helix. The grooves are much wider and more shallow than those of B-form DNA, and the helix turn is slower, with ca. 12 base pairs per 360 degrees turn. There is an extensive intra- and interstrand base stacking surface area, providing an explanation for the greater stability of xDNA relative to natural DNA. There is also evidence for greater motion in this structure compared to a previous two-base-expanded helix; possible chemical and structural reasons for this are discussed. The results confirm paired self-assembly of the designed xDNA system. This suggests the possibility that other genetic system structures besides the natural one might be functional in encoding information and transferring it to new complementary strands.  相似文献   

12.
Locked nucleic acids (LNAs) exhibit a modified sugar fragment that is restrained to the C3'-endo conformation. LNA-containing duplexes are rather stable and have a more rigid structure than DNA duplexes, with a propensity for A-conformation of the double helix. To gain detailed insight into the local structure of LNA-modified DNA oligomers (as a foundation for subsequent exploration of the electron-transfer capabilities of such modified duplexes), we carried out molecular dynamics simulations on a set of LNA:DNA 9-mer duplexes and analyzed the resulting structures in terms of base step parameters and the conformations of the sugar residues. The perturbation introduced by a single locked nucleotide was found to be fairly localized, extending mostly to the first neighboring base pairs; such duplexes featured a B-type helix. With increasing degree of LNA modification the structure gradually changed; the duplex with one complete LNA strand assumed a typical A-DNA structure. The relative populations of the sugar conformations agreed very well with NMR data, lending credibility to the validity of the computational protocol.  相似文献   

13.
Metal-mediated base pair formation, resulting from the interaction between metal ions and artificial bases in oligonucleotides, has been developed for its potential application in nanotechnology. We have recently found that the T:T mismatched base pair binds with Hg(II) ions to generate a novel metal-mediated base pair in duplex DNA. The thermal stability of the duplex with the T-Hg-T base pair was comparable to that of the corresponding T:A or A:T. The novel T-Hg-T base pair involving the natural base thymine is more convenient than the metal-mediated base pairs involving artificial bases due to the lack of time-consuming synthesis. Here, we examine the specificity and thermodynamic properties of the binding between Hg(II) ions and the T:T mismatched base pair. Only the melting temperature of the duplex with T:T and not of the perfectly matched or other mismatched base pairs was found to specifically increase in the presence of Hg(II) ions. Hg(II) specifically bound with the T:T mismatched base pair at a molar ratio of 1:1 with a binding constant of 10(6) M(-1), which is significantly higher than that for nonspecific metal ion-DNA interactions. Furthermore, the higher-order structure of the duplex was not significantly distorted by the Hg(II) ion binding. Our results support the idea that the T-Hg-T base pair could eventually lead to progress in potential applications of metal-mediated base pairs in nanotechnology.  相似文献   

14.
B-DNA is the most common DNA helix conformation under physiological conditions. However, when the amount of water in a DNA solution is decreased, B-to-A helix transitions have been observed. To understand what type of helix conformations exist in a solvent-free environment, a series of poly d(CG)(n) and mixed sequence DNA duplexes from 18 to 30 bp were examined with circular dichroism (CD), ESI-MS, ion mobility, and molecular dynamics. From the CD spectra, it was observed that all sequences had B-form helices in solution. However, the solvent-free results were more complex. For the poly d(CG)(n) series, the 18 bp duplex had an A-form helix conformation, both A- and B-helices were present for the 22 bp duplex, and only B-helices were observed for the 26 and 30 bp duplexes. Since these sequences were all present as B-DNA in solution, the observed solvent-free structures illustrate that smaller helices with fewer base pairs convert to A-DNA more easily than larger helices in the absence of solvent. A similar trend was observed for the mixed sequence duplexes where both an A- and B-helix were present for the 18 bp duplex, while only B-helices occur for the larger 22, 26, and 30 bp duplexes. Since the solvent-free B-helices appear at smaller sizes for the mixed sequences than for the pure d(CG)(n) duplexes, the pure d(CG)(n) duplexes have a greater A-philicity.  相似文献   

15.
In the present study, we demonstrate single‐molecule imaging of triple helix formation in DNA nanostructures. The binding of the single‐molecule third strand to double‐stranded DNA in a DNA origami frame was examined using two different types of triplet base pairs. The target DNA strand and the third strand were incorporated into the DNA frame, and the binding of the third strand was controlled by the formation of Watson–Crick base pairing. Triple helix formation was monitored by observing the structural changes in the incorporated DNA strands. It was also examined using a photocaged third strand wherein the binding of the third strand was directly observed using high‐speed atomic force microscopy during photoirradiation. We found that the binding of the third strand could be controlled by regulating duplex formation and the uncaging of the photocaged strands in the designed nanospace.  相似文献   

16.
The synthesis of a new ribonucleoside analogue, which combines two modifications, namely a 2′-aminoethoxy side-chain on the ribose and a 5-methyl-1H-pyrimidin-2-one (4HT) unit as a base replacement, is presented. This building block was incorporated into triplex forming oligonucleotides and the binding properties to CG inversion sites in DNA duplex targets were studied. The data clearly show that the 4HT base selectively recognizes the CG base-pair, while the aminoethoxy chain adds to the overall stability of the triple helix.  相似文献   

17.
Unnatural base pairs (UBPs) greatly increase the diversity of DNA and RNA, furthering their broad range of molecular biological and biotechnological approaches. Different candidates have been developed whereby alternative hydrogen-bonding patterns and hydrophobic and packing interactions have turned out to be the most promising base-pairing concepts to date. The key in many applications is the highly efficient and selective acceptance of artificial base pairs by DNA polymerases, which enables amplification of the modified DNA. In this Review, computational as well as experimental studies that were performed to characterize the pairing behavior of UBPs in free duplex DNA or bound to the active site of KlenTaq DNA polymerase are highlighted. The structural studies, on the one hand, elucidate how base pairs lacking hydrogen bonds are accepted by these enzymes and, on the other hand, highlight the influence of one or several consecutive UBPs on the structure of a DNA double helix. Understanding these concepts facilitates optimization of future UBPs for the manifold fields of applications.  相似文献   

18.
In this study, we investigated the stability and structure of artificial base pairs that contain cyclohexyl rings. The introduction of a single pair of isopropylcyclohexanes into the middle of DNA slightly destabilized the duplex. Interestingly, as the number of the "base pairs" increased, the duplex was remarkably stabilized. A duplex with six base pairs was even more stable than one containing six A-T pairs. Thermodynamic analysis revealed that changes in entropy and not enthalpy contributed to duplex stability, demonstrating that hydrophobic interactions between isopropyl groups facilitated the base pairing, and thus stabilized the duplex. NOESY of a duplex containing an isopropylcyclohexane-methylcyclohexane pair unambiguously demonstrated its "pairing" in the duplex because distinct NOEs between the protons of cyclohexyl moieties and imino protons of both of the neighboring natural base pairs were observed. CD spectra of duplexes tethering cyclohexyl moieties also showed a positive-negative couplet that is characteristic of the B-form DNA duplex. Taken together, these results showed that cyclohexyl moieties formed base pairs in the DNA duplex without severely disturbing the helical structure of natural DNA. Next, we introduced cyclohexyl base pairs between pyrene and nucleobases as an "insulator" that suppresses electron transfer between them. We found a massive increase in the quantum yield of pyrene due to the efficient shielding of pyrene from nucleobases. The cyclohexyl base pairs reported here have the potential to prepare highly fluorescent labeling agents by multiplying fluorophores and insulators alternately into DNA duplexes.  相似文献   

19.
Recently, we reported the first artificial nucleoside for alternative DNA base pairing through metal complexation (J. Org. Chem. 1999, 64, 5002-5003). In this regard, we report here the synthesis of a hydroxypyridone-bearing nucleoside and the incorporation of a neutral Cu(2+)-mediated base pair of hydroxypyridone nucleobases (H-Cu-H) in a DNA duplex. When the hydroxypyridone bases are incorporated into the middle of a 15 nucleotide duplex, the duplex displays high thermal stabilization in the presence of equimolar Cu(2+) ions in comparison with a duplex containing an A-T pair in place of the H-H pair. Monitoring temperature dependence of UV-absorption changes verified that a Cu(2+)-mediated base pair is stoichiometrically formed inside the duplex and dissociates upon thermal denaturation at elevated temperature. In addition, EPR and CD studies suggested that the radical site of a Cu(2+) center is formed within the right-handed double-strand structure of the oligonucleotide. The present strategy could be developed for controlled and periodic spacing of neutral metallobase pairs along the helix axis of DNA.  相似文献   

20.
Different solvent temperatures with five kinds of counterions are used to investigate solvent effects on the DNA microscopic structure. The dodecamer d (CGCGAATTCGCG) DNA segment is merged into the solvents and its conformation transition is studied with the molecular dynamics simulations in detail. For the simple point charge model of water molecule with Na(+) counterions, as temperature increases from 200 K to 343 K, the duplex DNA changes from stiff B form to a state between A form and B form, which we define as mixed (A-B) structure, with a double helix unwinding. To study the counterions effects, other four alkali cations, Li(+), K(+), Rb(+), or Cs(+) ions, are substituted for Na(+) ions at 298 K and 343 K, respectively. For the cases of Li(+), Rb(+), and Cs(+) ions, the duplex DNA becomes more flexible with sugar configuration changing form C2'-endo to C1'-endo type and the width and depth of minor groove at CpG and GpC steps moving towards A values, as the mass of the counterions decreasing. For the case of K(+) ions, DNA-K(+) interaction widens the width of minor and major grooves at ApA steps and TpT steps, respectively. It seems that the light ions (Li(+) or Na(+)) prefer to interact with the free phosphate oxygen atoms while the heavier ions (Rb(+) and Cs(+)) strongly interact with the base pairs.  相似文献   

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