Summary information and primary citation
- PDB-id
-
167d;
SNAP-derived features in text and
JSON formats
- Class
- DNA
- Method
- X-ray (2.3 Å)
- Summary
- The crystal structure of c-c-a-t-t-a-a-t-g-g:
implications for bending of b-DNA at t-a steps
- Reference
-
Goodsell DS, Kaczor-Grzeskowiak M, Dickerson RE (1994):
"The crystal
structure of C-C-A-T-T-A-A-T-G-G. Implications for
bending of B-DNA at T-A steps." J.Mol.Biol.,
239, 79-96. doi: 10.1006/jmbi.1994.1352.
- Abstract
- The single-crystal X-ray analysis of trigonal
C-C-A-T-T-A-A-T-G-G, and its comparison with orthorhombic
C-G-A-T-T-A-A-T-C-G, have shown that the A-T-T-A-A-T
sequence has limited polymorphism under the influence of
packing forces from neighboring molecules in the crystal.
The T-A step is intrinsically variable. It is not
inconsistent with a large propeller twist, a narrow minor
groove, and a single spine of hydration, as has sometimes
been claimed on theoretical grounds. The T-A step does show
a persistent positive roll, in a direction that compresses
the major groove, and this may be a significant factor in
macroscopic DNA curvature induced by phased A-tracts.
A-tracts, as understood in this paper, include A-A and A-T
steps, but not the T-A step, which is disruptive. Three
conclusions regarding A-tract-induced curvature can be
drawn from this and other X-ray crystal structure analyses,
and from key gel retardation experiments: (1) The A-tract
bending model is disqualified on two grounds: (i)
tilt-wedge bending within A-tracts is incompatible with the
observed direction of curvature; (ii) roll-wedge bending
within A-tracts is contradicted by every crystal structure
analysis, and is inconsistent with gel retardation results
for (G-C-A-A-A-A-T-T-T-T)n and for (A-A-A-A-A-T-T-T-T-T)n.
(2) The junction bend model is contradicted by
crystallography because: (i) the inclination of base-pairs
does not change between A-tract and non-A-tract regions of
helix; and (ii) the observed bends at GC/AT junctions are
roll-wedge bends, not tilt-wedge as the junction bend model
demands. (3) The non-A-tract bending model is consistent
with both gel retardation data and with X-ray
crystallography, and must be regarded as the only
consistent model for A-tract bending.