Summary information and primary citation
- PDB-id
-
2hk4;
DSSR-derived features in text and
JSON formats
- Class
- DNA
- Method
- NMR
- Summary
- Dimeric solution structure of the cyclic octamer
d(ccgtccgt)
- Reference
-
Escaja N, Gomez-Pinto I, Pedroso E, Gonzalez C (2007):
"Four-stranded
DNA structures can be stabilized by two different types
of minor groove G:C:G:C tetrads."
J.Am.Chem.Soc., 129, 2004-2014.
doi: 10.1021/ja066172z.
- Abstract
- Four-stranded nucleic acid structures are central to
many processes in biology and in supramolecular chemistry.
It has been shown recently that four-stranded DNA
structures are not only limited to the classical guanine
quadruplex but also can be formed by tetrads resulting from
the association of Watson-Crick base pairs. Such an
association may occur through the minor or the major groove
side of the base pairs. Structures stabilized by minor
groove tetrads present distinctive features, clearly
different from the canonical guanine quadruplex, making
these quadruplexes a unique structural motif. Within our
efforts to study the sequence requirements for the
formation of this unusual DNA motif, we have determined the
solution structure of the cyclic oligonucleotide dpCCGTCCGT
by two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy and restrained
molecular dynamics. This molecule self-associates, forming
a symmetric dimer stabilized by two G:C:G:C tetrads with
intermolecular G-C base pairs. Interestingly, although the
overall three-dimensional structure is similar to that
found in other cyclic and linear oligonucleotides of
related sequences, the tetrads that stabilize the structure
of dpCCGTCCGT are different to other minor groove G:C:G:C
tetrads found earlier. Whereas in previous cases the G-C
base pairs aligned directly, in this new tetrad the
relative position of the two base pairs is slipped along
the axis defined by the base pairs. This is the first time
that a quadruplex structure entirely stabilized by slipped
minor groove G:C:G:C tetrads is observed in solution or in
the solid state. However, an analogous arrangement of G-C
base pairs occurs between the terminal residues of
contiguous duplexes in some DNA crystals. This structural
polymorphism between minor groove GC tetrads may be
important in stabilization of higher order DNA
structures.