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1.
Biochemistry ; 43(51): 16467-76, 2004 Dec 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15610041

ABSTRACT

The conformational stability (difference between the free energies of the folded and unfolded states, DeltaG degrees ) of a DNA duplex is considered as a function of component energy terms, hydrophobic, base stacking, hydrogen bonding, van der Waals, and electrostatic, and a trinucleotide-level helix stiffness parameter measured in terms of its Young's modulus. Hydrophobic and base stacking energy components were determined with the use of the crystal structure data of 30 DNA duplexes judicially selected within a resolution of 1.5 A, and hydrogen bonding, van der Waals and electrostatic terms were determined through an extensive review of experimental and theoretical studies. The stiffness indices for the trinucleotides were the ones realized by M. M. Gromiha [(2000) J. Biol. Phys. 26, 43-50] using the crystal structure data of 70 DNA duplexes. The unfolded state was treated in the classical way to determine its stability. Thermodynamically determined DeltaG degrees values for 111 DNA duplexes, with the number of base pairs ranging from 4 to 16, were selected in two sets, and the regression equation formed with one set was used to predict the stabilities of the other set, taking the energy components and the stiffness parameter to be independent variables. The computed energy terms indicate that the base stacking and hydrogen bonding forces are the dominant and the hydrophobic and electrostatic forces the weak partners in imparting stability to the duplexes. This model predicts DeltaG degrees values for DNA duplexes examined with a level of accuracy similar to that used for predictions made by the widely used nearest-neighbor models. The uniqueness of this model is that it combines the crystal and thermodynamic data for interpretation of conformational stability.


Subject(s)
Base Pairing , DNA/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Crystallography, X-Ray , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Kinetics , Regression Analysis
2.
Biochemistry ; 41(4): 1195-201, 2002 Jan 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11802718

ABSTRACT

The crystal structure of Chromatium vinosum C77S HiPIP has been determined and is compared with that of wild type. This is the first reported crystal structure of a Ser ligated [4Fe-4S] cluster and reveals a 0.11 A shortening of the Fe-O bond (relative to Fe-S), but only minor structural alterations of the overall tertiary structure. Coordination changes are corroborated by resonance Raman spectroscopy. Comparison of the crystal and solution structures for HiPIPs identifies Phe48 as the main controller of solvent access to the Fe-S cluster; however, there is no significant change in cluster solvation of the C77S mutant relative to WT HiPIP. Ser ligation ultimately results in decreased cluster stability due to increased sensitivity to proton mediated degradation.


Subject(s)
Iron-Sulfur Proteins/chemistry , Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins , Serine/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins , Crystallography, X-Ray , Iron-Sulfur Proteins/isolation & purification , Models, Molecular , Protein Conformation , Spectrum Analysis, Raman
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 98(24): 13665-70, 2001 Nov 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11707581

ABSTRACT

Four-stranded guanine tetraplexes in RNA have been identified to be involved in crucial biological functions, such as dimerization of retroviral RNA, translational repression, and mRNA turnover. However, the structural basis for these biological processes is still largely unknown. Here we report the RNA tetraplex structure (UGGGGU)(4) at ultra-high resolution (0.61 A). The space group is P42(1)2, and cell constants are a = b = 36.16 A and c = 74.09 A. The structure was solved by the multiple-wavelength anomalous dispersion method using a set of three-wavelength data of the isomorphous bromo derivative (br)UGGGGU and refined to 0.61-A resolution. Each of the four strands in the asymmetric unit forms a parallel tetraplex with symmetry-related molecules. The tetraplex molecules stack on one another in opposite polarity (head-to-head or tail-to-tail) to form a pseudocontinuous column. All of the 5'-end uridines rotate around the backbone of G2, swing out, and form unique octaplexes with the neighboring G tetraplexes, whereas the 3'-end uridines are stacked-in and form uridine tetrads. All of the bases are anti, and the riboses are in the mixed C2'- and C3'-puckering mode. Strontium ions are observed in every other guanine tetrad plane, sitting on the fourfold axis and associated to the eight O6 atoms of neighboring guanine bases in a bipyramidal-antiprism geometry. The hydrogens are clearly observed in the structure.


Subject(s)
Nucleic Acid Conformation , RNA/chemistry , Strontium/chemistry , Base Pairing , Calcium , Cations, Divalent , Crystallography, X-Ray , DNA/chemistry , Guanine/chemistry , Ions , Metals , Models, Molecular , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Nucleic Acid Heteroduplexes , Sodium , Uracil/chemistry
4.
RNA ; 7(10): 1425-31, 2001 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11680847

ABSTRACT

The RNA/DNA 14-mer, (gguauuucgguaCc)2 with consecutive uridine bulges (underlined) on each strand has been determined in two crystal forms, spermine bound (Sp-form) and spermine free (Sp-free). The former was solved by the MAD method with three-wavelength data collected at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL); the later isomorphous structure was solved by the molecular replacement method using data collected on our Raxis IIc imaging plate system. The two crystal forms belong to the space group C2 with one molecule of double-stranded 14 mer in the asymmetric unit. The Sp-form has cell constants, a = 60.06, b = 29.10, c = 52.57 A, beta = 120.79 degrees and was refined to 1.7 A resolution with a final Rwork/Rfree of 19.8%/22.7% using 8,549 independent reflections. The Sp-free structure has cell constants, a = 60.06, b = 29.58, c = 52.50 A, beta = 120.85 degrees and was refined to 1.8 A with a final Rwork/ Rfree of 20.8%/23.2% using 6,285 unique reflections. The two structures are identical, except that the Sp-form has a spermine bound in the major groove, parallel to the RNA helical axis. One of the uridine bulges forms a novel intramolecular U*(A x U) base triple. The helices are in the C3'-endo conformation (A-form), but the bulges adopt the C2'-endo sugar pucker. Furthermore, the bulges induce a kink (30 degrees) in the helix axis and a very large twist (55 degrees) between the base pairs flanking the bulges. The Sp-form has one Mg2+ ion whereas the Sp-free form has two Mg2+ ions.


Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Nucleic Acid Heteroduplexes , RNA/chemistry , Chimera , Crystallography , DNA/metabolism , Ligands , Magnesium/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Nucleic Acid Conformation , RNA/metabolism , Spermine/metabolism
5.
J Mol Biol ; 313(3): 573-82, 2001 Oct 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11676540

ABSTRACT

The crystal structure of a nonamer RNA duplex with a uridine bulge in each strand, r(gugucgcac)(2), was determined at 1.4 A resolution. The structure was solved by multiple anomalous diffraction phasing method using a three-wavelength data set collected at the Advanced Protein Source and refined to a final R(work)/R(free) of 21.2 %/23.4 % with 33,271 independent reflections (Friedel pairs unmerged). The RNA duplex crystallized in the tetragonal space group P4(1)22 with two independent molecules in the asymmetric unit. The unit cell dimensions are a=b=47.18 A and c=80.04 A. The helical region of the nonamer adopts the A-form conformation. The uridine bulges assume similar conformations, with uracils flipping out and protruding into the minor groove. The presence of the bulge induces very large twist angles (approximately +50 degrees) between the base-pairs flanking the bulges while causing profound kinks in the helix axis at the bulges. This severe twist and the large kink in turn produces a very narrow major groove at the middle of the molecule. The ribose sugars of the guanosines before the bulges adopt the C2'-endo conformation while the rest, including the bulges, are in the C3'-endo conformation. The intrastrand phosphate-phosphate (P-P) distance of the phosphate groups flanking the bulges (approximately 4.4 A) are significantly shorter than the average P-P distance in the duplex (6.0 A). This short distance between the two phosphate groups brings the non-bridging oxygen atoms close to each other where a calcium ion is bound to each strand. The calcium ions in molecule 1 are well defined while the calcium ions in molecule 2 are disordered.


Subject(s)
Base Pairing , Nucleic Acid Conformation , RNA/chemistry , RNA/metabolism , Uridine/chemistry , Uridine/metabolism , Base Sequence , Binding Sites , Calcium/metabolism , Crystallization , Crystallography, X-Ray , Guanosine/chemistry , Guanosine/genetics , Guanosine/metabolism , Hydrogen Bonding , Models, Molecular , RNA/genetics , Ribose/chemistry , Ribose/genetics , Ribose/metabolism , Uridine/genetics
6.
J Biomol Struct Dyn ; 18(6): 824-31, 2001 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11444371

ABSTRACT

The nucleoside constituents of nucleic acids prefer the anti conformation (1). When the sugar pucker is taken into account the nucleosides prefer the C2'endo-anti conformation. Of the nearly 300 nucleosides known, about 250 are in the anti conformation and 50 are in the syn-conformation, i.e., anti to syn conformation is 5:1. The nucleotide building blocks of nucleic acids show the same trend as nucleosides. Both the deoxy-guanosine and riboguanosine residues in nucleosides and nucleotides prefer the syn-C2'endo conformation with an intra-molecular hydrogen bond (for nucleosides) between the O5'-H and the N3 of the base and, a few syn-C3'endo conformations are also observed. Evidence is presented for the occurrence of the C3'endo-syn conformation for guanines in mis-paired double helical right-handed structures with the distorted sugar phosphate C4'-C5' and P-O5' bonds respectively, from g+ (gg) and g- to trans. Evidence is also provided for guanosine nucleotides in left-handed double-helical (Z-DNA) oligo and polynucleotides which has the same syn-C3'endo conformation and the distorted backbone sugar-phosphate bonds (C4'-C5' and P-O5') as in the earlier right-handed case.


Subject(s)
Nucleic Acid Conformation , Oligodeoxyribonucleotides/chemistry , Polydeoxyribonucleotides/chemistry , Base Pairing , DNA/chemistry , Hydrogen Bonding , Molecular Conformation , Nucleosides/chemistry , Nucleotides/chemistry , Thionucleotides/chemistry
7.
Inorg Chem ; 40(8): 1915-25, 2001 Apr 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11312750

ABSTRACT

Tetraphenylporphinatomanganate(III) tetracyanoethenide, [MnTPP][TCNE], is the prototype of a growing family of linear chain (1-D) coordination polymers that magnetically order as ferrimagnets. [MnTPP][TCNE].xS [S = PhMe (x = 2), 1,2-C(6)H(4)Me(2) (x = 1), 1,2-C(6)H(4)Cl(2) (x = 3), 1,2,4-C(6)H(3)Cl(3) (x = 2), and 1,3-C(6)H(4)Cl(2) (x = 2)] have been prepared and structurally and magnetically characterized. All form 1-D chain structures with intrachain Mn.Mn separations ranging from 9.202 to 10.218 A. The 173 K crystal structure of [MnTPP][TCNE].2PhMe has been rerefined, revealing that the [TCNE](*)(-) is 2-fold-disordered and coordinated to Mn(III) by a pair of trans cyano nitrogen atoms to form parallel one-dimensional chains. The two orientations of [TCNE](*)(-) are related by a 180 degrees rotation about the diagonal axis joining the trans nitrogen atoms bound to Mn(III). The major form has an occupancy of 83.3(4)% with a Mn-N(TCNE) distance of 2.328(3) A and a MnNC angle of 146.8(8) degrees. The minor form, with 16.7(4)% occupancy, has a Mn-N(TCNE) distance of 2.176(15) A and a MnNC angle of 152.3(39) degrees. Lattice packing and molecular bonding imply static as opposed to dynamic disorder. The magnetic properties depend on the type and quantity of the solvent present in the structure. Desolvation via heating in n-octane (127 degrees C), n-dodecane (216 degrees C), and/or vacuum thermolysis (175 degrees C) leads to numerous different desolvated materials with differing magnetic properties. At higher temperatures the magnetic susceptibility can be fit by the Curie-Weiss expression, chi varies with (T - theta)(-1), with theta = 44, 52, 72, 55, and 77 K for the toluene, 1,2-xylene, 1,2-dichlorobenzene, 1,3-dichlorobenzene, and 1,2,4-trichlorobenzene solvates, respectively. The T(c)'s were taken as the maximum in 10 Hz chi'(T) and are 7.8, 9.2, 11.3, 10.8, and 8.2 K for the PhMe, 1,2-xylene, 1,2-dichlorobenzene, 1,3-dichlorobenzene, and 1,2,4-trichlorobenzene solvates, respectively. Upon desolvation the T(c)'s increase for the PhMe, 1,2-xylene, 1,2,4-trichlorobenzene solvates and decrease for the 1,2- and 1,3-dichlorobenezene solvates. The compounds show one-dimensional ferrimagnetic exchange behavior at high temperatures with intrachain exchange of J/k(b) = -63, -99, -234, -100, and -200 K for toluene, 1,2-xylene, 1,2-dichlorobenzene, 1,3-dichlorobenzene, and 1,2,4-trichlorobenzene solvates, respectively, as determined from fits to the Seiden expression, which models isolated 1-D interactions among alternating S = 2 classical and S = (1)/(2) quantum spins. For variation in the temperature at which the peak occurs per decade of frequency, phi, (DeltaT(f)/T(f))/Delta(log omega) is 0.167, 0.168, 0.066, 0.171, and 0.024 for toluene, 1,2-xylene, 1,2-dichlorobenzene, 1,3-dichlorobenzene, and 1,2,4-trichlorobenzene, respectively, typical of spin glass behavior. Since [TCNE](*)(-) is only disordered for the PhMe solvate and all five solvates exhibit spin glass behavior, the spin glass behavior cannot be attributed to this disorder.

8.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 28(21): 4356-63, 2000 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11058136

ABSTRACT

The crystal structure of the chimerical decamer d(CCACTAGTG)r(G), bearing a 3'-terminal ribo-guanidine, has been solved and refined at 1.8 A resolution (R-factor 16.6%; free R-factor 22.8%). The decamer crystallizes in the orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) with unit cell constants a = 23.90 A, b = 45.76 A and c = 49.27 A. The structure was solved by molecular replacement using the coordinates of the isomorphous chimera r(GCG)d(TATACGC). The final model contains one duplex and 77 water molecules per asymmetric unit. Surprisingly, all residues adopt a conformation typical for A-form nucleic acids (C3'-endo type sugar pucker) although the all-DNA analog, d(CCACTAGTGG), has been crystallized in the B-form. Comparing circular dichroism spectra of the chimera and the corresponding all-DNA sequence reveals a similar trend of the former molecule to adopt an A-like conformation in solution. The results suggest that the preference of ribonucleotides for the A-form is communicated into the 5'-direction of an oligonucleotide strand, although direct interactions of the 2'-hydroxyl group can only be discerned with nucleotides in the 3'-direction of a C3'-endo puckered ribose. These observations imply that forces like water-mediated contacts, the concerted motions of backbone torsion angles, and stacking preferences, are responsible for such long-range influences. This bi-directional structural communication originating from a ribonucleotide can be expected to contribute to the stability of the A-form within all-RNA duplexes.


Subject(s)
DNA, Recombinant/chemistry , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Oligonucleotides/chemistry , RNA/chemistry , Ribose/chemistry , Ribose/metabolism , Base Sequence , Circular Dichroism , Crystallography, X-Ray , DNA, Recombinant/genetics , DNA, Recombinant/metabolism , Genetic Engineering , Guanidine/chemistry , Guanidine/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Motion , Oligodeoxyribonucleotides/chemistry , Oligodeoxyribonucleotides/genetics , Oligodeoxyribonucleotides/metabolism , Oligonucleotides/genetics , Oligonucleotides/metabolism , RNA/genetics , RNA/metabolism , RNA Stability , Solutions , Thermodynamics , Water/metabolism
9.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 28(21): 4376-81, 2000 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11058138

ABSTRACT

We have determined the crystal structure of the RNA octamer duplex r(guguuuac)/r(guaggcac) with a tandem wobble pair, G.G/U.U (motif III), to compare it with U.G/G.U (motif I) and G.U/U.G (motif II) and to better understand their relative stabilities. The crystal belongs to the rhombohedral space group R3. The hexagonal unit cell dimensions are a = b = 41.92 A, c = 56.41 A, and gamma = 120 degrees, with one duplex in the asymmetric unit. The structure was solved by the molecular replacement method at 1.9 A resolution and refined to a final R: factor of 19.9% and R(free) of 23.3% for 2862 reflections in the resolution range 10.0-1.9 A with F >/= 2sigma(F). The final model contains 335 atoms for the RNA duplex and 30 water molecules. The A-RNA stacks in the familiar head-to-tail fashion forming a pseudo-continuous helix. The uridine bases of the tandem U.G pairs have slipped towards the minor groove relative to the guanine bases and the uridine O2 atoms form bifurcated hydrogen bonds with the N1 and N2 of guanines. The N2 of guanine and O2 of uridine do not bridge the 'locked' water molecule in the minor groove, as in motifs I and II, but are bridged by water molecules in the major groove. A comparison of base stacking stabilities of motif III with motifs I and II confirms the result of thermodynamic studies, motif I > motif III > motif II.


Subject(s)
Base Pairing , Guanine/metabolism , Oligoribonucleotides/chemistry , Oligoribonucleotides/genetics , Uridine/metabolism , Base Sequence , Crystallography, X-Ray , Hydrogen Bonding , Models, Molecular , Oligoribonucleotides/chemical synthesis , Oligoribonucleotides/metabolism , RNA Stability , Thermodynamics , Uridine/genetics , Water/metabolism
10.
RNA ; 6(9): 1316-24, 2000 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10999608

ABSTRACT

The crystal structure of r(GCCACCCUG).r(CAGGGUCGGC), helix II of the Xenopus laevis 5S rRNA with a cytosine bulge (underlined), has been determined in two forms at 2.2 A (Form I, space group P4(2)2(1)2, a = b = 57.15 A and c = 43.54 A) and 1.7 A (Form II, space group P4(3)2(1)2, a = b = 32.78 A and c = 102.5 A). The helical regions of the nonamers are found in the standard A-RNA conformations and the two forms have an RMS deviation of 0.75 A. However, the cytosine bulge adopts two significantly different conformations with an RMS deviation of 3.9 A. In Form I, the cytosine bulge forms an intermolecular C+*G.C triple in the major groove of a symmetry-related duplex with intermolecular hydrogen bonds between N4C and O6G, and between protonated N3+C and N7G. In contrast, a minor groove C*G.C triple is formed in Form II with intermolecular hydrogen bonds between O2C and N2G, and between N3C and N3G with a water bridge. A partial major groove opening was observed in Form I structure at the bulge site. Two Ca2+ ions were found in Form I helix whereas there were none in Form II. The structural comparison of these two forms indicates that bulged residues can adopt a variety of conformations with little perturbation to the global helix structure. This suggests that bulged residues could function as flexible latches in bridging double helical motifs and facilitate the folding of large RNA molecules.


Subject(s)
Cytosine/chemistry , RNA, Ribosomal, 5S/chemistry , Animals , Calcium/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Pliability , Purines/metabolism , Xenopus laevis/genetics , Xenopus laevis/physiology
11.
J Mol Biol ; 299(1): 103-12, 2000 May 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10860725

ABSTRACT

Crystal structure of a DNA.RNA hybrid, d(CTCCTCTTC).r(gaagagagag), with an adenine bulge in the polypurine RNA strand was determined at 2.3 A resolution. The structure was solved by the molecular replacement method and refined to a final R-factor of 19.9% (Rfree 22.2%). The hybrid duplex crystallized in the space group I222 with unit cell dimensions, a = 46.66 A, b = 47.61 A and c = 54.05 A, and adopts the A-form conformation. All RNA and DNA sugars are in the C3'-endo conformation, the glycosyl angles in anti conformation and the majority of the C4'-C5' torsion angles in g+ except two trans angles, in conformity with the C3'-endo rigid nucleotide hypothesis. The adenine bulge is looped out and it is also in the anti C3'-endo conformation. The bulge is involved in a base-triple (C.g)*a interaction with the end base-pair (C9.g10) in the minor groove of a symmetry-related molecule. The 2' hydroxyl group of g15 is hydrogen bonded to O2P and O5' of g17, skipping the bulged adenine a16 and stabilizing the sugar-phosphate backbone of the hybrid. The hydrogen bonding and the backbone conformation at the bulged adenine site is very similar to that found in the crystal structure of a protein-RNA complex.


Subject(s)
Adenine/chemistry , DNA/chemistry , HIV-1/genetics , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Nucleic Acid Heteroduplexes/chemistry , RNA/chemistry , Adenine/metabolism , Base Pairing/genetics , Base Sequence , Binding Sites , Crystallography, X-Ray , DNA/genetics , DNA/metabolism , Hydrogen Bonding , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Nucleic Acid Heteroduplexes/genetics , Nucleic Acid Heteroduplexes/metabolism , Oxygen/metabolism , RNA/genetics , RNA/metabolism , Torsion Abnormality , Water/metabolism
12.
J Mol Biol ; 299(1): 113-22, 2000 May 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10860726

ABSTRACT

The crystal structure of an alternating RNA octamer, r(guauaca)dC (RNA bases are in lower case while the only DNA base is in upper case), with two 3' overhang residues one of them a terminal deoxycytosine and the other a ribose adenine, has been determined at 2.2 A resolution. The refined structure has an Rwork 18.6% and Rfree 26.8%. There are two independent duplexes (molecules I and II) in the asymmetric unit cell, a = 24.95, b = 45.25 and c = 73.67 A, with space group P2(1)2(1)2(1). Instead of forming a blunt end duplex with two a+.c mispairs and six Watson-Crick base-pairs, the strands in the duplex slide towards the 3' direction forming a two-base overhang (radC) and a six Watson-Crick base-paired duplex. The duplexes are bent (molecule I, 20 degrees; molecule II, 25 degrees) and stack head-to-head to form a right-handed superhelix. The overhang residues are looped out and the penultimate adenines of the two residues at the top end (A15) are anti and at the bottom (A7) end are syn. The syn adenine bases form minor groove A*(G.C) base triples with C8-H...N2 hydrogen bonds. The anti adenine in molecule II also forms a triple and a different C2-H...N3 hydrogen bond, while the other anti adenine in molecule I does not, it stacks on the looped out overhang base dC. The 3' terminal deoxycytosines form two stacked hemiprotonated trans d(C.C)+ base-pairs and the pseudo dyad related molecules form four consecutive deoxyribose and ribose zipper hydrogen bonds in the minor groove.


Subject(s)
Base Pair Mismatch/genetics , Base Pairing/genetics , Deoxycytosine Nucleotides/genetics , Nucleic Acid Heteroduplexes/genetics , RNA/chemistry , RNA/genetics , Adenine/chemistry , Adenine/metabolism , Base Sequence , Crystallography, X-Ray , Deoxycytosine Nucleotides/chemistry , Deoxyribose/chemistry , Deoxyribose/metabolism , Hydrogen Bonding , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Nucleic Acid Heteroduplexes/chemistry , Oxygen/metabolism , Protons , Ribose/chemistry , Ribose/metabolism , Water/metabolism
13.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 28(10): 2171-6, 2000 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10773088

ABSTRACT

DNA.RNA hybrid duplexes are substrates of RNase H and reverse transcriptase. The crystal structure of a hybrid duplex, d(5'-CTCTTCTTC-3').r(5'-gaagaagag-3') (the uppercase letters indicate DNA and lowercase letters RNA), with a polypurine RNA strand and a complementary DNA strand has been determined at 1.8 A resolution. The structure was refined first at 1.9 A by XPLOR and subsequently by CNS at 1.8 A. The hybrid is found in a standard A-form conformation with all the sugars in the C3'-endo puckering. The 5'-terminal base dC of the DNA strand was clearly visible in the electron density map of the present structure, in contrast to the previously reported structure d(TTCTTBr(5)CTTC).r(gaagaagaa) where the 5'-terminal base dT was not visible, leaving the terminal rA unpaired. Thus, the comparison of the terminal base pairs, C.g versus T.a, in the two hybrid crystal structures provides information on the stability of these base pairs in hydrogen bonding (three versus two) and base stacking interactions. The differences in the terminal base pairs produce different kinks in the two structures. Minor groove widening is observed in the present structure at a distinctive kink in the lower half of the duplex, in contrast to the small widening of the minor groove and a very slight bend in the upper half of the T.a structure.


Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Nucleic Acid Heteroduplexes/chemistry , Oligodeoxyribonucleotides/chemistry , Oligoribonucleotides/chemistry , RNA/chemistry , Base Composition , Base Pairing , Base Sequence , Computer Graphics , Crystallography, X-Ray , Models, Molecular
14.
J Biomol Struct Dyn ; 17 Suppl 1: 189-94, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22607423

ABSTRACT

Abstract Crystal structure of the RNA octamer duplex, [r(gugcaca)dC] (2), with space group I2(1)2(1)2(1) and the cell constants a=24.29, b=45.25 and c=73.68Å, has been determined and refined. The structural and packing architecture of the molecule consist of a highly bent six base paired duplex forming a right-handed superhelix stacked in tandem compared to an infinite pseudo- continuous column as is usually present in RNA crystal structures. The super helix could be formed by the head-to-head stacking (g1 over g1 and g9 over g9), the large bend and the twists at the junctions may also be responsible. The sugar-phosphate backbones of the 3'-end dinucleoside overhangs snuggly fit into the minor grooves of adjacent double helical stacks. The 3'-terminal deoxycytidines form antiparallel hemiprotonated trans (C·C)(+) pairs with symmetry related deoxycytidines, while the penultimate adenines form base triples (a*g·c) with the capping g·c base pairs of the hexamer duplex with the adenine (a7) at one end being syn and at the other anti. These triple interactions are the same as those found in the tetrahymena ribozyme and group I intron.


Subject(s)
Nucleic Acid Conformation , RNA , Adenine/chemistry , Base Pairing , Base Sequence , Models, Molecular , RNA/chemistry
15.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 27(10): 2196-201, 1999 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10219093

ABSTRACT

The crystal structure of a self-complementary RNA duplex r(GGGCGCUCC)2with non-adjacent G*U and U*G wobble pairs separated by four Watson-Crick base pairs has been determined to 2.5 A resolution. Crystals belong to the space group R3; a = 33.09 A,alpha = 87.30 degrees with a pseudodyad related duplex in the asymmetric unit. The structure was refined to a final Rworkof 17.5% and Rfreeof 24.0%. The duplexes stack head-to-tail forming infinite columns with virtually no twist at the junction steps. The 3'-terminal cytosine nucleosides are disordered and there are no electron densities, but the 3' penultimate phosphates are observed. As expected, the wobble pairs are displaced with guanine towards the minor groove and uracil towards the major groove. The largest twist angles (37.70 and 40.57 degrees ) are at steps G1*C17/G2*U16 and U7*G11/C8*G10, while the smallest twist angles (28.24 and 27.27 degrees ) are at G2*U16/G3*C15 and C6*G12/U7*G11 and conform to the pseudo-dyad symmetry of the duplex. The molecule has two unequal kinks (17 and 11 degrees ) at the wobble sites and a third kink at the central G5 site which may be attributed to trans alpha (O5'-P), trans gamma (C4'-C5') backbone conformations. The 2'-hydroxyl groups in the minor groove form inter-column hydrogen bonding, either directly or through water molecules.


Subject(s)
RNA, Double-Stranded/chemistry , Base Pairing , Base Sequence , Crystallography, X-Ray , Electrochemistry , Hydrogen Bonding , Models, Molecular , Nucleic Acid Conformation
16.
Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr ; 55(Pt 2): 443-7, 1999 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10089353

ABSTRACT

Crystal structures of the active-site mutants D99A and H48Q and the calcium-loop mutant D49E of bovine phospholipase A2 have been determined at around 1.9 A resolution. The D99A mutant is isomorphous to the orthorhombic recombinant enzyme, space group P212121. The H48Q and the calcium-loop mutant D49E are isomorphous to the trigonal recombinant enzyme, space group P3121. The two active-site mutants show no major structural perturbations. The structural water is absent in D99A and, therefore, the hydrogen-bonding scheme is changed. In H48Q, the catalytic water is present and hydrogen bonded to Gln48 N, but the second water found in native His48 is absent. In the calcium-loop mutant D49E, the two water molecules forming the pentagonal bipyramid around calcium are absent and only one O atom of the Glu49 carboxylate group is coordinated to calcium, resulting in only four ligands.


Subject(s)
Calcium/chemistry , Phospholipases A/chemistry , Animals , Catalytic Domain , Cattle , Crystallography, X-Ray , Hydrogen Bonding , Mutation , Phospholipases A/genetics , Phospholipases A2
17.
Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr ; 55(Pt 1): 46-50, 1999 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10089393

ABSTRACT

The X-ray structure of recombinant bovine pancreatic phospholipase A2 (PLA2), which specifically catalyzes the cleavage of the sn-2 acylester bond of phospholipids, has been refined at 1.5 A resolution. The crystal belongs to the space group P212121 with unit-cell parameters a = 47.12, b = 64.59 and c = 38.14 A similar to the native enzyme reported previously by Dijkstra et al. [J. Mol. Biol. (1981), 147, 97-123]. The refinement converged to an R value of 18.4% (Rfree = 22.8%) for 16 374 reflections between 10.0 and 1.5 A resolution. The surface-loop residues (60-70) are ordered in the present orthorhombic recombinant enzyme, but disordered in the trigonal recombinant enzyme. The active-site residues, His48, Asp99, and the catalytic water superimpose well with the trigonal form. Besides the catalytic water which is hydrogen bonded to His48, it is often seen that there is a second water attached to the same N atom of His48 and simultaneously hydrogen bonded to the O atom of Asp49. It is thought that the second water facilitates the tautomerism of His48 for enzyme catalysis. The catalytic water is also hydrogen bonded to the equatorial water coordinated to the calcium ion. In addition to the equatorial water, there is also an axial calcium water and the additional structural water. These five common water molecules are hydrogen bonded to the additional 16 water molecules in the present orthorhombic structure which may further enhance the structural integrity of the active site. Besides the protein and one calcium ion, a total of 134 water molecules were located in the present high-resolution refinement.


Subject(s)
Pancreas/enzymology , Phospholipases A/chemistry , Animals , Binding Sites , Cattle , Crystallography, X-Ray , Electrochemistry , Hydrogen Bonding , Models, Molecular , Phospholipases A2 , Protein Conformation , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Water/chemistry
18.
Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr ; 55(Pt 3): 602-9, 1999 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10089456

ABSTRACT

The 2.40 A resolution crystal structure of a side-by-side binding of distamycin A molecules to a DNA octamer d(GTATATAC)2 with an extended alternating TA sequence has been determined. The unit-cell parameters are a = 29.55, b = 42.18, c = 43.38 A, beta = 96.56 degrees, space group P21, with two molecules in the asymmetric unit, in contrast to all previous side-by-side distamycin-DNA complexes which have only a single DNA strand and one drug molecule in the asymmetric unit. The structure was solved by the molecular-replacement method and refined to an R index of 21.0% using 3467 reflections [>/= 2sigma(F)]. The minor grooves of the DNA molecules bind two side-by-side antiparallel staggered distamycins spanning about five base pairs and virtually covering the entire length of the DNA. The octamer duplexes exhibit low-high alternations in the helical twist, sugar puckering and the C-O3' and O3'-P torsion angles, similar to the earlier side-by-side complexes containing inosine bases. The molecules are stacked one over the other along the ac diagonal in an infinite pseudo-continuous helical column with no lateral interactions.


Subject(s)
Distamycins/chemistry , Oligodeoxyribonucleotides/metabolism , Crystallography, X-Ray , Distamycins/metabolism , Hydrogen Bonding , Molecular Structure , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Oligodeoxyribonucleotides/chemistry
19.
Biochemistry ; 38(9): 2826-31, 1999 Mar 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10052954

ABSTRACT

G.A mispairs are one of the most common noncanonical structural motifs of RNA. The 1.9 A resolution crystal structure of the RNA 16-mer r(GCAGAGUUAAAUCUGC)2 has been determined with two isolated or nonadjacent G.A mispairs. The molecule crystallizes with one duplex in the asymmetric unit in space group R3 and unit cell dimensions a = b = c = 49.24 A and alpha = beta = gamma = 51.2 degrees. It is the longest known oligonucleotide duplex at this resolution and isomorphous to the 16-mer duplex with the C.A+ mispairs [Pan, et al., (1998) J. Mol. Biol. 283, 977-984]. The C.A+ mispair behaves like a wobble pair while the G.A+ does not. The G.A mispairs are protonated at N1 of the adenines as in the C.A+ mispairs, and two hydrogen bonds in the G(syn).A+(anti) conformation are formed. The syn guanine is stabilized by an intranucleotide hydrogen bond between the 2-amino and the 5'-phosphate groups. The G(syn).A+(anti) conformation can provide a different surface for recognition in the grooves compared to other G.A hydrogen bonding schemes. The major groove is widened between the two mispairs allowing access to ligands. One of the 3-fold axes is occupied by a sodium ion and a water molecule, while a second is occupied by another water molecule.


Subject(s)
Adenine Nucleotides/chemistry , Base Pair Mismatch , Guanine Nucleotides/chemistry , Nucleic Acid Heteroduplexes/chemistry , RNA/chemistry , Crystallization , Cytosine Nucleotides/chemistry , Metals/chemistry , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Oligodeoxyribonucleotides/chemistry , Purines/chemistry , Solvents
20.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 26(24): 5699-706, 1998 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9838002

ABSTRACT

The crystal structure of the RNA octamer duplex r(CCCIUGGG)2has been elucidated at 2.5 A resolution. The crystals belong to the space group P21and have unit cell constants a = 33.44 A, b = 43.41 A, c = 49.39 A and beta = 104.7 degrees with three independent duplexes (duplexes 1-3) in the asymmetric unit. The structure was solved by the molecular replacement method and refined to an Rwork/Rfree of 0.185/0.243 using 3765 reflections between 8.0 and 2.5 A. This is the first report of an RNA crystal structure incorporating I.U wobbles and three molecules in the asymmetric unit. Duplex 1 displays a kink of 24 degrees between the mismatch sites, while duplexes 2 and 3 have two kinks each of 19 degrees and 27 degrees, and 24 degrees and 29 degrees, respectively, on either side of the tandem mismatches. At the I.U/U.I mismatch steps, duplex 1 has a twist angle of 33.9 degrees, close to the average for all base pair steps, but duplexes 2 and 3 are underwound, with twist angles of 24.4 degrees and 26.5 degrees, respectively. The tandem I.U wobbles show intrastrand purine-pyrimidine stacking but exhibit interstrand purine-purine stacking with the flanking C.G pairs. The three independent duplexes are stacked non-coaxially in a head-to-tail fashion to form infinite pseudo-continuous helical columns which form intercolumn hydrogen bonding interactions through the 2'-hydroxyl groups where the minor grooves come together.


Subject(s)
Nucleic Acid Conformation , RNA/chemistry , Base Pairing , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
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