Dimerization of the guanine-adenine repeat strands of DNA
Language English Country England, Great Britain Media print
Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PubMed
9862983
PubMed Central
PMC148218
DOI
10.1093/nar/27.2.581
PII: gkc126
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- MeSH
- Adenine chemistry MeSH
- Circular Dichroism MeSH
- Nucleic Acid Denaturation MeSH
- Dimerization MeSH
- Dinucleotide Repeats * MeSH
- Ethanol pharmacology MeSH
- Guanine chemistry MeSH
- DNA, Single-Stranded chemistry drug effects MeSH
- Nucleic Acid Conformation drug effects MeSH
- Acids pharmacology MeSH
- Salts pharmacology MeSH
- Hot Temperature MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Adenine MeSH
- Ethanol MeSH
- Guanine MeSH
- DNA, Single-Stranded MeSH
- Acids MeSH
- Salts MeSH
Jovin and co-workers have demonstrated that DNA strands containing guanine-adenine repeats generate a parallel-stranded homoduplex. Here we propose that the homoduplex is a dimer of the ordered single strand discovered by Fresco and co-workers at acid pH. The Fresco single strand is shown here to be stabilized in aqueous ethanol where adenine is not protonated. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the strands dimerize at higher salt concentrations without significantly changing their conformation, so that the dimerization is non-cooperative. Hence, the Jovin homoduplex can form through a non-cooperative dimerization of two cooperatively melting single strands. The available data indicate that the guanines stabilize the Fresco single strand whereas the adenines cause dimerization owing to their known intercalation or clustering tendency. The guanine-adenine repeat dimer seems to be a DNA analog of the leucine zipper causing dimerization of proteins.
References provided by Crossref.org
Revealing structural peculiarities of homopurine GA repetition stuck by i-motif clip
Circular dichroism and conformational polymorphism of DNA
DNA homoduplexes containing no pyrimidine nucleotide