- MeSH
- alergologie a imunologie MeSH
- Publikační typ
- nekrology MeSH
- O autorovi
- Urbanová, Jarmila 1941-2021 Autorita
We induced the B-to-A conformational transition by ethanol in a linearized pUC19 DNA. A primer extension method was used in combination with UV light irradiation to follow the transition, based on pausing of DNA synthesis due to the presence of damaged bases in the template. Primer extension data highly correlated with the results of another method monitoring the B-A transition, i.e. inhibition of restriction endonuclease cleavage of UV light-irradiated DNA. Primer extension enabled us to locate damaged nucleotides within the region of interest. Most damaged nucleotides were located in B-form trimers, exclusively containing both pyrimidine bases (TTC, TCT, CTC, and CTT), and in a cytosine tetramer. The amount of damaged bases decreased in the course of B-A transition. Some of the damage even disappeared in the A-form, which mainly concerns the C(4) and C(3) blocks. The cleavage was nearly restored in the A-form within this region (Eco88I). On the contrary the decrease of damage was less significant with thymine dimers, only dropping to 50-60% of the B-form level. Consequently, the cleavage with EcoRI and HindIII remained mostly as before the transition (75% and 60% of uncleaved DNA preserved). We found significant differences in the B- and A-form pattern of UV light-damaged bases within the same region (polylinker) of DNA embedded within long (plasmid) or short (127 bp fragment) DNA molecules. The B-A transition of the fragment was found less cooperative than with linearized plasmid, which was confirmed by both CD spectroscopy and restriction cleavage inhibition.
- MeSH
- A-DNA chemie účinky záření MeSH
- cirkulární dichroismus MeSH
- DNA chemie účinky záření MeSH
- financování organizované MeSH
- fotochemie MeSH
- konformace nukleové kyseliny účinky záření MeSH
- molekulární sekvence - údaje MeSH
- plazmidy genetika MeSH
- restrikční enzymy metabolismus MeSH
- sekvence nukleotidů MeSH
- ultrafialové záření MeSH
Secondary structures of the G-rich strand of human telomere DNA fragments G3(TTAG3)n, n = 1-16, have been studied by means of circular dichroism spectroscopy and PAGE, in solutions of physiological potassium cation concentrations. It has been found that folding of these fragments into tetraplexes as well as tetraplex thermostabilities and enthalpy values depend on the number of TTAG3 repeats. The suggested topologies include, e.g. antiparallel and parallel bimolecular tetraplexes, an intramolecular antiparallel tetraplex, a tetraplex consisting of three parallel chains and one antiparallel chain, a poorly stable parallel intramolecular tetraplex, and both parallel and antiparallel tetramolecular tetraplexes. G3(TTAG3)3 folds into a single, stable and very compact intramolecular antiparallel tetraplex. With an increasing repeat number, the fragment tetraplexes surprisingly are ever less thermostable and their migration and enthalpy decrease indicate increasing irregularities or domain splitting in their arrangements. Reduced stability and different topology of lengthy telomeric tails could contribute to the stepwise telomere shortening process.