The formation of purine and pyrimidine base pairs (BPs), which contributes to shaping of the canonical and noncanonical 3D structures of nucleic acids, is one the most investigated phenomena in chemistry and life sciences. In this contribution, the anatomy of the bond energy (BDE) of the base-pairing interaction in 39 different arrangements found experimentally or predicted for DNA structures containing the four common nucleobases (A, C, G, T) in their neutral or protonated forms is described in light of the theory of interacting quantum atoms within the context of the quantum theory of atoms in molecules. The interplay of individual energy components involved in the three stages of the bond formation process (structural deformation, electron-density promotion, and intermolecular interaction) is studied. We recognized that for the neutral BPs, variations in the kinetic and electrostatic contributions to the BDE are rather negligible, leaving the exchange-correlation energy as the main stabilizing component. It is shown that the contribution of the exchange-correlation term can be recovered by including atoms that are formally assumed to be hydrogen bonded (primary interaction). In contrast, to recover the electrostatic component of interaction, one must consider both the primary and secondary (formally nonbonded atoms) interatomic interactions. The results of our study were employed to design new types of BPs with altered bonding anatomy. We demonstrate that improving the electrostatic characteristics of the BPs does not necessarily result in greater interaction energies if weak secondary hydrogen bonding is destroyed. However, the main tuning factor for systems with conserved interacting faces (primary interactions) is the electrostatic component of the interaction energy resulting from the secondary atom-atom electrostatics.
Several sequences forming G-quadruplex are highly conserved in regulatory regions of genomes of different organisms and affect various biological processes like gene expression. Diverse G-quadruplex properties can be modulated via their interaction with small polyaromatic molecules such as pyrene. To investigate how pyrene interacts with G-rich DNAs, we incorporated deoxyuridine nucleotide(s) with a covalently attached pyrene moiety (Upy) into a model system that forms parallel G-quadruplex structures. We individually substituted terminal positions and positions in the pentaloop of the c-kit2 sequence originating from the KIT proto-oncogene with Upy and performed a detailed NMR structural study accompanied with molecular dynamic simulations. Our results showed that incorporation into the pentaloop leads to structural polymorphism and in some cases also thermal destabilization. In contrast, terminal positions were found to cause a substantial thermodynamic stabilization while preserving topology of the parent c-kit2 G-quadruplex. Thermodynamic stabilization results from π-π stacking between the polyaromatic core of the pyrene moiety and guanine nucleotides of outer G-quartets. Thanks to the prevalent overall conformation, our structures mimic the G-quadruplex found in human KIT proto-oncogene and could potentially have antiproliferative effects on cancer cells.
- MeSH
- deoxyuridin chemie MeSH
- G-kvadruplexy * MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- molekulární modely MeSH
- nukleární magnetická rezonance biomolekulární MeSH
- promotorové oblasti (genetika) MeSH
- protoonkogenní proteiny c-kit genetika MeSH
- pyreny chemie MeSH
- termodynamika MeSH
- Check Tag
- lidé MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
Mismatch repair is a highly conserved cellular pathway responsible for repairing mismatched dsDNA. Errors are detected by the MutS enzyme, which most likely senses altered mechanical property of damaged dsDNA rather than a specific molecular pattern. While the curved shape of dsDNA in crystallographic MutS/DNA structures suggests the role of DNA bending, the theoretical support is not fully convincing. Here, we present a computational study focused on a base-pair opening into the minor groove, a specific base-pair motion observed upon interaction with MutS. Propensities for the opening were evaluated in terms of two base-pair parameters: Opening and Shear. We tested all possible base pairs in anti/anti, anti/syn and syn/anti orientations and found clear discrimination between mismatches and canonical base-pairs only for the opening into the minor groove. Besides, the discrimination gap was also confirmed in hotspot and coldspot sequences, indicating that the opening could play a more significant role in the mismatch recognition than previously recognized. Our findings can be helpful for a better understanding of sequence-dependent mutability. Further, detailed structural characterization of mismatches can serve for designing anti-cancer drugs targeting mismatched base pairs.
- MeSH
- chybné párování bází * MeSH
- DNA chemie metabolismus MeSH
- oprava chybného párování bází DNA * MeSH
- párování bází MeSH
- simulace molekulární dynamiky * MeSH
- termodynamika MeSH
- vazebný protein MutS opravné syntézy DNA chemie genetika metabolismus MeSH
- vodíková vazba MeSH
- výpočetní biologie MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH