Most cited article - PubMed ID 38486445
Multistate B- to A- transition in protein-DNA Binding - How well is it described by current AMBER force fields?
The transition from B-DNA to A-DNA occurs in many protein-DNA interactions or in DNA/RNA hybrid duplexes, and thus plays a role in many important biomolecular processes that convey the biological function of DNA. However, the stability of A-DNA is severely underestimated in current AMBER force fields such as OL15, OL21 or bsc1, potentially leading to unstable or deformed protein-DNA complexes. In this study, we refine the deoxyribose dihedral potential to increase the stability of the north (N) puckering present in A-DNA. The new parameters, termed OL24, model A/B equilibrium in B-DNA duplexes in water in good agreement with nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiment. They also improve the description of DNA/RNA hybrids and the transition of the DNA duplex to the A-form in concentrated ethanol solutions. These refinements significantly improve the modeling of protein-DNA complexes, increasing their structural stability and A-form population, while maintaining accurate representation of canonical B-DNA duplexes. Overall, the new parameters should allow more reliable modeling of the thermodynamic equilibrium between A- and B-DNA forms and the interactions of DNA with proteins.
- MeSH
- DNA, A-Form * chemistry MeSH
- DNA, B-Form * chemistry MeSH
- Deoxyribose * chemistry MeSH
- DNA * chemistry MeSH
- Nucleic Acid Conformation MeSH
- Molecular Dynamics Simulation MeSH
- Thermodynamics MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Names of Substances
- DNA, A-Form * MeSH
- DNA, B-Form * MeSH
- Deoxyribose * MeSH
- DNA * MeSH
Mixed double helices formed by RNA and DNA strands, commonly referred to as hybrid duplexes or hybrids, are essential in biological processes like transcription and reverse transcription. They are also important for their applications in CRISPR gene editing and nanotechnology. Yet, despite their significance, the hybrid duplexes have been seldom modeled by atomistic molecular dynamics methodology, and there is no benchmark study systematically assessing the force-field performance. Here, we present an extensive benchmark study of polypurine tract (PPT) and Dickerson-Drew dodecamer hybrid duplexes using contemporary and commonly utilized pairwise additive and polarizable nucleic acid force fields. Our findings indicate that none of the available force-field choices accurately reproduces all the characteristic structural details of the hybrid duplexes. The AMBER force fields are unable to populate the C3'-endo (north) pucker of the DNA strand and underestimate inclination. The CHARMM force field accurately describes the C3'-endo pucker and inclination but shows base pair instability. The polarizable force fields struggle with accurately reproducing the helical parameters. Some force-field combinations even demonstrate a discernible conflict between the RNA and DNA parameters. In this work, we offer a candid assessment of the force-field performance for mixed DNA/RNA duplexes. We provide guidance on selecting utilizable force-field combinations and also highlight potential pitfalls and best practices for obtaining optimal performance.
- MeSH
- DNA * chemistry MeSH
- Nucleic Acid Conformation * MeSH
- Base Pairing MeSH
- RNA * chemistry MeSH
- Molecular Dynamics Simulation * MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Names of Substances
- DNA * MeSH
- RNA * MeSH