1RVH
SOLUTION STRUCTURE OF THE DNA DODECAMER GCAAAATTTTGC
Summary for 1RVH
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb1rvh/pdb |
Related | 1RVI |
Descriptor | 5'-D(*GP*CP*AP*AP*AP*AP*TP*TP*TP*TP*GP*C)-3' (1 entity in total) |
Functional Keywords | double helix, dna |
Total number of polymer chains | 2 |
Total formula weight | 7322.83 |
Authors | Stefl, R.,Wu, H.,Ravindranathan, S.,Sklenar, V.,Feigon, J. (deposition date: 2003-12-13, release date: 2004-02-10, Last modification date: 2024-05-22) |
Primary citation | Stefl, R.,Wu, H.,Ravindranathan, S.,Sklenar, V.,Feigon, J. DNA A-tract bending in three dimensions: Solving the dA4T4 vs. dT4A4 conundrum. Proc.Natl.Acad.Sci.USA, 101:1177-1182, 2004 Cited by PubMed Abstract: DNA A-tracts have been defined as four or more consecutive A.T base pairs without a TpA step. When inserted in phase with the DNA helical repeat, bending is manifested macroscopically as anomalous migration on polyacrylamide gels, first observed >20 years ago. An unsolved conundrum is why DNA containing in-phase A-tract repeats of A(4)T(4) are bent, whereas T(4)A(4) is straight. We have determined the solution structures of the DNA duplexes formed by d(GCAAAATTTTGC) [A4T4] and d(CGTTTTAAAACG) [T4A4] with NH(4)(+) counterions by using NMR spectroscopy, including refinement with residual dipolar couplings. Analysis of the structures shows that the ApT step has a large negative roll, resulting in a local bend toward the minor groove, whereas the TpA step has a positive roll and locally bends toward the major groove. For A4T4, this bend is nearly in phase with bends at the two A-tract junctions, resulting in an overall bend toward the minor groove of the A-tract, whereas for T4A4, the bends oppose each other, resulting in a relatively straight helix. NMR-based structural modeling of d(CAAAATTTTG)(15) and d(GTTTTAAAAC)(15) reveals that the former forms a left-handed superhelix with a diameter of approximately 110 A and pitch of 80 A, similar to DNA in the nucleosome, whereas the latter has a gentle writhe with a pitch of >250 A and diameter of approximately 50 A. Results of gel electrophoretic mobility studies are consistent with the higher-order structure of the DNA and furthermore depend on the nature of the monovalent cation present in the running buffer. PubMed: 14739342DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0308143100 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | SOLUTION NMR |
Structure validation
Download full validation report
