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1YCW

Clustered abasic lesions in dna: nmr solution structures of clustered bistranded-1 abasic lesion

Summary for 1YCW
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb1ycw/pdb
Related1HT4 1HT7 1YCT
Descriptor5'-D(*CP*GP*CP*AP*TP*GP*(3DR)P*GP*TP*AP*CP*GP*C)-3', 5'-D(*GP*CP*GP*TP*AP*CP*CP*(3DR)P*AP*TP*GP*CP*G)-3' (2 entities in total)
Functional Keywordsdouble helix, abasic sites, clustered damage, extruded residues, reduced ap site, furan, bistranded abasic lesion, dna
Total number of polymer chains2
Total formula weight7686.98
Authors
Hazel, R.D.,de los Santos, C. (deposition date: 2004-12-23, release date: 2005-12-06, Last modification date: 2024-05-01)
Primary citationHazel, R.D.,Tian, K.,de Los Santos, C.
NMR solution structures of bistranded abasic site lesions in DNA.
Biochemistry, 47:11909-11919, 2008
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Ionizing radiation produces clustered lesions in DNA. Since the orientation of bistranded lesions affects their recognition by DNA repair enzymes, clustered damages are more difficult to process and thus more toxic than single oxidative lesions. In order to understand the structural determinants that lead to differential recognition, we used NMR spectroscopy and restrained molecular dynamics to solve the structure of two DNA duplexes, each containing two stable abasic site analogues positioned on opposite strands of the duplex and staggered in the 3' (-1 duplex, (AP) 2-1 duplex) or 5' (+1 duplex, (AP) 2+1 duplex) direction. Cross-peak connectivities observed in the nonexchangeable NOESY spectra indicate compression of the helix at the lesion site of the duplexes, resulting in the formation of two abasic bulges. The exchangeable proton spectra show the AP site partner nucleotides forming interstrand hydrogen bonds that are characteristic of a Watson-Crick G.C base pairs, confirming the extra helical nature of the AP residues. Restrained molecular dynamics simulations generate a set of converging structures in full agreement with the spectroscopic data. In the (AP) 2-1 duplex, the extra helical abasic site residues reside in the minor groove of the helix, while they appear in the major groove in the (AP) 2+1 duplex. These structural differences are consistent with the differential recognition of bistranded abasic site lesions by human AP endonuclease.
PubMed: 18950195
DOI: 10.1021/bi800950t
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
SOLUTION NMR
Structure validation

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