| Deoxythymidine sugars are not direct precursors of DNA-thymine Biophysical Journal, Volume 28, Issue 1, 1 October 1979, Pages 65-79 J. Loehr and P. Hanawalt Abstract A theoretical model for the kinetics of uptake of a putative precursor molecule into nucleotide pools and into replicating DNA has been developed. The relationship between the accumulation of radioactively labeled precursors in the pool and the appearance of radioactivity in DNA is then derived. Experiments have been carried out in bacteria to compare the uptake of radioactive thymine into deoxythymidine triphosphate, deoxythymidine diphosphate sugars, and DNA to test the suitability of either compound as the direct precursor of thymine in DNA. New one-dimensional, thin-layer chromatographic procedures were used to determine the specific activity of deoxythymidine triphosphate and deoxythymidine triphosphate and deoxythymidine diphosphate sugars in growing cultures of 32PO4-labeled Escherichia coli during pulse labeling with [3H]-thymine. A comparison of the experimental data with our theoretical model supports the hypothesis that deoxythymidine triphosphate, but not deoxythymidine sugar, is the direct precursor of thymine in normally replicating DNA in vivo. Abstract | PDF (1324 kb) |
| DNA Quality Control by Conformational Readout on the Undamaged Strand of the Double Helix Chemistry & Biology, Volume 12, Issue 8, 1 August 2005, Pages 913-922 Tonko Buterin, Christoph Meyer, Bernd Giese and Hanspeter Naegeli Summary Synthetic DNA probes were incubated in human cell extracts to dissect the early step of bulky lesion recognition in the nucleotide excision repair pathway. Excision was induced upon combination of the target adduct with either a two-sided bulge, involving both the damaged sequence and its undamaged partner strand, or a one-sided bulge, affecting exclusively the undamaged complementary sequence. Surprisingly, the same adduct became refractory to repair when only the modified strand was bulged out of the double helix. Adduct removal was further dependent on an intact opposing strand and, at carcinogen-DNA adducts, the assembly of excision complexes was triggered by a single flipped-out deoxyribonucleotide in the complementary sequence. These findings describe a mechanism of molecular readout in DNA repair that, unexpectedly, is entirely confined to the undamaged side of the double helix. Summary | Full Text | PDF (545 kb) |
| Intrinsic Conformational Properties of Deoxyribonucleosides: Implicated Role for Cytosine in the Equilibrium Among the A, B, and Z Forms of DNA Biophysical Journal, Volume 76, Issue 6, 1 June 1999, Pages 3206-3218 Nicolas Foloppe and Alexander D. MacKerell Abstract Structural properties of biomolecules are dictated by their intrinsic conformational energetics in combination with environmental contributions. Calculations using high-level ab initio methods on the deoxyribonucleosides have been performed to investigate the influence of base on the intrinsic conformational energetics of nucleosides. Energy minima in the north and south ranges of the deoxyribose pseudorotation surfaces have been located, allowing characterization of the influence of base on the structures and energy differences between those minima. With all bases, values associated with the south energy minimum are lower than in canonical B-DNA, while values associated with the north energy minimum are close to those in canonical A-DNA. In deoxycytidine, adopts an A-DNA conformation in both the north and south energy minima. Energy differences between the A and B conformations of the nucleosides are <0.5kcal/mol in the present calculations, except with deoxycytidine, where the A form is favored by 2.3kcal/mol, leading the intrinsic conformational energetics of GC basepairs to favor the A form of DNA by 1.5kcal/mol as compared with AT pairs. This indicates that the intrinsic conformational properties of cytosine at the nucleoside level contribute to the A form of DNA containing predominately GC-rich sequences. In the context of a B versus Z DNA equilibrium, deoxycytidine favors the Z form over the B form by 1.6kcal/mol as compared with deoxythymidine, suggesting that the intrinsic conformational properties of cytosine also contribute to GC-rich sequences occurring in Z DNA with a higher frequency than AT-rich sequences. Results show that the east pseudorotation energy barrier involves a decrease in the furanose amplitude and is systematically lower than the inversion barrier, with the energy differences influenced by the base. Energy barriers going from the south (B form) sugar pucker to the east pseudorotation barrier are lower in pyrimidines as compared with purines, indicating that the intrinsic conformational properties associated with base may also influence the sugar pseudorotational population distribution seen in DNA crystal structures and the kinetics of B to A transitions. The present work provides evidence that base composition, in addition to base sequence, can influence DNA conformation. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (139 kb) |
Copyright © 1995 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 69, Issue 6, 2277-2285, 1 December 1995
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(95)80098-6
Research Article
J. Norberg and L. Nilsson
Department of Biosciences at NOVUM, Karolinska Institute, Huddinge, Sweden.
The free energy of the stacking-unstacking process of deoxyribodinucleoside monophosphates in aqueous solution has been investigated by potential of mean force calculations along a reaction coordinate, defined by the distance between the glycosidic nitrogen atoms of the bases. The stacking-unstacking process of a ribodinucleoside monophosphate was observed to be well characterized by this coordinate, which has the advantage that it allows for a dynamical backbone and flexible bases. All 16 naturally occurring DNA dimers composed of the adenine, cytosine, guanine, or thymine bases in both the 5' and the 3' positions were studied. From the free-energy profiles we observed the deepest minima for the stacked states of the purine-purine dimers, but good stacking was also observed for the purine-pyrimidine and pyrimidine-purine dimers. Substantial stacking ability was found for the dimers composed of a thymine base and a purine base and also for the deoxythymidylyl-3',5'-deoxythymidine dimer. Very poor stacking was observed for the dCpdC dimer. Conformational properties and solvent accessibility are discussed for the stacked and unstacked dimers. The potential of mean force profiles of the stacking-unstacking process for the DNA dimers are compared with the RNA dimers.