Solution structure of the Dickerson DNA dodecamer containing a single ribonucleotide

EF DeRose, L Perera, MS Murray, TA Kunkel… - Biochemistry, 2012 - ACS Publications
EF DeRose, L Perera, MS Murray, TA Kunkel, RE London
Biochemistry, 2012ACS Publications
Ribonucleotides are frequently incorporated into DNA during replication. They are
recognized and processed by several cellular enzymes, and their continued presence in the
yeast nuclear genome results in replicative stress and genome instability. Thus, it is
important to understand the effects of isolated ribonucleotide incorporation on DNA
structure. With this goal in mind, we describe the nuclear magnetic resonance structure of
the self-complementary Dickerson dodecamer sequence [d (CGC) rGd (AATTCGCG)] 2 …
Ribonucleotides are frequently incorporated into DNA during replication. They are recognized and processed by several cellular enzymes, and their continued presence in the yeast nuclear genome results in replicative stress and genome instability. Thus, it is important to understand the effects of isolated ribonucleotide incorporation on DNA structure. With this goal in mind, we describe the nuclear magnetic resonance structure of the self-complementary Dickerson dodecamer sequence [d(CGC)rGd(AATTCGCG)]2 containing two symmetrically positioned riboguanosines. The absence of an observable H1–H2 scalar coupling interaction indicates a C3′-endo conformation for the ribose. Longer-range structural perturbations resulting from the presence of the ribonucleotide are limited to the adjacent and transhelical nucleotides, while the global B-form DNA structure is maintained. Because crystallographic studies have indicated that isolated ribonucleotides promote global B → A transitions, we also performed molecular modeling analyses to evaluate the structural consequences of higher ribonucleotide substitution levels. Increasing the ribonucleotide content increased the minor groove width toward values more similar to that of A-DNA, but even 50% ribonucleotide substitution did not fully convert the B-DNA to A-DNA. Comparing our structure with the structure of an RNase H2-bound DNA supports the conclusion that, as with other DNA–protein complexes, the DNA conformation is strongly influenced by the interaction with the protein.
ACS Publications