4.8 Article

Structural dynamics of possible late-stage intermediates in folding of quadruplex DNA studied by molecular simulations

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 41, Issue 14, Pages 7128-7143

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkt412

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Regional Development Fund project 'CEITEC - Central European Institute of Technology' [CZ.1.05/1.1.00/02.0068]
  2. Grant Agency of the Czech Republic [P208/11/1822]
  3. NIH [01-GM081411]
  4. NSF [XRAC MCA01S027]

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Explicit solvent molecular dynamics simulations have been used to complement preceding experimental and computational studies of folding of guanine quadruplexes (G-DNA). We initiate early stages of unfolding of several G-DNAs by simulating them under no-salt conditions and then try to fold them back using standard excess salt simulations. There is a significant difference between G-DNAs with all-anti parallel stranded stems and those with stems containing mixtures of syn and anti guanosines. The most natural rearrangement for all-anti stems is a vertical mutual slippage of the strands. This leads to stems with reduced numbers of tetrads during unfolding and a reduction of strand slippage during refolding. The presence of syn nucleotides prevents mutual strand slippage; therefore, the antiparallel and hybrid quadruplexes initiate unfolding via separation of the individual strands. The simulations confirm the capability of G-DNA molecules to adopt numerous stable locally and globally misfolded structures. The key point for a proper individual folding attempt appears to be correct prior distribution of syn and anti nucleotides in all four G-strands. The results suggest that at the level of individual molecules, G-DNA folding is an extremely multi-pathway process that is slowed by numerous misfolding arrangements stabilized on highly variable timescales.

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