4.8 Article

Long promoter sequences form higher-order G-quadruplexes: an integrative structural biology study of c-Myc, k-Ras and c-Kit promoter sequences

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 50, Issue 7, Pages 4127-4147

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkac182

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [GM077422]
  2. UofLHealth Brown Cancer Center

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In this study, we investigated higher-order G-quadruplex structures adopted by long promoter sequences using quantitative biophysical tools, modeling, and molecular dynamics simulations. We found that different sequences exhibited unique structures, which contained interfacial regions between stacked quadruplexes or novel loop geometries that could serve as potential drug targets.
We report on higher-order G-quadruplex structures adopted by long promoter sequences obtained by an iterative integrated structural biology approach. Our approach uses quantitative biophysical tools (analytical ultracentrifugation, small-angle X-ray scattering, and circular dichroism spectroscopy) combined with modeling and molecular dynamics simulations, to derive self-consistent structural models. The formal resolution of our approach is 18 angstroms, but in some cases structural features of only a few nucleotides can be discerned. We report here five structures of long (34-70 nt) wild-type sequences selected from three cancer-related promoters: c-Myc, c-Kit and k-Ras. Each sequence studied has a unique structure. Three sequences form structures with two contiguous, stacked, G-quadruplex units. One longer sequence from c-Myc forms a structure with three contiguous stacked quadruplexes. A longer c-Kit sequence forms a quadruplex-hairpin structure. Each structure exhibits interfacial regions between stacked quadruplexes or novel loop geometries that are possible druggable targets. We also report methodological advances in our integrated structural biology approach, which now includes quantitative CD for counting stacked G-tetrads, DNaseI cleavage for hairpin detection and SAXS model refinement. Our results suggest that higher-order quadruplex assemblies may be a common feature within the genome, rather than simple single quadruplex structures.

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