Fold-back structures at the distal end influence DNA slippage at the proximal end during mononucleotide repeat expansions

Karthikeyan, G. ; Rao, Basuthkar J. ; Chary, Kandala V. R. (1999) Fold-back structures at the distal end influence DNA slippage at the proximal end during mononucleotide repeat expansions Nucleic Acids Research, 27 (19). pp. 3851-3858. ISSN 0305-1048

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Official URL: https://academic.oup.com/nar/article/27/19/3851/10...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/27.19.3851

Abstract

Polymerase slippage during DNA synthesis by the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase across A, C, G and T repeats (30 bases) has been studied. Within minutes, duplexes that contain only repeats (30 bp) expand dramatically to several hundred base pairs long. Rate comparisons in a repeat duplex when one strand was expanded as against that when both strands were expanded suggest a model ofmigrating hairpin loops which in the latter case coalesce into a duplex. Moreover, slippage (at the proximal or 3'-end) is subject to positive and negative effects from the 5'-end (distal) of the same strand. Growing T and G strands generate T.A:T and G-G:C motif fold-back structures at the distal end that hamper slippage at the proximal end. On the other hand, growing tails at the distal end upon annealing with excess complementary template accentuates proximal slippage several-fold.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Oxford University Press.
ID Code:107460
Deposited On:15 Jun 2017 11:13
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