Recognition of 5-aminouracil (U#) in the central strand of a DNA triplex: orientation selective binding of different third strand bases

Rana, Vipul S. ; Ganesh, Krishna N. (2000) Recognition of 5-aminouracil (U#) in the central strand of a DNA triplex: orientation selective binding of different third strand bases Nucleic Acids Research, 28 (5). pp. 1162-1169. ISSN 0305-1048

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Official URL: http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/28.5.1162

Abstract

A necessary feature of the natural base triads for triplex formation is the requirement of a purine (A or G) in the central position, since only these provide sets of two hydrogen bond donors/acceptors in the major groove of the double helix. Pyrimidine bases devoid of this feature have incompatible complementarity and lead to triplexes with lower stability. This paper demonstrates that 5-aminouracil (U#) (I), a pyrimidine nucleobase analogue of T in which 5-methyl is replaced by 5-amino group, with hydrogen bonding sites on both sides, is compatible in the central position of triplex triad XU#. A, where X = A/G/C/T/2-aminopurine (AP), and ∗ and . represent Hoogsteen and Watson-Crick hydrogen bonding patterns respectively. A novel recognition selectivity based on the orientation (parallel/antiparallel) of the third strand purines A, G or AP with A in the parallel motif (ApU# .A), and G/AP in the antiparallel motif (Gap/APapU# .A) is observed. Similarly for pyrimidines in the third strand, C is accepted only in a parallel mode (CpU# .A). Significantly, T is recognised in both parallel and antiparallel modes (Tp/TapU# .A), with the antiparallel mode being stable compared to the parallel one. The 'U#' triplexes are also more stable than the corresponding control 'T' triplexes. The results expand the lexicon of triplex triads with a recognition motif consisting of pyrimidine in the central strand.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Oxford University Press.
ID Code:10829
Deposited On:09 Nov 2010 04:45
Last Modified:16 May 2016 20:21

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