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The Role of Unconventional Hydrogen Bonds in Determining BII Propensities in B-DNA.

Alexandra BalaceanuMarco PasiPablo Daniel DansAdam HospitalRichard LaveryModesto Orozco
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2016)
An accurate understanding of DNA backbone transitions is likely to be the key for elucidating the puzzle of the intricate sequence-dependent mechanical properties that govern most of the biologically relevant functions of the double helix. One factor believed to be important in indirect recognition within protein-DNA complexes is the combined effect of two DNA backbone torsions (ε and ζ) which give rise to the well-known BI/BII conformational equilibrium. In this work we explain the sequence-dependent BII propensity observed in RpY steps (R = purine; Y = pyrimidine) at the tetranucleotide level with the help of a previously undetected C-H···O contact between atoms belonging to adjacent bases. Our results are supported by extensive multimicrosecond molecular dynamics simulations from the Ascona B-DNA Consortium, high-level quantum mechanical calculations, and data mining of the experimental structures deposited in the Protein Data Bank.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • circulating tumor
  • single molecule
  • cell free
  • molecular dynamics
  • molecular docking
  • nucleic acid
  • amino acid
  • big data
  • density functional theory
  • artificial intelligence