DNA's ability to exist in a wide variety of structural forms, subforms, and secondary motifs is fundamental to numerous biological processes and has driven the development of biotechnological applications. Major determinants of DNA flexibility are the multiple torsional degrees of freedom around the phosphodiester backbone. This high complexity can be rationalized by using two pseudotorsional angles linking atoms P and C4', from which Ramachandran-like plots can be built.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe characterization of the conformational landscape of the RNA backbone is rather complex due to the ability of RNA to assume a large variety of conformations. These backbone conformations can be depicted by pseudotorsional angles linking RNA backbone atoms, from which Ramachandran-like plots can be built. We explore here different definitions of these pseudotorsional angles, finding that the most accurate ones are the traditional (eta) and (theta) angles, which represent the relative position of RNA backbone atoms P and C4'.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe structure of B-DNA, the physiological form of the DNA molecule, has been a central topic in biology, chemistry and physics. Far from uniform and rigid, the double helix was revealed as a flexible and structurally polymorphic molecule. Conformational changes that lead to local and global changes in the helix geometry are mediated by a complex choreography of base and backbone rearrangements affecting the ability of the B-DNA to recognize ligands and consequently on its functionality.
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