M.TaqI facilitates the base flipping via an unusual DNA backbone conformation.

Biopolymers

Institute of General, Inorganic, and Theoretical Chemistry, University of Innsbruck, Innrain 52a, A6020 Innsbruck, Austria.

Published: October 2005

MD simulations have been carried out to understand the dynamical behavior of the DNA substrate of the Thermus aquaticus DNA methyltransferase (M.TaqI) in the methylation process at N6 of adenine. As starting structures, an x-ray structure of M.TaqI in complex with DNA and cofactor analogue (PDB code: 1G 38) and free decamer d(GTTCGATGTC)(2) were taken. The x-ray structure shows two consecutive BII substates that are not observed in the free decamer. These consecutive BII substates are also observed during our simulation. Additionally, their facing backbones adopt the same conformations. These double facing BII substates are stable during the last 9 ns of the trajectories and result in a stretched DNA structure. On the other hand, protein-DNA contacts on 5' and 3' phosphodiester groups of the partner thymine of flipped adenine have changed. The sugar and phosphate parts of thymine have moved further into the empty space left by the flipping base without the influence of protein. Furthermore, readily high populated BII substates at the GpA step of palindromic tetrad TCGA rather than CpG step are observed in the free decamer. On the contrary, the BI substate at the GpA step is observed on the flipped adenine strand. A restrained MD simulation, reproducing the BI/BII pattern in the complex, demonstrated the influence of the unusual backbone conformation on the dynamical behavior of the target base. This finding along with the increased nearby interstrand phosphate distance is supportive to the N6-methylation mechanism.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bip.20341DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

bii substates
16
free decamer
12
backbone conformation
8
dynamical behavior
8
x-ray structure
8
consecutive bii
8
substates observed
8
observed free
8
flipped adenine
8
gpa step
8

Similar Publications

Influence of BII Backbone Substates on DNA Twist: A Unified View and Comparison of Simulation and Experiment for All 136 Distinct Tetranucleotide Sequences.

J Chem Inf Model

February 2017

Regional Centre of Advanced Technologies and Materials, Department of Physical Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Palacky University, 17 listopadu 12, 77146 Olomouc, Czech Republic.

Reliable representation of the B-DNA base-pair step twist is one of the crucial requirements for theoretical modeling of DNA supercoiling and other biologically relevant phenomena in B-DNA. It has long been suspected that the twist is inaccurately described by current empirical force fields. Unfortunately, comparison of simulation results with experiments is not straightforward because of the presence of BII backbone substates, whose populations may differ in experimental and simulation ensembles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Refinement of the Sugar-Phosphate Backbone Torsion Beta for AMBER Force Fields Improves the Description of Z- and B-DNA.

J Chem Theory Comput

December 2015

Regional Centre of Advanced Technologies and Materials, Department of Physical Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Palacky University, 17. listopadu 12, 77146 Olomouc, Czech Republic.

Z-DNA duplexes are a particularly complicated test case for current force fields. We performed a set of explicit solvent molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with various AMBER force field parametrizations including our recent refinements of the ε/ζ and glycosidic torsions. None of these force fields described the ZI/ZII and other backbone substates correctly, and all of them underpredicted the population of the important ZI substate.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recently, we reported the differential impact of the monovalent cations Li(+), Na(+), K(+), and Rb(+) on DNA conformational properties. These were identified from variations in the calculated solution-state X-ray DNA spectra as a function of the ion type in solvation buffer in MD simulations using our recently developed polarizable force field based on the classical Drude oscillator. Changes in the DNA structure were found to mainly involve variations in the minor groove width.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

DNA Backbone BI/BII Distribution and Dynamics in E2 Protein-Bound Environment Determined by Molecular Dynamics Simulations.

J Phys Chem B

November 2015

Department of Medicinal Chemistry, College of Pharmacy, 2000 East 30 South Skaggs 307, The University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112-5820, United States.

BI and BII conformational substates in the DNA backbone typify canonical B-form DNA. The BI and BII substates are important for structural variation of DNA and have been implicated in protein-nucleic acid recognition mechanisms. Recent refinements have been made to nucleic acid force fields employed in molecular dynamics simulations that demonstrate a better ability to model the BI and BII states, leading to overall improved modeling of DNA structure and dynamics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Understanding dinucleotide sequence directed structures of nuleic acids and their variability from experimental observation remained ineffective due to unavailability of statistically meaningful data. We have attempted to understand this from energy scan along twist, roll, and slide degrees of freedom which are mostly dependent on dinucleotide sequence using ab initio density functional theory. We have carried out stacking energy analysis in these dinucleotide parameter phase space for all ten unique dinucleotide steps in DNA and RNA using DFT-D by ωB97X-D/6-31G(2d,2p), which appears to satisfactorily explain conformational preferences for AU/AU step in our recent study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!