Chemistry and Biology of Non-canonical Nucleic Acids. Naoki Sugimoto
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Название: Chemistry and Biology of Non-canonical Nucleic Acids

Автор: Naoki Sugimoto

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Химия

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isbn: 9783527817863

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СКАЧАТЬ formation of the Y-R*R triplexes than that for the formation of the Y-R*Y triplexes (Figure 3.7) [8]. The protonation at N3 of Hoogsteen cytosine residues plays a key role in stabilizing the Y-R*Y triplex structure. In contrast, the Y-R*R triplex does not require this precondition; therefore, the interaction of divalent cations with a triplex may be different for the two types of triplexes. The interaction of metal ions with the triplexes clearly depended on the type and ionic strength of the cations, and the efficiency with which the cations stabilized the global triplex was in the order Mg2+ > Mn2+ > Ca2+ > Ba2+ > Na+ (monovalent cations). This order is in good agreement with the ionic radii (r) of the divalent cations (r of Mg2+; 0.66 Å, r of Mn2+; 0.80 Å, r of Ca2+; 0.99 Å, r of Ba2+; 1.34 Å), which suggests that the divalent cations with a smaller radius may increase the affinity of the nucleotide alignment, resulting in enhancing the stability of the double helix structure. It was reported that the folding of RNA tertiary structures is also stabilized by cations and the stabilizing ability of cations to RNA depends on the ionic radius [9].

Schematic illustration of the probable structures adopted by the poly(dG)-poly(dC) sequence in supercoiled plasmid DNA and the corresponding hydrogen bonding scheme for the base triplet in (a) the presence or (b) absence of 2 mM Mg2+. Hydrogen bonds in the non-B-DNA structure are shown in stars.

      3.4.2 Factors Influencing Stability of Quadruplex

      3.4.2.1 G-Quadruplexes

Schematic illustration of the (a) Hydrogen bond formation in base pairs in a DNA G-quadruplex. The hydrogen bonds are shown in dashed lines. (b) G-quadruplex structures of DNAs are depicted in tube (left) and ball-and-stick (right) models, respectively. Stacking interactions are shown in arrows. Graph depicts the melting temperature of 8-bromoguanosine gels as a function of cation size.

      3.4.2.2 i-Motif

Schematic illustration of the (a) Hydrogen bond formation in base pairs in a DNA i-motif. The hydrogen bonds are shown in dashed lines. (b) i-Motif structures of DNAs are depicted in tube (left) and ball-and-stick (right) models, respectively. Stacking interactions are shown in arrows.