Formation Pathways of a Guanine-Quadruplex DNA Revealed by Molecular Dynamics and Thermodynamics Analysis of the Substates

Warning

This publication doesn't include Faculty of Economics and Administration. It includes Faculty of Science. Official publication website can be found on muni.cz.
Authors

ŠTEFL Richard CHEATHAM Thomas E. ŠPAČKOVÁ Naděžda FADRNÁ Eva BERGER Imre KOČA Jaroslav ŠPONER Jiří

Year of publication 2003
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Biophysical Journal
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web http://www.biophysj.org
Field Physical chemistry and theoretical chemistry
Keywords G-DNA;quadruplex;molecular dynamics
Description The formation of a cation-stabilized guanine quadruplex (G-DNA) stem is an exceptionally slow process involving complex kinetics that has not yet been characterized at atomic resolution. Here, we investigate the formation of a parallel stranded G-DNA stem consisting of four strands of d(GGGG) using molecular dynamics simulations with explicit inclusion of counterions and solvent. Due to the limitations imposed by the nanosecond timescale of the simulations, rather than watching for the spontaneous formation of G-DNA, our approach probes the stability of possible supramolecular intermediates (including two-, three-, and four-stranded assemblies with out-of-register basepairing between guanines) on the formation pathway. The simulations suggest that "cross-like" two-stranded assemblies may serve as nucleation centers in the initial formation of parallel stranded G-DNA quadruplexes, proceeding through a series of rearrangements involving trapping of cations, association of additional strands, and progressive slippage of strands toward the full stem. To supplement the analysis, approximate free energies of the models are obtained with explicit consideration of the integral cations. The approach applied here serves as a prototype for qualitatively investigating other G-DNA molecules using molecular dynamics simulation and free-energy analysis.
Related projects:

You are running an old browser version. We recommend updating your browser to its latest version.