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Abstract

Cytosine methylation or bromination of the DNA sequence d(GGCGCC)2 is shown here to induce a novel extended and eccentric double helix, which we call E-DNA. Like B-DNA, E-DNA has a long helical rise and bases perpendicular to the helix axis. However, the 3[variant prime]-endo sugar conformation gives the characteristic deep major groove and shallow minor groove of A-DNA. Also, if allowed to crystallize for a period of time longer than that yielding E-DNA, the methylated sequence forms standard A-DNA, suggesting that E-DNA is a kinetically trapped intermediate in the transition to A-DNA. Thus, the structures presented here chart a crystallographic pathway from B-DNA to A-DNA through the E-DNA intermediate in a single sequence. The E-DNA surface is highly accessible to solvent, with waters in the major groove sitting on exposed faces of the stacked nucleotides. We suggest that the geometry of the waters and the stacked base pairs would promote the spontaneous deamination of 5-methylcytosine in the transition mutation of dm5 C-dG to dT-dA base pairs.

Details

Title
The extended and eccentric E-DNA structure induced by cytosine methylation or bromination
Author
Vargason, Jeffrey M; Eichman, Brandt F; Ho, P Shing
Pages
758-761
Publication year
2000
Publication date
Sep 2000
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
10728368
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
228256159
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Sep 2000