Internal mobility in a double‐stranded B DNA hexamer and undecamer
- 9 July 1984
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in FEBS Letters
- Vol. 172 (2) , 219-225
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0014-5793(84)81129-1
Abstract
The internal mobility of the deoxyribose H2'-H2' ' and base C(H5)-C(H6) and T(CH3)-T(H6) vectors has been investigated by means of time-dependent nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) measurements in a B DNA hexamer and undecamer. Cross-relaxation rates between these proton pairs are determined from the initial slopes of the time development of the NOEs, and, as the interproton distances between these proton pairs are fixed, apparent correlation times for the 3 interproton vectors are calculated from the cross-relaxation rate data. It is shown that there is little residue to residue variation in the crossrelaxation rates of the interproton vectors within each oligonucleotide, that the mean apparent correlation times of the C(H5)-C(H6) and T(CH3)-T(H6) vectors are approximately equal and significantly greater than that of the H2'-H2' ' vectors, and that the data for the H2'-H2' ' vectors of both oligonucleotides and the C(H5)-C(H6) and T(CH3)-T(H6) vectors of the undecamer cannot be accounted for by isotropic tumbling alone. The data are analysed in terms of a two motion model with isotropic tumbling and a single internal motion. The relaxation time of the internal motion at 23 °C is ≲ 1 ns for the H2'-H2' ' vectors of both oligonucleotides and ≲3 ns for the C(H5)-C(H6) and T(CH3)-T(H6) vectors of the undecamer. In the case of the H2'-H2' ' vectors, however, the amplitude of the internal motion is found to be too large to be compatible with the known stereochemistry of DNA. This finding can only be explained by invoking additional degrees of internal freedom with a larger number of internal motions of small amplitude of the type deduced from the analysis of crystallographic thermal factors [(1984) J. Mol. Biol. 173, 361-388].Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Local mobility of nucleic acids as determined from crystallographic dataJournal of Molecular Biology, 1984
- Molecular‐mechanics studies on d(CGCGAATTCGCG)2 and dA12·dT12: An illustration of the coupling between sugar repuckering and DNA twistingBiopolymers, 1982
- Proton nuclear Overhauser effects and protein dynamicsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1981
- Increase of carbon-13 NMR relaxation times in proteins due to picosecond motional averagingJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1981
- Internal motions in deoxyribonucleic acid IIBiochemistry, 1980
- Conformational mobility of deoxyribonucleic acid, transfer ribonucleic acid, and poly(adenylic acid) as monitored by carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance relaxationBiochemistry, 1980
- NMR relaxation processes of 31P in macromoleculesBiopolymers, 1980
- Fast and slow conformational fluctuations of RNA and DNA. Subnanosecond internal motion correlation times determined by phosphorus-31 NMRJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1980
- Molecular motions in RNA and DNA investigated by phosphorus-31 and carbon-13 NMR relaxationThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1979
- Truncated driven nuclear overhauser effect (TOE). A new technique for studies of selective 1H1H overhauser effects in the presence of spin diffusionJournal of Magnetic Resonance (1969), 1979