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Download fileConformations of Human Telomeric G‑Quadruplex Studied Using a Nucleotide-Independent Nitroxide Label
journal contribution
posted on 2016-01-19, 00:00 authored by Xiaojun Zhang, Cui-Xia Xu, Rosa Di Felice, Jiri Sponer, Barira Islam, Petr Stadlbauer, Yuan Ding, Lingling Mao, Zong-Wan Mao, Peter Z. QinGuanine-rich oligonucleotides can
form a unique G-quadruplex (GQ)
structure with stacking units of four guanine bases organized in a
plane through Hoogsteen bonding. GQ structures have been detected in vivo and shown to exert their roles in maintaining genome
integrity and regulating gene expression. Understanding GQ conformation
is important for understanding its inherent biological role and for
devising strategies to control and manipulate functions based on targeting
GQ. Although a number of biophysical methods have been used to investigate
structure and dynamics of GQs, our understanding is far from complete.
As such, this work explores the use of the site-directed spin labeling
technique, complemented by molecular dynamics simulations, for investigating
GQ conformations. A nucleotide-independent nitroxide label (R5), which
has been previously applied for probing conformations of noncoding
RNA and DNA duplexes, is attached to multiple sites in a 22-nucleotide
DNA strand derived from the human telomeric sequence (hTel-22) that
is known to form GQ. The R5 labels are shown to minimally impact GQ
folding, and inter-R5 distances measured using double electron–electron
resonance spectroscopy are shown to adequately distinguish the different
topological conformations of hTel-22 and report variations in their
occupancies in response to changes of the environment variables such
as salt, crowding agent, and small molecule ligand. The work demonstrates
that the R5 label is able to probe GQ conformation and establishes
the base for using R5 to study more complex sequences, such as those
that may potentially form multimeric GQs in long telomeric repeats.