posted on 2024-04-15, 14:41authored byElisa Frezza, Damien Laage, Elise Duboué-Dijon
Water molecules are essential to determine the structure
of nucleic
acids and mediate their interactions with other biomolecules. Here,
we characterize the hydration dynamics of analogous DNA and RNA double
helices with unprecedented resolution and elucidate the molecular
origin of their differences: first, the localization of the slowest
hydration water moleculesin the minor groove in DNA, next
to phosphates in RNAand second, the markedly distinct hydration
dynamics of the two phosphate oxygen atoms OR and OS in RNA. Using our Extended
Jump Model for water reorientation, we assess the relative importance
of previously proposed factors, including the local topography, water
bridges, and the presence of ions. We show that the slow hydration
dynamics at RNA OR sites is not due to
bridging water molecules but is caused by both the larger excluded
volume and the stronger initial H-bond next to OR, due to the different phosphate orientations in A-form double
helical RNA.