Abstract

Double helices, since the discovery of the DNA structure by Watson and Crick, represent the single most important secondary structural form of nucleic acids. The secondary structures of a variety of polynucleotide helices have now been well characterised with hydrogen-bonded base-pairs as building blocks. We wish to propose here the possibility, in a specific case, of a double stranded helical structure without any base-pair, but having a repeat unit of two nucleotides with their bases stacked through intercalation. The proposal comes from the initial models we have built for poly(dC) using the stacking patterns found in the crystal structures of 5'-dCMPNa2 which crystallises in two forms depending on the degree of hydration. These structures have pairs of nucleotides with the cytosine rings partially overlapping and separated by 3.3A. Using these as repeat units one could generate a model for poly(dC) with parallel strands, having a turn angle of 30 degrees and a base separation of 6.6A along each strand. Both right and left handed models with these parameters can be built in a smooth fashion without any obviously unreasonable stereochemical contacts. The helix diameter is about 13.5A, much smaller than that of normal helices with base-pair repeats. The changes in the sugar-phosphate backbone conformation in the present models compared to normal duplexes only reflect the torsional flexibility available for extension of polynucleotide chains as manifested by the crystal structures of drug-inserted oligonucleotide complexes. Intercalation proposed here could have some structural relevance elsewhere, for instance to the base-mismatched regions on the double helix and the packing of noncomplementary single strands as found in the filamentous bacteriophage Pf1.

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