Abstract

The physical properties of the DNA oligomer d(CGCGCGTTTTCGCGCG) in solvents containing 4 M NaClO4 and 0.1 M NaCl were investigated by proton NMR, optical melting, and circular dichroism spectroscopy. Results of these investigations are as follows: (i) The DNA hexadecamer exists as a unimolecular hairpin in either high or low salt. (ii) In high salt the stem region of the hairpin is in the left-handed Z conformation. (iii) In either high or low salt, the duplex stem of the hairpin is stabilized against melting by approximately 40 degrees C compared to the linear core duplex. The added stability of the hairpin is entropic in origin. (iv) In high salt, as the temperature is elevated, the equilibrium structure of the duplex stem of the hairpin shifts from the Z to the B conformation before melting. (v) In low salt, when the DNA duplex exists in the B conformation, attachment of a T4 single-strand loop to one end only slightly decreases (by 14%) the correlation time of the CH5-CH6 interproton vector. In high salt, when the DNA duplex exists in the Z conformation, the correlation time of the CH5-CH6 interproton vector decreases by 51%. Since these viscosity-corrected correlation times are taken to be indicators of duplex motions on the nanosecond time scale, this result directly suggests a larger amplitude of these motions is present in the duplex stem of the hairpin when it exists in the Z conformation.

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