Abstract

Conformational flexibility of DNA plays important roles in biological processes such as transcriptional regulation and DNA packaging etc. To understand the mechanisms of these processes, it is important to analyse when, where and how DNA shows conformational variations. Recent analyses have indicated that conventional refinement methods do not always provide accurate models of crystallographic heterogeneities and that some information on polymorphism has been overlooked in previous crystallographic studies. In the present study, the m|Fo| - D|Fc| electron-density maps of double-helical DNA crystal structures were calculated at a resolution equal to or better than 1.5 Å and potential conformational transitions were found in 27% of DNA phosphates. Detailed analyses of the m|Fo| - D|Fc| peaks indicated that some of these unassigned densities correspond to ZI ↔ ZII or A/B → BI conformational transitions. A relationship was also found between ZI/ZII transitions and metal coordination in Z-DNA from the detected peaks. The present study highlights that frequent transitions of phosphate backbones occur even in crystals and that some of these transitions are affected by the local molecular environment.

Highlights

  • DNA plasticity plays important roles in various biological processes such as the transcription and packaging of genomic information

  • In order to determine a threshold for reliably picking peaks in the m|Fo| À D|Fc| maps, we first estimated the frequency of peaks in the m|Fo| À D|Fc| maps that can be produced by noise from the errors in the measurement and modelling procedure

  • Phosphate transitions found in the m|Fo| À D|Fc| maps

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Summary

Introduction

DNA plasticity plays important roles in various biological processes such as the transcription and packaging of genomic information. Molecular-dynamics (MD) simulations of the binding sites of papillomavirus type 1 E2 protein (Djuranovic & Hartmann, 2005; Robertson & Cheatham, 2015) demonstrated that a DNA sequence with stronger affinity adopts the BII conformer more frequently, and the BII conformer is preserved in protein–DNA complexes. In this way, transitions between BI and BII have mainly been studied using MD or NMR spectroscopy

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