Abstract

Nucleic acid quadruplexes, based on the guanine quartet, can arise from one or several strands, depending on the sequence. Those consisting of a single strand are usually folded in one of two principal topologies: antiparallel, in which all or half of the guanine stretches are antiparallel to each other, or parallel, in which all guanine stretches are parallel to each other. In the latter, all guanine nucleosides possess the anti conformation about the glycosidic bond, while in the former, half possess the anti conformation, and half possess the syn conformation. While antiparallel is the more common fold, examples of biologically important, parallel quadruplexes are becoming increasingly common. Thus, it is of interest to understand the forces that determine the quadruplex fold. Here, we examine the influence of individual nucleoside conformation on the overall folding topology by selective substitution of rG for dG. We can reverse the antiparallel fold of the thrombin binding aptamer (TBA) by this approach. Additionally, this substitution converts a unimolecular quadruplex into a bimolecular one. Similar reverse substitutions in the all-RNA analogue of TBA result in a parallel to antiparallel change in topology and alter the strand configuration from bimolecular to unimolecular. On the basis of the specific substitutions made, we conclude that the strong preference of guanine ribonucleosides for the anti conformation is the driving force for the change in topology. These results demonstrate how conformational properties of guanine nucleosides govern not only the quadruplex folding topology but also impact quadruplex molecularity and provide a means to control these properties.

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