Abstract

A matter of speed: when allowed to fold in a K(+)/poly(ethylene glycol) solution, the guanine (G)-rich strand of vertebrate telomere DNA forms a parallel/antiparallel G-quadruplex, which is a (3+1) hybrid, within microseconds before slowly transforming into the parallel one within hours. Thus, the conformation that a G-quadruplex initially adopts under physiological conditions may not be the one it adopts at the equilibrium state.

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