Abstract

Bending flexibility of the six tetrameric duplexes was investigated d(AAAA):d(TTTT), d(AATT)2, d(TTAA)2, d(GGGG):d(CCCC), d(GGCC)2 and d(CCGG)2,. The tetramers were extended in the both directions by regular double helices. The stiffness of the B-DNA double helix when bent into the both grooves proved to be less than that in the perpendicular direction by an order of magnitude. Such an anisotropy is a property of the sugar-phosphate backbone structure. The calculated fluctuations of the DNA bending along the dyad axis, 5-7 degree, are in agreement with experimental value of the DNA persistence length. Anisotropy of the double helix is sequence-dependent: most easily bent into the minor groove are the tetramers with purine-pyrimidine dimer (RY) in the middle. In contrast, YR dinucleotides prefer bending into the major groove. Moreover, they have an equilibrium bend of 6-12 degree into this groove. The above inequality is caused by stacking interaction of the bases. The bend in the central dimer is distributed to some extent between the adjacent links, though the main fraction of the bend remains within the central link. Variation of the sugar-phosphate geometry in the bent helix is inessential, so that DNA remains within the B-family of forms: namely, when the helical axis is bent by 20 degree. the backbone dihedral angles vary by no more than 15 degree. The obtained results are in accord with x-ray structure of the B-DNA dodecamer; they further substantiate our early model of DNA wrapping in the nucleosome by means of "mini-kinks" separated by a half-pitch of the double helix, i.e. by 5-6 b.p. Sequence-dependent anisotropy of DNA presumably dictates the three-dimensional structure of DNA in solution as well. We have found that nonrandom allocation of YR dimers leads to the systematic bends in equilibrium structure of certain DNA fragments.

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