화학공학소재연구정보센터
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.532, No.4, 662-667, 2020
DNA triplex with conformationally locked sugar disintegrates to duplex: Insights from molecular simulations
DNA triplex is a popular, higher-order structural arrangement with several biological importance. In the present article, we examined the impact of replacing regular deoxyribose sugar by conformationally locked sugar on the structure/stability of a DNA triplex. We individually modified single strands of DNA triplex (3'-5' strand/5'-3' strand) and observed the consequences in terms of the overall structural integrity and energetics using all-atom explicit-solvent Gaussian accelerated molecular dynamics simulations at biological salt concentration. As anticipated, the control DNA triplex maintained the structural integrity throughout the simulations. However, it is striking to note that a duplex evolved from both the modified systems (3'-5' modified triplex as well as 5'-3' modified triplex). The resultant duplexes in both cases contain a modified strand and a regular strand, whereas the third strand (regular ssDNA) left the binding site entirely. We observed that the modified ssDNA binds to the regular ssDNA with high affinities in both the hybrid duplexes (similar to-64 kcal/mol), significantly higher than the regular ssDNA - regular ssDNA interaction (similar to-52 kcal/mol). The remarkable binding of modified ssDNA to regular ssDNA can be utilized to design new antisense oligonucleotides, and the role of such modified oligonucleotides in anticancer therapy is foreseen. (C) 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.