2,452 results on '"Deoxyribose"'
Search Results
2. Antisense oligonucleotide gapmers containing phosphoryl guanidine groups reverse MDR1-mediated multiple drug resistance of tumor cells
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O. A. Patutina, Dmitry A. Stetsenko, Elena L. Chernolovskaya, Marina A. Zenkova, N. L. Mironova, Anton V. Filatov, Ivan V. Chernikov, Dmitrii V. Pyshnyi, Maxim S. Kupryushkin, Sidney Altman, and Valentin V. Vlassov
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RNase H ,Nuclease ,Phosphoramidite ,biology ,antisense oligonucleotide gapmer ,nuclease resistance ,Chemistry ,Oligonucleotide ,MDR1 ,RM1-950 ,Multiple drug resistance ,gene silencing ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Deoxyribose ,Biochemistry ,Drug Discovery ,Phosphodiester bond ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Original Article ,intracellular accumulation ,Cationic liposome ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,Guanidine ,phosphoryl guanidine - Abstract
Antisense gapmer oligonucleotides containing phosphoryl guanidine (PG) groups, e.g., 1,3-dimethylimidazolidin-2-imine, at three to five internucleotidic positions adjacent to the 3′ and 5′ ends were prepared via the Staudinger chemistry, which is compatible with conditions of standard automated solid-phase phosphoramidite synthesis for phosphodiester and, notably, phosphorothioate linkages, and allows one to design a variety of gapmeric structures with alternating linkages, and deoxyribose or 2′-O-methylribose backbone. PG modifications increased nuclease resistance in serum-containing medium for more than 21 days. Replacing two internucleotidic phosphates by PG groups in phosphorothioate-modified oligonucleotides did not decrease their cellular uptake in the absence of lipid carriers. Increasing the number of PG groups from two to seven per oligonucleotide reduced their ability to enter the cells in the carrier-free mode. Cationic liposomes provided similar delivery efficiency of both partially PG-modified and unmodified oligonucleotides. PG-gapmers were designed containing three to four PG groups at both wings and a central “window” of seven deoxynucleotides with either phosphodiester or phosphorothioate linkages targeted to MDR1 mRNA providing multiple drug resistance of tumor cells. Gapmers efficiently silenced MDR1 mRNA and restored the sensitivity of tumor cells to chemotherapeutics. Thus, PG-gapmers can be considered as novel, promising types of antisense oligonucleotides for targeting biologically relevant RNAs., Graphical abstract, Many successful antisense oligonucleotide designs are gapmers, which contain a central section of DNA phosphorothioates flanked by RNA-like nucleotides. We describe a new type of gapmers with phosphoryl guanidine groups in the flanks, which efficiently silenced MDR1 gene expression and restored the sensitivity of drug-resistant tumor cells to conventional chemotherapy.
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- 2022
3. Radiation Research Symposium: Chemistry and Biology of Radical-mediated Deoxyribose Oxidation in DNA
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Dedon, Peter
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- 2005
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4. K+ -Cl− -cotransport Mediates the Deoxyribose 1-phosphate-Induced Melanogenesis
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Yong Soo Lee
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chemistry.chemical_compound ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Deoxyribose ,General Medicine ,Phosphate ,Cotransporter - Published
- 2021
5. Variability of the DNA Backbone Geometry in DNA–Protein Complexes: Experimental Data Analysis
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Natalya A. Kovaleva, E. A. Zubova, and Ivan A. Strelnikov
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Data Analysis ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Nucleotides ,General Chemical Engineering ,Cryoelectron Microscopy ,Degrees of freedom (physics and chemistry) ,Protein Data Bank (RCSB PDB) ,Value (computer science) ,Geometry ,DNA ,General Chemistry ,DNA Solutions ,Library and Information Sciences ,Computer Science Applications ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Deoxyribose ,Helix ,Nucleic Acid Conformation ,Nucleotide - Abstract
We have analyzed and compared the available experimental data (PDB) on the backbone geometry of the DNA in solution (NMR), in crystals (X-rays), and in complexes with proteins (X-rays and cryo-electron microscopy). The deoxyribose (pseudorotational angle τ0) and e/ζ (BI-BII transition in phosphates) flexibilities are practically the same in the four samples. The α/γ mobility is minimal in crystalline DNA: on the histograms, there is one canonical and one noncanonical t/t peak. The α/γ mobility increases in DNA solutions (three more noncanonical peaks) and is maximal in DNA-protein complexes (another additional peak). On a large amount of data, we have confirmed that the three main degrees of freedom of the sugar-phosphate backbone are "orthogonal": changes in any of the angles τ0, (ζ-e), and (γ-α) occur, as a rule, at a constant (usually canonical) value of any other. In the DNA-protein complexes, none of the geometrical parameters commonly used to distinguish the A and B forms of DNA, except for Zp and its simpler analog Zp', show an unambiguous correlation with τ0. Proteins, binding to DNA, in 59% of cases change the local shape of the helix up to the characteristic of the A-form without switching the deoxyribose conformation from south to north. However, we have found simple local characteristics of one nucleotide that correlate with the angles τ0 and (ζ-e). These are the angles C3'C1'N* and C4'C3'P(2), respectively. They are orthogonal in DNA-protein complexes exactly as the pair τ0 and (ζ-e). Most characteristics of DNA in complexes with proteins are the same in X-ray and in cryo-EM data, except for the histogram for the angle τ0. We offer a possible explanation for this difference. We also discuss the artifacts on the e/ζ histogram for DNA in solutions caused by the currently used NMR refinement protocols.
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- 2021
6. Gene Expression-Assisted Cancer Prediction Techniques
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Monica Luthra, Isha Batra, S. Vimal, Tanima Thakur, Gaurav Dhiman, Mohammad Shabaz, and Arun Malik
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Medicine (General) ,Biomedical Engineering ,Gene Expression ,Health Informatics ,Review Article ,Computational biology ,Biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,R5-920 ,Neoplasms ,Ribose ,Gene expression ,Medical technology ,medicine ,Humans ,R855-855.5 ,Gene ,Cancer ,RNA ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,chemistry ,Deoxyribose ,Nucleic acid ,Surgery ,DNA ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Cancer is one of the deadliest diseases and with its growing number, its detection and treatment become essential. Researchers have developed various methods based on gene expression. Gene expression is a process that is used to convert deoxyribose nucleic acid (DNA) to ribose nucleic acid (RNA) and then RNA to protein. This protein serves so many purposes, such as creating cells, drugs for cancer, and even hybrid species. As genes carry genetic information from one generation to another, some gene deformity is also transferred to the next generation. Therefore, the deformity needs to be detected. There are many techniques available in the literature to predict cancerous and noncancerous genes from gene expression data. This is an important development from the point of diagnostics and giving a prognosis for the condition. This paper will present a review of some of those techniques from the literature; details about the various datasets on which these techniques are implemented and the advantages and disadvantages.
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- 2021
7. Comparative Proteomic Analysis of Mycoplasma hominis Grown on Media with Different Carbon Sources
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A. I. Zubov, M. A. Galyamina, D. S. Matyushkina, and Olga Pobeguts
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Arginine ,Pyrimidine ,biology ,Cell growth ,Catabolism ,General Medicine ,Mycoplasma hominis ,biology.organism_classification ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Deoxyribose ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Host organism ,Thymidine - Abstract
Culturing of Mycoplasma hominis in the presence of arginine and thymidine and subsequent comparative proteomic analysis of cells showed that, in addition to the already known arginine dihydrolase pathway of energy metabolism, M. hominis can utilize deoxyribose phosphates formed as a result of catabolism of pyrimidine nucleosides. In this case, a sharp deceleration of cell growth was observed. This allows M. hominis to occupy new niches in the host organism and survive under competitive conditions when the main sources of energy are unavailable.
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- 2021
8. Interactions of the C-Terminal Truncated DEAD-Box Protein DDX3X With RNA and Nucleotide Substrates
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Eda Koculi, Anthony F. T. Moore, and Aliana López de Victoria
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Cytidine triphosphate ,biology ,DEAD box ,General Chemical Engineering ,RNA ,General Chemistry ,biology.organism_classification ,RNA Helicase A ,Article ,Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Deoxyribose ,Nucleotide ,QD1-999 ,Adenosine triphosphate ,Caenorhabditis elegans - Abstract
DDX3X is a human DEAD-box RNA helicase implicated in many important cellular processes. In addition to the RecA-like catalytic core, DDX3X contains N- and C-terminal domains. The ancillary domains of DEAD-box RNA helicases have been shown to modulate their interactions with RNA and nucleotide substrates. Here, with the goal of understanding the role of N- and C-terminal domains of DDX3X on the DDX3X catalytic activity, we examined the interactions of RNA substrates and nucleotides with a DDX3X construct possessing the entire N-terminal domain and the catalytic core but lacking 80 residues from its C-terminal domain. Next, we compared our results with previously investigated DDX3X constructs. Our data show that the C-terminal truncated DDX3X does not bind to a blunt-ended double-helix RNA. This conclusion agrees with the data obtained on the wild-type LAF-1 protein, the DDX3X ortholog in Caenorhabditis elegans, and disagrees with the data obtained on the minimally active DDX3X construct, which misses 131 residues from its N-terminal domain and 80 residues from its C-terminal domain. The minimally active DDX3X construct was able to bind to the blunt-ended RNA construct. Combined, the previous studies and our results indicate that the N-terminal of DDX3X modulates the choice of DDX3X–RNA substrates. Furthermore, a previous study showed that the wild-type DDX3X construct hydrolyzes all four nucleotides and deoxynucleotides, both in the presence and absence of RNA. The C-terminal truncated DDX3X investigated here hydrolyzes only cytidine triphosphate (CTP) in the absence of RNA and CTP, adenosine triphosphate (ATP), and deoxyribose adenosine triphosphate (dATP) in the presence of RNA. Hence, the C-terminal truncated DDX3X has a more stringent nucleotide specificity than wild-type DDX3X.
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- 2021
9. 5'-Deoxyribose Phosphate Lyase Activity of Apurinic/Apyrimidinic Endonuclease 1
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Ekaterina S Ilina, Svetlana N. Khodyreva, and Olga I. Lavrik
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Chemistry ,DNA polymerase ,Biophysics ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endonuclease ,Biochemistry ,Deoxyribose ,Structural Biology ,Phosphodiester bond ,biology.protein ,AP site ,Nucleotide ,Lyase activity ,DNA - Abstract
One of the most common DNA lesions is the appearance of apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP-) sites. The main repair pathway for AP sites is initiated by apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 (APE1). Upon hydrolysis of the phosphodiester bond by this enzyme, a one nucleotide gap flanked by 3′-hydroxyl and 5′‑deoxyribose phosphate groups on the 5′-side of the AP site is formed. After hydrolysis of the AP site, APE1 remains associated with the product for some time. In the present work, the ability of APE1 to form a product of covalent attachment of APE1 to DNA containing a gap with a 5′-deoxyribose phosphate residue was demonstrated. In addition, it was found that while in a complex with the product of hydrolysis of the AP site, APE1 exhibits 5'‑deoxyribose phosphate lyase activity, cleaving off the 5′-deoxyribose phosphate residue. The presence of lyase activity in APE1 may be important for the repair of AP sites if there is a deficiency of, or mutations in DNA polymerase β, the main enzyme that removes the 5′-deoxyribose phosphate group.
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- 2021
10. Isomorphic building blocks for information-bearing duplexes—part 2: pyrimidine base pairs with sugar phosphate backbones
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R. H. Duncan Lyngdoh and Esther Chingbiaknem
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Pyrimidine ,010405 organic chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Base pair ,010402 general chemistry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Deoxyribonucleotide ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Deoxyribose ,Moiety ,Isomorphism ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,DNA ,Macromolecule - Abstract
Earlier searches using DFT had identified two isomorphic H-bonded pyrimidine base pairs B1:B2 and B3:B4 as possible repeat units for macromolecular H-bonded duplexes with a capacity to store information as in DNA. This DFT study seeks to design repeat units with suitable backbones which can hold a sequence of base pairs in desired order. A deoxyribose phosphate backbone and a deoxyallopyranose phosphate backbone are proposed here. These sets of backboned nucleotide pairs are examined for their stability and their isomorphism. The results yield stable H-bonded nucleotide pairs with pairing energies of the order of those for the Watson-Crick DNA base pairs. Isomorphism is examined in the central pyrimidine base pair moiety, in the backbone torsional angles and in the overall topology. Out of three different sets of nucleotide pairs, the anionic deoxyribonucleotide pairs DA1:DA2 and DA3:DA4 emerge as showing the maximal overall isomorphism, while the pyranonucleotide pairs PyA1:PyA2 and PyA3:PyA4 are predicted as the most stable.
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- 2021
11. The mechanism of the nucleo-sugar selection by multi-subunit RNA polymerases
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Janne J. Mäkinen, Eeva Vieras, Pasi Virta, Mikko Metsä-Ketelä, Georgiy A. Belogurov, Katsuhiko S. Murakami, and Yeonoh Shin
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biology ,DNA polymerase ,Protein subunit ,Science ,RNA ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Residue (chemistry) ,Deoxyribose ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,biology.protein ,Moiety ,Polymerase ,DNA - Abstract
RNA polymerases (RNAPs) synthesize RNA from NTPs, whereas DNA polymerases synthesize DNA from 2’dNTPs. DNA polymerases select against NTPs by using steric gates to exclude the 2’ OH, but RNAPs have to employ alternative selection strategies. In single-subunit RNAPs, a conserved Tyr residue discriminates against 2’dNTPs, whereas selectivity mechanisms of multi-subunit RNAPs remain hitherto unknown. Here we show that a conserved Arg residue uses a two-pronged strategy to select against 2’dNTPs in multi-subunit RNAPs. The conserved Arg interacts with the 2’OH group to promote NTP binding, but selectively inhibits incorporation of 2’dNTPs by interacting with their 3’OH group to favor the catalytically-inert 2’-endo conformation of the deoxyribose moiety. This deformative action is an elegant example of an active selection against a substrate that is a substructure of the correct substrate. Our findings provide important insights into the evolutionary origins of biopolymers and the design of selective inhibitors of viral RNAPs.
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- 2021
12. Molecular Assessment of Genetic Diversity Among Male, Female and Hermaphrodite Simarouba species Using Random Amplified Polymorphic Deoxyribose Nucleic Acid Markers
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Vaidya Gayatri and Naik Gr
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Genetics ,Aging ,Genetic diversity ,Male female ,Biology ,Simarouba ,biology.organism_classification ,Health Professions (miscellaneous) ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous) ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Hermaphrodite ,Deoxyribose ,chemistry ,General Health Professions ,Nucleic acid ,Dentistry (miscellaneous) ,General Dentistry - Published
- 2021
13. Biophysical, biochemical and microscopic studies on whole histone glycated by deoxyribose
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Zarina Arif, Moinuddin, Shireen Naaz Islam, Asim Badar, and Khursheed Alam
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Histone ,Deoxyribose ,chemistry ,biology ,Biochemistry ,biology.protein ,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health - Published
- 2021
14. Gas phase formation of carbon cluster (fullerenes and graphenes)/prebiotic sugar complexes
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Deping Zhang, Yuanyuan Yang, Junfeng Zhen, and Xiaoyi Hu
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Fullerene ,Binding energy ,General Physics and Astronomy ,chemistry.chemical_element ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Computational chemistry ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,Cluster (physics) ,Molecule ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Dicoronylene ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Evolution, Chemical ,Deoxyribose ,Graphene ,chemistry ,Nucleic acid ,Graphite ,Fullerenes ,Gases ,Carbon - Abstract
Among the constituent molecular classes of proteins and nucleic acids, the presence of Ribose and deoxy-Ribose in space remains unclear. Here, we provide experimental evidence of astronomically related sugar derivatives - carbon cluster (fullerenes and graphenes)/prebiotic sugar complexes - and study their formation processes in the gas phase. The results show that, with PAH cations (dicoronylene, DC, C48H20+)/(2-deoxy-d-Ribose, dR, C5H10O4, and dehydrated 2-deoxy-d-Ribose, DedR, C5H8O3) and fullerene cations (C60+)/(dR and DedR) as the initial molecular precursors, two series of graphene-prebiotic sugar cluster cations (graphene/dR and graphene/DedR, e.g., (dR)Cn+ and (DedR)Cn+) and two series of fullerene-prebiotic sugar cluster cations (fullerene/dR and fullerene/DedR, e.g., (dR)(DedR)2Cn+, (DedR)3Cn+, and (dR)2(DedR)Cn+) are formed through an ion-molecule reaction pathway under the influence of a strong radiation field. The structures of the newly formed complexes and the binding energies of these formation reactions are initially theoretically calculated. These laboratory studies attest to the importance of ion-molecule reaction synthesis routes for the chemical complexity in space, demonstrating that the gas phase interstellar materials could directly lead to the formation of large and complex sugar derivatives in a bottom-up growth process. The chemical evolution in space in which single molecules are transformed into complex molecules produces a wide variety of organic compounds (e.g., carbon cluster (fullerenes and graphenes)/prebiotic sugar complexes). For their astrobiological implications, this opens up aromatic based biogenic chemistry that is available to the parent of PAHs or fullerenes in the interstellar environments.
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- 2021
15. Structure of a Stable Interstrand DNA Cross-Link Involving a β-N-Glycosyl Linkage Between an N6-dA Amino Group and an Abasic Site
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Andrew H. Kellum, David Y. Qiu, William H. Martin, Kent S. Gates, Markus Voehler, and Michael P. Stone
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,0303 health sciences ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,DNA damage ,DNA repair ,030302 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Biochemistry ,Aldehyde ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Deoxyribose ,Electrophile ,AP site ,Glycosyl ,DNA - Abstract
Abasic (AP) sites are one of the most common forms of DNA damage. The deoxyribose ring of AP sites undergoes anomerization between α and β configurations, via an electrophilic aldehyde intermediate...
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- 2020
16. The proto-Nucleic Acid Builder: a software tool for constructing nucleic acid analogs
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Joshua Barnett, Anton S. Petrov, Nicholas V. Hud, C. David Sherrill, and Asem Alenaizan
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AcademicSubjects/SCI00010 ,Software tool ,Computational biology ,Biology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Nucleobase ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Narese/14 ,Nucleic Acids ,Genetics ,030304 developmental biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,0303 health sciences ,Molecular Structure ,Deoxyribose ,Rational design ,RNA ,Computational Biology ,Polymer ,DNA ,Chemical space ,0104 chemical sciences ,Narese/24 ,chemistry ,Models, Chemical ,Nucleic acid ,Nucleic Acid Conformation ,Algorithms ,Software - Abstract
The helical structures of DNA and RNA were originally revealed by experimental data. Likewise, the development of programs for modeling these natural polymers was guided by known structures. These nucleic acid polymers represent only two members of a potentially vast class of polymers with similar structural features, but that differ from DNA and RNA in the backbone or nucleobases. Xeno nucleic acids (XNAs) incorporate alternative backbones that affect the conformational, chemical, and thermodynamic properties of XNAs. Given the vast chemical space of possible XNAs, computational modeling of alternative nucleic acids can accelerate the search for plausible nucleic acid analogs and guide their rational design. Additionally, a tool for the modeling of nucleic acids could help reveal what nucleic acid polymers may have existed before RNA in the early evolution of life. To aid the development of novel XNA polymers and the search for possible pre-RNA candidates, this article presents the proto-Nucleic Acid Builder (https://github.com/GT-NucleicAcids/pnab), an open-source program for modeling nucleic acid analogs with alternative backbones and nucleobases. The torsion-driven conformation search procedure implemented here predicts structures with good accuracy compared to experimental structures, and correctly demonstrates the correlation between the helical structure and the backbone conformation in DNA and RNA., Graphical Abstract Graphical AbstractAn artistic rendering of the proto-Nucleic Acid builder.
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- 2020
17. Synthesis of Nucleoside Derivatives of N-Acetyl-7-nitroindoline, Their Incorporation into the DNA Oligomer, and Evaluation of Their Photoreactivity in the DNA/RNA Duplex
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Kenji Kikuta, Shigeki Sasaki, Yosuke Taniguchi, and Jan Barta
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Indoles ,Molecular Structure ,Stereochemistry ,RNA ,Nucleosides ,DNA ,General Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Nitroso ,Photochemical Processes ,Oligomer ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Deoxyribose ,Acetylation ,Drug Discovery ,Linker ,Nucleoside - Abstract
N-Acetyl-7-nitroindoline has a characteristic reaction in that its acetyl group is photo-activated to acetylate amines to form amides. In this study, the N-acetyl-7-nitroindoline part was connected to the 2'-deoxyribose part at the 3- or 5-position or to a glycerol unit at the 3-position through an ethylene linker (1, 2, and 3, respectively). They were incorporated into the oligodeoxynucleotides, and their photo-reactivities toward the complementary RNA were evaluated. The acetyl group of 1 was photo-activated to form the deacelylated nitroso derivative without affecting the RNA strand. The photoreaction with 2 suggested acetylation of the RNA strand. In contrast, compound 3 formed the photo-cross-linked adduct with the RNA. These results have shown the potential application of N-acetyl-7-nitroindoline unit in aqueous solutions.
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- 2020
18. Programmable type III-A CRISPR-Cas DNA targeting modules.
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Ichikawa, H. Travis, Cooper, John C., Lo, Leja, Potter, Jason, Terns, Rebecca M., and Terns, Michael P.
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DEOXYRIBOSE , *BASE pairs , *AMPLIFIED fragment length polymorphism , *DNA , *NUCLEIC acids - Abstract
The CRISPR-Cas systems provide invader defense in a wide variety of prokaryotes, as well as technologies for many powerful applications. The Type III-A or Csm CRISPR-Cas system is one of the most widely distributed across prokaryotic phyla, and cleaves targeted DNA and RNA molecules. In this work, we have constructed modules of Csm systems from 3 bacterial species and heterologously expressed the functional modules in E. coli. The modules include a Cas6 protein and a CRISPR locus for crRNA production, and Csm effector complex proteins. The expressed modules from L. lactis, S. epidermidis and S. thermophilus specifically eliminate invading plasmids recognized by the crRNAs of the systems. Characteristically, activation of plasmid targeting activity depends on transcription of the plasmid sequence recognized by the crRNA. Activity was not observed when transcription of the crRNA target sequence was blocked, or when the opposite strand or a non-target sequence was transcribed. Moreover, the Csm module can be programmed to recognize plasmids with novel target sequences by addition of appropriate crRNA coding sequences to the module. These systems provide a platform for investigation of Type III-A CRISPR-Cas systems in E. coli, and for introduction of programmable transcription-activated DNA targeting into novel organisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The intrinsic ability of double-stranded DNA to carry out D-loop and R-loop formation
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Takehiko Shibata, Kouji Hirota, and Wakana Iwasaki
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R-loop ,ssRNA ,lcsh:Biotechnology ,Biophysics ,RAD51 ,Review Article ,single-stranded DNA ,Biochemistry ,Homology (biology) ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,crRNA-Cas-effector complex ,Structural Biology ,Transcription (biology) ,lcsh:TP248.13-248.65 ,CRISPR-Cas system ,Genetics ,Homologous pairing ,030304 developmental biology ,Trans-activating crRNA ,0303 health sciences ,RecA ,Homologous triplex ,Effector ,Deoxyribose ,CH-pi interaction (CH-π interaction) ,Computer Science Applications ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Entropy-driven reaction ,Rad51 ,dsDNA ,DNA ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Double-stranded (ds)DNA, not dsRNA, has an ability to form a homologous complex with single-stranded (ss)DNA or ssRNA of homologous sequence. D-loops and homologous triplexes are homologous complexes formed with ssDNA by RecA/Rad51-family homologous-pairing proteins, and are a key intermediate of homologous (genetic/DNA) recombination. R-loop formation independent of transcription (R-loop formation in trans) was recently found to play roles in gene regulation and development of mammals and plants. In addition, the crRNA-Cas effector complex in CRISPR-Cas systems also relies on R-loop formation to recognize specific target. In homologous complex formation, ssDNA/ssRNA finds a homologous sequence in dsDNA by Watson-Crick base-pairing. crRNA-Cas effector complexes appear to actively melt dsDNA to make its bases available for annealing to crRNA. On the other hand, in D-loop formation and homologous-triplex formation, it is likely that dsDNA recognizes the homologous sequence before the melting of its double helix by using its intrinsic molecular function depending on CH2 at the 2'-position of the deoxyribose, and that the major role of RecA is the extension of ssDNA and the holding dsDNA at a position suitable for homology search. This intrinsic dsDNA function would also play a role in R-loop formation. The dependency of homologous-complex formation on 2'-CH2 of the deoxyribose would explain the absence of homologous complex formation by dsRNA, and dsDNA as sole genome molecule in all cellular organisms.
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- 2020
20. Exploring extra dimensions to capture saliva metabolite fingerprints from metabolically healthy and unhealthy obese patients by comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography featuring Tandem Ionization mass spectrometry
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Carlo Bicchi, Erica Liberto, Federico Stilo, Stephen E. Reichenbach, Marta Cialiè Rosso, Paolo Marzullo, Chiara Cordero, Gianluca Aimaretti, Chiara Mele, Massimo Collino, Simone Squara, and Stefania Mai
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Male ,Analyte ,Multivariate statistics ,Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization ,Chromatography, Gas ,Metabolite ,Glucuronates ,Lactose ,Mass spectrometry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Acetylglucosamine ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography-time of flight mass spectrometry ,Fused data from multiplexed ionization ,Saliva metabolome ,Untargeted fingerprinting by template matching ,Variable ionization energy ,Fuzzy Logic ,Cyclohexanes ,Reference Values ,Partial least squares regression ,Humans ,Urea ,Obesity ,Saliva ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Deoxyribose ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Esters ,Linear discriminant analysis ,N-Acetylneuraminic Acid ,0104 chemical sciences ,Amino Acids, Neutral ,Principal component analysis ,Solvents ,Gas chromatography ,Algorithms ,Research Paper - Abstract
This study examines the information potential of comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography combined with time-of-flight mass spectrometry (GC×GC-TOF MS) and variable ionization energy (i.e., Tandem Ionization™) to study changes in saliva metabolic signatures from a small group of obese individuals. The study presents a proof of concept for an effective exploitation of the complementary nature of tandem ionization data. Samples are taken from two sub-populations of severely obese (BMI > 40 kg/m2) patients, named metabolically healthy obese (MHO) and metabolically unhealthy obese (MUO). Untargeted fingerprinting, based on pattern recognition by template matching, is applied on single data streams and on fused data, obtained by combining raw signals from the two ionization energies (12 and 70 eV). Results indicate that at lower energy (i.e., 12 eV), the total signal intensity is one order of magnitude lower compared to the reference signal at 70 eV, but the ranges of variations for 2D peak responses is larger, extending the dynamic range. Fused data combine benefits from 70 eV and 12 eV resulting in more comprehensive coverage by sample fingerprints. Multivariate statistics, principal component analysis (PCA), and partial least squares discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) show quite good patient clustering, with total explained variance by the first two principal components (PCs) that increases from 54% at 70 eV to 59% at 12 eV and up to 71% for fused data. With PLS-DA, discriminant components are highlighted and putatively identified by comparing retention data and 70 eV spectral signatures. Within the most informative analytes, lactose is present in higher relative amount in saliva from MHO patients, whereas N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, urea, glucuronic acid γ-lactone, 2-deoxyribose, N-acetylneuraminic acid methyl ester, and 5-aminovaleric acid are more abundant in MUO patients. Visual feature fingerprinting is combined with pattern recognition algorithms to highlight metabolite variations between composite per-class images obtained by combining raw data from individuals belonging to different classes, i.e., MUO vs. MHO. Graphical abstract Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1007/s00216-020-03008-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
- Published
- 2020
21. An Unprecedented Ring-Contraction Mechanism in Cobalamin-Dependent Radical S-Adenosylmethionine Enzymes
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Shuo-Qi Sun and Shi-Lu Chen
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Oxetane ,Aldehyde ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Electron transfer ,Enzyme ,Deoxyadenosine ,Deoxyribose ,Deoxyadenosine triphosphate ,General Materials Science ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Radical SAM - Abstract
A unique member of the family of cobalamin (Cbl)-dependent radical S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) enzymes, OxsB, catalyzes the ring constriction of deoxyadenosine triphosphate (dATP) to the base oxetane aldehyde phosphate, a crucial precursor for oxetanocin A (OXT-A), which is an antitumor, antiviral, and antibacterial compound. This enzyme reveals a new catalytic function for this big family that is different from the common methylation. On the basis of density functional theory calculations, a mechanism has been proposed to mainly include that the generation of 5'-deoxyadenosine radical, a hydrogen transfer forming 2'-dATP radical, and a Cbl-catalyzed ring contraction of the deoxyribose in 2'-dATP radical. The ring contraction is a concerted rearrangement step accompanied by an electron transfer from the deoxyribose hydroxyl oxygen to CoIII without any ring-opening intermediate. CoIICbl has been ruled out as an active state. Other mechanistic characteristics are also revealed. This unprecedented non-methylation mechanism provides a new catalytic repertoire for the family of radical SAM enzymes, representing a new class of ring-contraction enzymes.
- Published
- 2020
22. In Vitro Antioxidant Activity of Memantine Derivatives Containing Amino Acids
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Albena Alexandrova, A. I. Stoilkova, Ivanka Stankova, Almira Georgieva, Radoslav Chayrov, and Elina Tsvetanova
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Antioxidant ,010405 organic chemistry ,Superoxide ,DPPH ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Radical ,Memantine ,medicine.disease_cause ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Amino acid ,010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Deoxyribose ,Biochemistry ,embryonic structures ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Oxidative stress ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common type of dementia in elderly. Since oxidative stress is an important feature of AD, it could be assumed that conjugation of the available medicines with substances having antioxidant properties may produce beneficial effect. The aim of this study was to investigate the antioxidant capacity of 7 analogs of memantine (MEM) with Gly, Ala, β-Ala, Val, Phe, Phe (4-F), and Gly-Gly. The antioxidant capacity of the MEM conjugates was tested in chemical systems generating superoxide anion (●O2–) and hydroxyl (●OH) radicals, and by applying the DPPH test. The results showed a negligible effect of the substances on DPPH● reduction. Phe-MEM, (4-F)-Phe-MEM and Gly-Gly-MEM demonstrated ●O2– scavenging potential. The Phe-containing derivatives exerted protective effect on ●OH-induced deoxyribose degradation and had abilities for chelating iron ions. In conclusion, the investigated Phe-containing MEM derivatives manifested a good antioxidant activity, and a promising effect in AD treatment could be expected.
- Published
- 2020
23. Systematic investigation of bioorthogonal cellular DNA metabolic labeling in a photo-controlled manner
- Author
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Zhiyong He, Shaokang Jia, Kun Chen, Shixi Yang, Huimin Ji, Shuang Peng, and Xiang Zhou
- Subjects
02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Cleavage (embryo) ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Metabolic pathway ,Deoxyribose ,chemistry ,Cellular dna ,Biophysics ,Ultraviolet light ,Bioorthogonal chemistry ,Methylene ,0210 nano-technology ,Nucleoside - Abstract
Bioorthogonal cleavage and ligation reactions together form one more integrated system about the repertoire of bioorthogonal chemistry, capacitating an array of thrilling new biological applications. The bond-cleavage type and position of biomolecular remain a great challenge, which determines the metabolic pathway of the targets in living systems. Herein we designed two linkages of methylene and carbonyl group attached the N-3 position of the 5-ethynyl-2′-deoxyuridine (EdU) base or the oxygen atom at deoxyribose 3′ position to a photocaging group, which would be cleaved by irradiation with 365 nm ultraviolet light. EdU derivatives linked by methylene at the N-3 position had better photodecage efficiency and stability in the absence of light. This paper provides a strategy for studying the nucleoside metabolic pathways in cells, which can easily and conveniently evaluate the effect of the position and type of the linkages. The developed strategy affords a reference for controlling spatial and temporal metabolism of small-molecule drugs, allowing direct manipulation of intact cells under physiological conditions.
- Published
- 2020
24. Chemistry and Biology of Aflatoxin-DNA Adducts
- Author
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Egli, Martin [Vanderbilt]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Developing wound dressings using 2-deoxy-D-Ribose to induce angiogenesis as a backdoor route for stimulating the production of vascular endothelial growth factor
- Author
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Serkan Dikici, Joanna Shepherd, Sabiniano Roman, Muhammad Yar, Sheila MacNeil, and Anthony J. Bullock
- Subjects
Angiogenesis ,QH301-705.5 ,Ribose ,Neovascularization, Physiologic ,Review ,2-deoxy-D-Ribose (2dDR) ,Pharmacology ,deoxy sugar ,wound dressing ,Catalysis ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Cardiovascular Physiological Phenomena ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,angiogenesis ,medicine ,Morphogenesis ,Animals ,Humans ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Deoxy sugar ,Thymidine phosphorylase ,Biology (General) ,Molecular Biology ,QD1-999 ,Spectroscopy ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Wound Healing ,integumentary system ,Chemistry ,Deoxyribose ,Vascular Endothelial Growth Factors ,Organic Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Bandages ,In vitro ,Computer Science Applications ,Vascular endothelial growth factor ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chronic wounds ,Angiogenesis Inducing Agents ,Thymidine ,Wound healing ,Blood vessel - Abstract
2-deoxy-D-Ribose (2dDR) was first identified in 1930 in the structure of DNA and discovered as a degradation product of it later when the enzyme thymidine phosphorylase breaks down thymidine into thymine. In 2017, our research group explored the development of wound dressings based on the delivery of this sugar to induce angiogenesis in chronic wounds. In this review, we will survey the small volume of conflicting literature on this and related sugars, some of which are reported to be anti-angiogenic. We review the evidence of 2dDR having the ability to stimulate a range of pro-angiogenic activities in vitro and in a chick pro-angiogenic bioassay and to stimulate new blood vessel formation and wound healing in normal and diabetic rat models. The biological actions of 2dDR were found to be 80 to 100% as effective as VEGF in addition to upregulating the production of VEGF. We then demonstrated the uptake and delivery of the sugar from a range of experimental and commercial dressings. In conclusion, its pro-angiogenic properties combined with its improved stability on storage compared to VEGF, its low cost, and ease of incorporation into a range of established wound dressings make 2dDR an attractive alternative to VEGF for wound dressing development.
- Published
- 2021
26. Sugar-Pucker Force-Induced Transition in Single-Stranded~DNA
- Author
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Felix Ritort, Maria Manosas, and Xavier Viader-Godoy
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Optical Tweezers ,Àcids nucleics ,ADN ,01 natural sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,ssDNA ,Biology (General) ,Molècules ,force-spectroscopy ,Spectroscopy ,Persistence length ,010304 chemical physics ,biology ,Deoxyribose ,sugar pucker ,General Medicine ,Computer Science Applications ,Nucleic acids ,Chemistry ,nucleic acids ,Elastic models ,Elasticity ,Force-spectroscopy ,Optical tweezers ,Single-molecule ,SsDNA ,Sugar pucker ,Chemical physics ,Biological Physics (physics.bio-ph) ,Thermodynamics ,single-molecule ,QH301-705.5 ,DNA, Single-Stranded ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,Catalysis ,Article ,Inorganic Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Physics - Chemical Physics ,0103 physical sciences ,Molecule ,Physics - Biological Physics ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Elasticity (economics) ,Molecular Biology ,QD1-999 ,Chemical Physics (physics.chem-ph) ,Elasticitat ,Organic Chemistry ,Force spectroscopy ,Helicase ,DNA ,Espectroscòpia ,Molecules ,Spectrum analysis ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Orders of magnitude (time) ,biology.protein ,Nucleic Acid Conformation ,Soft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft) ,Stress, Mechanical ,elastic models - Abstract
The accurate knowledge of the elastic properties of single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) is key to characterize the thermodynamics of molecular reactions that are studied by force spectroscopy methods where DNA is mechanically unfolded. Examples range from DNA hybridization, DNA ligand binding, DNA unwinding by helicases, etc. To date, ssDNA elasticity has been studied with different methods in molecules of varying sequence and contour length. A dispersion of results has been reported and the value of the persistence length has been found to be larger for shorter ssDNA molecules. We carried out pulling experiments with optical tweezers to characterize the elastic response of ssDNA over three orders of magnitude in length (60–14 k bases). By fitting the force-extension curves (FECs) to the Worm-Like Chain model we confirmed the above trend:the persistence length nearly doubles for the shortest molecule (60 b) with respect to the longest one (14 kb). We demonstrate that the observed trend is due to the different force regimes fitted for long and short molecules, which translates into two distinct elastic regimes at low and high forces. We interpret this behavior in terms of a force-induced sugar pucker conformational transition (C3′-endo to C2′-endo) upon pulling ssDNA.
- Published
- 2021
27. Redesigning Aldolase Stereoselectivity by Homologous Grafting.
- Author
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Bisterfeld, Carolin, Classen, Thomas, Küberl, Irene, Henßen, Birgit, Metz, Alexander, Gohlke, Holger, and Pietruszka, Jörg
- Subjects
- *
ALDOLASES , *DEOXYRIBOSE , *STEREOSELECTIVE reactions , *HOMOGRAFTS , *BOND formation mechanism , *ENANTIOSELECTIVE catalysis - Abstract
The 2-deoxy--ribose-5-phosphate aldolase (DERA) offers access to highly desirable building blocks for organic synthesis by catalyzing a stereoselective C-C bond formation between acetaldehyde and certain electrophilic aldehydes. DERA´s potential is particularly highlighted by the ability to catalyze sequential, highly enantioselective aldol reactions. However, its synthetic use is limited by the absence of an enantiocomplementary enzyme. Here, we introduce the concept of homologous grafting to identify stereoselectivity-determining amino acid positions in DERA. We identified such positions by structural analysis of the homologous aldolases 2-keto-3-deoxy-6-phosphogluconate aldolase (KDPG) and the enantiocomplementary enzyme 2-keto-3-deoxy-6-phosphogalactonate aldolase (KDPGal). Mutation of these positions led to a slightly inversed enantiopreference of both aldolases to the same extent. By transferring these sequence motifs onto DERA we achieved the intended change in enantioselectivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. MicroRNAs Form Triplexes with Double Stranded DNA at Sequence-Specific Binding Sites; a Eukaryotic Mechanism via which microRNAs Could Directly Alter Gene Expression.
- Author
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Paugh, Steven W., Coss, David R., Bao, Ju, Laudermilk, Lucas T., Grace, Christy R., Ferreira, Antonio M., Waddell, M. Brett, Ridout, Granger, Naeve, Deanna, Leuze, Michael, LoCascio, Philip F., Panetta, John C., Wilkinson, Mark R., Pui, Ching-Hon, Naeve, Clayton W., Uberbacher, Edward C., Bonten, Erik J., and Evans, William E.
- Subjects
- *
MICRORNA , *RNA , *DNA , *DEOXYRIBOSE , *NUCLEIC acids - Abstract
MicroRNAs are important regulators of gene expression, acting primarily by binding to sequence-specific locations on already transcribed messenger RNAs (mRNA) and typically down-regulating their stability or translation. Recent studies indicate that microRNAs may also play a role in up-regulating mRNA transcription levels, although a definitive mechanism has not been established. Double-helical DNA is capable of forming triple-helical structures through Hoogsteen and reverse Hoogsteen interactions in the major groove of the duplex, and we show physical evidence (i.e., NMR, FRET, SPR) that purine or pyrimidine-rich microRNAs of appropriate length and sequence form triple-helical structures with purine-rich sequences of duplex DNA, and identify microRNA sequences that favor triplex formation. We developed an algorithm (Trident) to search genome-wide for potential triplex-forming sites and show that several mammalian and non-mammalian genomes are enriched for strong microRNA triplex binding sites. We show that those genes containing sequences favoring microRNA triplex formation are markedly enriched (3.3 fold, p<2.2 × 10−16) for genes whose expression is positively correlated with expression of microRNAs targeting triplex binding sequences. This work has thus revealed a new mechanism by which microRNAs could interact with gene promoter regions to modify gene transcription. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Uncharged Components of Single-Stranded DNA Modulate Liquid–Liquid Phase Separation With Cationic Linker Histone H1
- Author
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Masahiro Mimura, Ryoji Kurita, Hiroka Sugai, Sayaka Ishihara, Yoichi Shinkai, and Shunsuke Tomita
- Subjects
QH301-705.5 ,Peptide ,Nucleobase ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cell and Developmental Biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Histone H1 ,Biology (General) ,030304 developmental biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,0303 health sciences ,linker histone H1 ,Cell Biology ,DNA ,Brief Research Report ,Chromatin ,liquid droplets ,Deoxyribose ,chemistry ,Biophysics ,Nucleic acid ,intrinsically disordered proteins ,phase separation ,Linker ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Liquid–liquid phase separation (LLPS) of proteins and DNAs has been recognized as a fundamental mechanism for the formation of intracellular biomolecular condensates. Here, we show the role of the constituent DNA components, i.e., the phosphate groups, deoxyribose sugars, and nucleobases, in LLPS with a polycationic peptide, linker histone H1, a known key regulator of chromatin condensation. A comparison of the phase behavior of mixtures of H1 and single-stranded DNA-based oligomers in which one or more of the constituent moieties of DNA were removed demonstrated that not only the electrostatic interactions between the anionic phosphate groups of the oligomers and the cationic residues of H1, but also the interactions involving nucleobases and deoxyriboses (i) promoted the generation of spherical liquid droplets via LLPS as well as (ii) increased the density of DNA and decreased its fluidity within the droplets under low-salt conditions. Furthermore, we found the formation of non-spherical assemblies with both mobile and immobile fractions at relatively higher concentrations of H1 for all the oligomers. The roles of the DNA components that promote phase separation and modulate droplet characteristics revealed in this study will facilitate our understanding of the formation processes of the various biomolecular condensates containing nucleic acids, such as chromatin organization.
- Published
- 2021
30. Sequencing uracil in DNA at single-nucleotide resolution
- Author
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Liu T, Kui Chen, Yin J, Ma H, Yong Liu, Jiayin Guo, Chengchen Zhao, Maoxiang Qian, Yan Zhang, Rong S, Jiang L, Yiqing Chen, Tan Y, Bin Shen, Jinxuan Yang, Siyuan Gao, Huaisheng Chen, Fei-Long Meng, and Jinchuan Hu
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Deoxyribose ,DNA Replication Timing ,Deamination ,Uracil ,Nucleotide ,Cytidine deaminase ,DNA ,Cytosine - Abstract
As an aberrant base in DNA, uracil is generated by dUMP misincorporation or cytosine deamination, and involved in multiple physiological and pathological processes. Current methods for whole-genome mapping of uracil all rely on uracil-DNA N-glycosylase (UNG) and are limited in resolution or specificity. Here, we present a UNG-independent Single-Nucleotide resolution Uracil Sequencing (SNU-seq) method utilizing the UdgX protein which specifically excises the uracil and forms a covalent bond with the resulting deoxyribose. SNU-seq was validated on synthetic DNA and applied to mammalian genomes. We found that the uracil content of pemetrexed-treated cells fluctuated along with DNA replication timing. We also accurately detected uracil introduced through cytosine deamination by the cytosine base editor (nCas9-APOBEC) and verified uracil occurrence in “WRC” motif within Activation-Induced Cytidine Deaminase (AID) hotspot regions in CSR-activated UNG−/− B cells.
- Published
- 2021
31. Evaluation of fluorescence based quantification of DNA: Influence of an external fluorescent probe
- Author
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J.P. Chandhana, Rahamatthunnisha Ummar, Elango Kandasamy, T.G. Satheesh Babu, and Susithra Selvam
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Chemistry ,02 engineering and technology ,Molecular cloning ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Fluorescence ,Fluorescence spectroscopy ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Real-time polymerase chain reaction ,Deoxyribose ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,Biophysics ,Nucleic acid ,0210 nano-technology ,DNA ,Polymerase chain reaction - Abstract
Much advancement in biological studies has led to the greater understanding of pathological conditions, their diagnosis and treatment modalities. One among them is polymerase chain reaction (PCR) an effective and inexpensive method used in molecular biology for deoxyribose nucleic acid (DNA) amplification. DNA quantification and characterisation is an important step in molecular cloning. Common laboratory techniques like absorption spectrophotometry, spectrofluorometry and real time PCR are used to quantify DNA. Spectrofluorometry is more specific and sensitive than spectrophotometry method. Fluorescence spectroscopy can be used by adding probes to the sample, called fluorescence probing technique. In the present work, animal DNA is extracted from liver tissues initially. The isolated DNA is then treated with certain fluorescence probe, such as methylene blue (MB). This probe can intercalate with DNA conformations and also can be used for quantification of DNA. The interaction studies of MB with DNA gives understanding of the nano-environment of the conformations of DNA. Molecular mechanics calculations are carried out to ascertain the findings from the experimental data.
- Published
- 2020
32. Enzymatic Incorporation of a Coumarin–Guanine Base Pair
- Author
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Nathan W. Luedtke, Ashkan Karimi, and Aaron Johnson
- Subjects
DNA Replication ,Models, Molecular ,Guanine ,Base pair ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Catalysis ,Nucleobase ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Coumarins ,Humans ,heterocyclic compounds ,Base Pairing ,Klenow fragment ,biology ,010405 organic chemistry ,fungi ,Hydrogen Bonding ,DNA ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,DNA Polymerase I ,Combinatorial chemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,Deoxyribose ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Nucleoside triphosphate ,DNA polymerase I - Abstract
Previous expansions beyond nature's preferred base-pairing interactions have utilized either nonpolar shape-fitting interactions or classical hydrogen bonding. Reported here is a hybrid of these systems. By replacing a single N-H with C-H at a Watson-Crick interface, the design space for new drug candidates and fluorescent nucleobase analogues is dramatically expanded, as demonstrated here by the new, highly fluorescent deoxycytidine mimic 3-glycosyl-5-fluoro-7-methoxy-coumarin-2'-deoxyribose (dCC ). dGTP is selectively incorporated across from a template dCC during enzymatic DNA synthesis. Likewise, dCC is selectively incorporated across from a template guanine when dCC is provided as the triphosphate dCC TP. DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment) exhibited about a 10-fold higher affinity for dCC TP than dCTP, allowing selective incorporation of dCC in direct competition experiments. These results demonstrate that a single C-H can replace N-H at a Watson-Crick-type interface with preservation of functional selectivity and enhanced activity.
- Published
- 2019
33. Enzymatic Synthesis of 2-Deoxyribose 1-Phosphate and Ribose 1 Phosphate and Subsequent Preparation of Nucleosides
- Author
-
Pavel N. Solyev, Sergey N. Mikhailov, Irina V. Kulikova, Cyrill S. Alexeev, and Mikhail S. Drenichev
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_compound ,Deoxyribose ,Biochemistry ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Ribose ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Enzymatic synthesis ,Phosphate ,Enzyme catalysis ,Phosphorolysis - Published
- 2019
34. Development of mCherry tagged UdgX as a highly sensitive molecular probe for specific detection of uracils in DNA
- Author
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Shashanka Aroli, Kapudeep Karmakar, Dipshikha Chakravortty, Umesh Varshney, Somnath Dutta, and Madhurima Datta
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Mycobacterium smegmatis ,Biophysics ,Oxocarbenium ,Biochemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Bacterial Proteins ,Uracil ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,biology ,DNA ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Luminescent Proteins ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Deoxyribose ,Molecular Probes ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Molecular probe ,mCherry ,Genome, Bacterial - Abstract
Uracil is not always a mistakenly occurring base in DNA. Uracils in DNA genomes are known to be important in the life cycles of Bacillus subtilis phages (PBS1/2) and the malarial parasite, Plasmodium falciparum; and have been implicated in the development of fruit fly and antibody maturation in B-lymphocytes. Availability of a sensitive, specific and robust technique for the detection uracils in genes/genomes is essential to understand its varied biological roles. Mycobacterium smegmatis UdgX (MsmUdgX), identified and characterised in our laboratory, forms covalent complexes with the uracil sites in DNA in a specific manner. MsmUdgX cleaves the glycosidic bond between uracil and the deoxyribose sugar in DNA to produce uracilate and oxocarbenium ions. The oxocarbenium ion is then captured into a covalent complex by the nucleophilic attack of a histidine side chain of MsmUdgX. Here, we describe the use of a fusion protein, mCherry tagged MsmUdgX (mChUdgX), which combines the property of MsmUdgX to covalently and specifically bind the uracil sites in the genome, with the sensitivity of fluorescent detection of mCherry as a reporter. We show that both the purified mChUdgX and the Escherichia coli cell-extracts overexpressing mChUdgX provide high sensitivity and specificity of detecting uracils in DNA.
- Published
- 2019
35. Probing the Intercalation of Noscapine from Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate Micelles to Calf Thymus Deoxyribose Nucleic Acid: A Mechanistic Approach
- Author
-
Khalid Ahmed Alzahrani, Neha Maurya, and Rajan Patel
- Subjects
Quenching (fluorescence) ,General Chemical Engineering ,Intercalation (chemistry) ,General Chemistry ,Micelle ,Article ,Noscapine ,Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Deoxyribose ,chemistry ,Drug delivery ,medicine ,Biophysics ,Nucleic acid ,Sodium dodecyl sulfate ,QD1-999 ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Noscapine (NOS) is efficient in inhibiting cellular proliferation and induces apoptosis in nonsmall cell, lung, breast, lymphatic, and prostate cancers. The micelle-assisted drug delivery is a well-known phenomenon; however, the proper mechanism is still unclear. Therefore, in the present study, we have shown a mechanistic approach for the delivery of NOS from sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles to calf thymus deoxyribose nucleic acid (ctDNA) base-pairs using various spectroscopic techniques. The absorption and emission spectroscopy results revealed that NOS interacts with the SDS micelle and resides in its hydrophobic core. Further, the intercalation of NOS from SDS micelles to ctDNA was also shown by these techniques. The anisotropy and quenching results further confirmed the relocation of NOS from SDS micelles to ctDNA. The CD analysis suggested that SDS micelles do not perturb the structure of ctDNA, which supported that SDS micelles can be used as a safe delivery vehicle for NOS. This work may be helpful for the invention of advanced micelle-based vehicles for the delivery of an anticancer drug to their specific target site.
- Published
- 2019
36. Additive‐Free Enzymatic Phosphorylation and Ligation of Artificial Oligonucleotides with C‐Nucleosides at the Reaction Points
- Author
-
Fumihiro Kurosaki, Junya Chiba, Yusuke Yamade, Masahiko Inouye, and Yutaro Oda
- Subjects
Polynucleotide 5'-Hydroxyl-Kinase ,DNA Ligases ,Stereochemistry ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Nucleobase ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Bacteriophage T4 ,Nucleotide ,Phosphorylation ,Molecular Biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,DNA ligase ,010405 organic chemistry ,Oligonucleotide ,Organic Chemistry ,Nucleosides ,DNA ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry ,Deoxyribose ,Nucleic Acid Conformation ,Molecular Medicine ,Ligation - Abstract
We report enzymatic phosphorylation and additive-free ligation of DNAs containing unnatural C-nucleotide residues through the action of T4 polynucleotide kinase and T4 DNA ligase. The artificial units are each made up of an alkynyl deoxyribose component and one of the unnatural nucleobases D*, T*, G*, and C*, corresponding-from a viewpoint of hydrogen-bonding patterns-to natural A, T, G, and C, respectively. Phosphorylation progressed quantitatively at the 5'-end in the cases of all of the artificial units in the chimeric DNAs. Ligation also smoothly progressed at the 5'-end in the cases of the D* and G* nucleotide residues, but only negligibly in those of their T* and C* counterparts. Chemical redesign of the last two units successfully improved the ligation efficiency, so that enzymatic ligation worked well for all of the artificial units in every 3'-natural⋅5'-artificial, 3'-artificial⋅5'-natural, and 3'-artificial⋅5'-artificial terminal combination at the nicks.
- Published
- 2019
37. Base-Pair Contents and Sequences of DNA Double Helices Differentiated by Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy
- Author
-
Tianyang Gao, Guantong Xu, Xiao Xia Han, Xinhua Guo, Xiaoxuan Xiang, Yang Li, and Bing Zhao
- Subjects
Guanine ,Silver ,Base Pair Mismatch ,Surface Properties ,Base pair ,Metal Nanoparticles ,Spectrum Analysis, Raman ,Cytosine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,symbols.namesake ,General Materials Science ,Particle Size ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Base Pairing ,Base Composition ,Base Sequence ,Chemistry ,Hydrogen bond ,Hydrogen Bonding ,DNA ,Iodides ,Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy ,Crystallography ,Deoxyribose ,Helix ,symbols ,Raman spectroscopy ,Aluminum - Abstract
Direct, label-free sequence analysis of DNA hybridization has been achieved by surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy. In this work, aluminum-ion-aggregated and iodide-modified silver nanoparticles were used as substrates to obtain Raman spectra of the DNA strands with the same base composition but different sequences, which form random coils or various hairpin conformations. Upon DNA hybridization, reproducibly enhanced bands were easily observed, corresponding well to the formation of Watson-Crick hydrogen bonds, base ring breathing vibrations, and hairpin loops. These characteristic bands can be used to unambiguously distinguish the hairpins from the random DNA conformation. Moreover, by using the deoxyribose band (959 cm-1) as an internal standard to normalize the characteristic bands at 1703 cm-1 corresponding to the dG νC=O H bond, the guanine-cytosine base-pair contents and sequence in DNA hairpins can be accurately measured. Applying this method, a single base mutation in a functional double helix was confidently identified.
- Published
- 2019
38. Triazolyl C-nucleosides via the intermediacy of β-1′-ethynyl-2′-deoxyribose derived from a Nicholas reaction: Synthesis, photophysical properties and interaction with BSA
- Author
-
Subhendu Sekhar Bag and Suman Kalyan Das
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Quenching (fluorescence) ,010405 organic chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Solvatochromism ,Nicholas reaction ,Alkyne ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Acceptor ,Combinatorial chemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Deoxyribose ,chemistry ,Intramolecular force ,Drug Discovery ,Click chemistry - Abstract
We report the design and synthesis of triazolyl donor/acceptor unnatural C-nucleosides via alkyne (sugar)—azide (aromatic) 1, 3-dipolar cyclo-addition reaction as a key step and studies on their photophysical properties. We have chosen β-1′-ethynyl-2′-deoxyribose as a precursor to synthesize triazolyl-C-nucleosides. Overcoming the difficulties, we obtain β-1′-ethynyl-2′-deoxyribose as a major product following a Co2(CO)8 catalyzed intramolecular Nicholas reaction. The 1,3-diaxial interaction is the driving force for the α to β-anomeric conversion while performing cobalt complexation followed by oxidation to afford β-1′- ethynyl-2′-deoxyribose as the major product. A Cu(I)-catalyzed click reaction between different aromatic donor/acceptor azides and β-1′- ethynyl-2′-deoxyribose generates the desired unnatural triazolyl donor-acceptor aromatic C-nucleosides (cTBDo/Ac) within 30 min. Single crystal X-ray structure shows the puckered conformation of sugar as C3′-exo. Studies on the photophysical properties suggests good fluorophoric as well as solvatochromic characteristics of these nucleosides. Two of the synthesised nucleosides, cTAnthBDo and cTPyBDo, are found to interact with BSA as the only tested protein with quenching of fluorescence signal. The designed bases, thus, might find applications in stabilizing a DNA and in the biophysical study thereof, if a pair of such donor acceptor C-nucleosides could be incorporated into a DNA sequence.
- Published
- 2019
39. Handy DNA Nucleotide Model
- Author
-
James L. Middleton
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Guanine ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Computational biology ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Education ,Structure and function ,Thymine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Deoxyribose ,Nucleotide ,A-DNA ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,0503 education ,Cytosine ,DNA - Abstract
A readily available resource to create a model for the study of DNA is the human hand. Students can recognize how structure and function of nucleotides determine structure and function of the DNA molecule by labeling parts of a gloved hand with the parts of a DNA molecule.
- Published
- 2019
40. Exploration of 2-deoxy-D-ribose and 17β-Estradiol as alternatives to exogenous VEGF to promote angiogenesis in tissue-engineered constructs
- Author
-
Muhammad Yar, Naside Mangir, Sheila MacNeil, Frederik Claeyssens, and Serkan Dikici
- Subjects
Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A ,Embryology ,Angiogenesis ,VEGF receptors ,0206 medical engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,Neovascularization, Physiologic ,Chick Embryo ,02 engineering and technology ,Chorioallantoic Membrane ,Neovascularization ,03 medical and health sciences ,Tissue engineering ,In vivo ,medicine ,Animals ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Tissue engineered ,Estradiol ,Tissue Engineering ,biology ,Deoxyribose ,Chemistry ,Estrogens ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Cell biology ,Chorioallantoic membrane ,biology.protein ,2 deoxy d ribose ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
Aim: In this study, we explored the angiogenic potential and proangiogenic concentration ranges of 2-deoxy-D-ribose (2dDR) and 17β-Estradiol (E2) in comparison with VEGF. The 2dDR and E2 were then loaded into tissue engineering (TE) scaffolds to investigate their proangiogenic potential when released from fibers. Materials & methods: Ex ovo chick chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) assay was used to evaluate angiogenic activity of 2dDR and E2. Both factors were then introduced into scaffolds via electrospinning to assess their angiogenic potential when released from fibers. Results: Both factors were approximately 80% as potent as VEGF and showed a dose-dependent angiogenic response. The sustained release of both agents from the scaffolds stimulated neovascularization over 7 days in the chorioallantoic membrane assay. Conclusion: We conclude that both 2dDR and E2 provide attractive alternatives to VEGF for the functionalization of tissue engineering scaffolds to promote angiogenesis in vivo.
- Published
- 2019
41. Antioxidant activity of different species and varieties of turmeric (Curcuma spp): Isolation of active compounds
- Author
-
Md. Amzad Hossain, Kensaku Takara, Jesmin Akter, De-Xing Hou, and Md. Zahorul Islam
- Subjects
Curcumin ,Antioxidant ,Oxygen radical absorbance capacity ,Physiology ,DPPH ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Phytochemicals ,Toxicology ,Biochemistry ,Antioxidants ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Rutin ,Curcuma ,0302 clinical medicine ,Japan ,Species Specificity ,Diarylheptanoids ,Drug Discovery ,Bisdemethoxycurcumin ,medicine ,Gallic acid ,Food science ,Spices ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Molecular Structure ,biology ,Deoxyribose ,Plant Extracts ,Methanol ,Osmolar Concentration ,Free Radical Scavengers ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Plant Breeding ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Solvents ,Trolox ,Oxidation-Reduction ,Rhizome - Abstract
There are >80 species of turmeric (Curcuma spp.) and some species have multiple varieties, for example, Curcuma longa (C. longa) has 70 varieties. They could be different in their chemical properties and biological activities. Therefore, we compared antioxidant activity, total phenolic and flavonoid content of different species and varieties of turmeric namely C. longa [variety: Ryudai gold (RD) and Okinawa ukon], C. xanthorrhiza, C. aromatica, C. amada, and C. zedoaria. The antioxidant activity was determined using the 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) free radical scavenging activity, oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC), reducing power and 2-deoxyribose (2-DR) oxidation assay. Our results suggested that RD contained significantly higher concentrations of total phenolic (157.4 mg gallic acid equivalent/g extract) and flavonoids (1089.5 mg rutin equivalent/g extract). RD also showed significantly higher DPPH radical-scavenging activity (IC50: 26.4 μg/mL), ORAC (14,090 μmol Trolox equivalent/g extract), reducing power absorbance (0.33) and hydroxyl radical scavenging activity (IC50: 7.4 μg/mL). Therefore, RD was chosen for the isolation of antioxidant compounds using silica gel column, Toyopearl HW-40F column, and high-performance liquid chromatography. Structural identification of the compounds was conducted using 1H NMR, 13C NMR, and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. The purified antioxidant compounds were bisabolone-9-one (1), 4-methyllene-5-hydroxybisabola-2,10-diene-9-one (2), turmeronol B (3), 5-hydroxy-1,7-bis(4-hydroxy-3-methoxyphenyl)-1-hepten-3-one (4), 3-hydroxy-1,7-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)-6-hepten-1,5-dione (5), cyclobisdemethoxycurcumin (6), bisdemethoxycurcumin (7), demethoxycurcumin (8) and curcumin (9). The IC50 for DPPH radical-scavenging activity were 474, 621, 234, 29, 39, 257, 198, 47 and 18 μM and hydroxyl radical-scavenging activity were 25.1, 24.4, 20.2, 2.1, 5.1, 17.2, 7.2, 3.3 and 1.5 μM for compound 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9, respectively. Our findings suggested that the RD variety of C. longa, developed by the University of the Ryukyus, Okinawa, Japan, is a promising source of natural antioxidants.
- Published
- 2019
42. 4′-C-Trifluoromethyl modified oligodeoxynucleotides: synthesis, biochemical studies, and cellular uptake properties
- Author
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Xin Wen, Huawei Wang, Zenghui Cui, Fengmin Guo, Zhen Xi, Chuanzheng Zhou, Qiang Li, Zhiguo Yan, Jiajun Li, Yifei Zhou, and Chuanlong Zang
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Small interfering RNA ,Hydrocarbons, Fluorinated ,Molecular Conformation ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Humans ,Tissue Distribution ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Antisense odns ,Nuclease ,Microscopy, Confocal ,Trifluoromethyl ,DNA synthesis ,biology ,010405 organic chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,RNA ,hemic and immune systems ,respiratory system ,0104 chemical sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Oligodeoxyribonucleotides ,chemistry ,Deoxyribose ,Biophysics ,biology.protein ,Thymidine ,HeLa Cells - Abstract
Herein, we report the synthesis of 4'-C-trifluoromethyl (4'-CF3) thymidine (T4'-CF3) and its incorporation into oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) through solid-supported DNA synthesis. The 4'-CF3 modification leads to a marginal effect on the deoxyribose conformation and a local helical structure perturbation for ODN/RNA duplexes. This type of modification slightly decreases the thermal stability of ODN/RNA duplexes (-1 °C/modification) and leads to improved nuclease resistance. Like the well-known phosphorothioate (PS) modification, heavy 4'-CF3 modifications enable direct cellular uptake of the modified ODNs without any delivery reagents. This work highlights that 4'-CF3 modified ODNs are promising candidates for antisense-based therapeutics, which will, in turn, inspire us to develop more potent modifications for antisense ODNs and siRNAs.
- Published
- 2019
43. Rotational and translational positions determine the structural and dynamic impact of a single ribonucleotide incorporated in the nucleosome
- Author
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Duncan J. Smith, Iwen Fu, and Suse Broyde
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Models, Molecular ,Ribonucleotide ,Rotation ,DNA polymerase ,Ribose ,Ribonucleotide excision repair ,Population ,Biochemistry ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nucleosome ,education ,Base Pairing ,Molecular Biology ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,Base Sequence ,biology ,DNA ,Cell Biology ,Ribonucleotides ,Nucleosomes ,Histone ,Deoxyribose ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,biology.protein ,Biophysics - Abstract
Ribonucleotides misincorporated by replicative DNA polymerases are by far the most common DNA lesion. The presence of ribonucleotides in DNA is associated with genome instability, causing replication stress, chromosome fragility, gross chromosomal rearrangements, and other mutagenic events. Furthermore, nucleosome and chromatin assembly as well as nucleosome positioning are affected by the presence of ribonucleotides. Notably, nucleosome formation is significantly reduced by a single ribonucleotide. Single ribonucleotides are primarily removed from DNA by the ribonucleotide excision repair (RER) pathway via the RNase H2 enzyme, which incises the DNA backbone on the 5′-side of the ribonucleotide. While the structural implications of a single ribonucleotide in free duplex DNA have been well studied, how a single ribonucleotide embedded in nucleosomal DNA impacts nucleosome structure and dynamics, and the possible consequent impact on RER, have not been explored. We have carried out 3.5 μs molecular dynamics simulations of a single ribonucleotide incorporated at various translational and rotational positions in a nucleosome core particle. We find that the presence of the 2′−OH group on the ribose impacts the local conformation and dynamics of both the ribonucleotide and nearby DNA nucleotides as well as their interactions with histones; the nature of these disturbances depends on the rotational and translational setting, including whether the ribose faces toward or away from the histones. The ribonucleotide’s preferred C3′-endo pucker is stabilized by interactions with the histones, and furthermore the ribonucleotide can cause dynamic local duplex disturbance involving an abnormal C3′-endo population of the adjacent deoxyribose pucker, minor groove opening, ruptured Watson-Crick pairing, and duplex unwinding that are governed by translation-dependent histone-nucleotide interactions. Possible effects of these disturbances on RER are considered.
- Published
- 2019
44. Optimized Synthesis of Poly(deoxyribose) Isobutyrate, a Viscous Biomaterial for Bone Morphogenetic Protein-2 Delivery
- Author
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David G. Little, Farshad Oveissi, Sina Naficy, Farid Mirmohseni, Fariba Dehghani, Mohammadreza Behi, Peter Valtchev, Tegan L. Cheng, and Aaron Schindeler
- Subjects
Condensation polymer ,Materials science ,0206 medical engineering ,Bone Morphogenetic Protein 2 ,Biocompatible Materials ,02 engineering and technology ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Viscosity ,Drug Delivery Systems ,0302 clinical medicine ,Isobutyrates ,Humans ,General Materials Science ,030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,Drug Carriers ,Tissue Engineering ,Molecular mass ,Deoxyribose ,Biomaterial ,Adhesion ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Monomer ,chemistry ,Chemical engineering ,Rheology ,Drug carrier - Abstract
Injectable and phase-transitioning carriers from natural polysaccharides have great potential for the minimally invasive delivery of therapeutic proteins in the field of bone tissue engineering. In this study, a novel and highly viscous drug carrier was synthesized by a sequential process of deoxyribose polycondensation and esterification. The effect of synthesis parameters on the molecular weight, viscosity, and adhesion of the material was studied and correlated to temperature and time of polycondensation (Tp and tp), time and temperature of esterification (Te and te), and the molar ratio of the monomer (R). The formulations were evaluated for molecular weight and distribution properties using GPC, chemical structures by FTIR and NMR spectra, and rheological properties using a rheometer. Formulations illustrated a wide range of viscosities (0.736 to 2225 Pa s), adhesion (0.896 to 58.45 N), and molecular weights (637 to 4216 Da), where viscosity was significantly reduced in the presence of low amounts of...
- Published
- 2018
45. Deoxyribose and deoxysugar derivatives from photoprocessed astrophysical ice analogues and comparison to meteorites
- Author
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Scott A. Sandford, Michel Nuevo, and George Cooper
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Science ,General Physics and Astronomy ,01 natural sciences ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,Nucleobase ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0103 physical sciences ,Ribose ,Organic chemistry ,lcsh:Science ,Sugar ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,Multidisciplinary ,General Chemistry ,Sugar derivatives ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Meteorite ,Deoxyribose ,Ultraviolet irradiation ,lcsh:Q ,DNA - Abstract
Sugars and their derivatives are essential to all terrestrial life. Their presence in meteorites, together with amino acids, nucleobases, amphiphiles, and other compounds of biological importance, may have contributed to the inventory of organics that played a role in the emergence of life on Earth. Sugars, including ribose (the sugar of RNA), and other sugar derivatives have been identified in laboratory experiments simulating photoprocessing of ices under astrophysical conditions. In this work, we report the detection of 2-deoxyribose (the sugar of DNA) and several deoxysugar derivatives in residues produced from the ultraviolet irradiation of ice mixtures consisting of H2O and CH3OH. The detection of deoxysugar derivatives adds to the inventory of compounds of biological interest that can form under astrophysical conditions and puts constraints on their abiotic formation pathway. Finally, we report that some of the deoxysugar derivatives found in our residues are also newly identified in carbonaceous meteorites., Sugars are known to form from the UV photoprocessing of ices under astrophysical conditions. Here, the authors report the detection of deoxyribose, the sugar of DNA, and other deoxysugars from the UV photoprocessing of H2O:CH3OH ice mixtures, which are compared with materials from carbonaceous meteorites.
- Published
- 2018
46. Structure based design, synthesis, and evaluation of anti-CML activity of the quinolinequinones as LY83583 analogs
- Author
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Mikako Fujita, Amaç Fatih Tuyun, Hiroshi Tateishi, Masami Otsuka, Halil I. Ciftci, Hatice Yıldırım, Belgin Sever, Nilüfer Bayrak, and Mahmut Yıldız
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Apoptosis ,Chemistry Techniques, Synthetic ,Toxicology ,Jurkat cells ,HeLa ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive ,Humans ,MTT assay ,biology ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,In vitro ,030104 developmental biology ,Deoxyribose ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Drug Design ,Cancer cell ,Aminoquinolines ,Ethidium homodimer assay ,Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor ,DNA - Abstract
Quinone-based small molecules are the promising structures for antiproliferative drug design and can induce apoptosis in cancer cells. Among them, one of the quinolinequinones, named as 6-anilino-5,8-quinolinequinone, LY83583 has the ability to inhibit the growth of cancer cells as an inhibitor of cyclase. The biological potential of all synthesized compounds as the analogs of the identified lead molecule LY83583 that possessed the antiproliferative efficiency was determined. The two series of the LY83583 analogs containing electron-withdrawing or electron-donating group(s) were synthesized and subsequently in vitro evaluated for their cytotoxic activity against K562, Jurkat, MT-2, and HeLa cell lines using MTT assay. All the LY83583 analogs showed antiproliferative activity with good IC50 values (less than positive control imatinib). Four analogs from each series were also selected for the determination of selectivity against human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). The analog AQQ15 showed high potency towards all cancer cell lines with almost similar selectivity of imatinib. In order to get a better insight into cytotoxic effects of the analog AQQ15 in K562 cells, further apoptotic effects due to annexin V/ethidium homodimer III staining, ABL1 kinase inhibition, and DNA cleaving ability were examined. The analog AQQ15 induced apoptotic cell death in K562 cells with 34.6% compared to imatinib (6.5%). This analog showed no considerable ABL1 kinase inhibitory activity but significant DNA cleavage activity indicating DNA fragmentation-induced apoptosis. Besides, molecular docking studies revealed that the analog AQQ15 established proper interactions with the deoxyribose sugar attached with the nucleobases adenine and guanidine respectively, in the minor groove of the double helix of DNA. In silico predicted pharmacokinetic parameters of this analog were found to comply with the standard range making it an efficient anticancer drug candidate for further research.
- Published
- 2021
47. Antioxidant activity by Deoxyribose assay: in vitroprotocol v1
- Author
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Matheus Gallas-Lopes, Ana P Herrmann, Greicy Michelle Marafiga Conterato, Angelo Piato, and Adrieli Sachett
- Subjects
inorganic chemicals ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Antioxidant ,Biochemistry ,Deoxyribose ,Chemistry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,In vitro - Abstract
Considering the role of oxidative stress in the pathology of several diseases and the use of antioxidants as treatment and/or adjuvants in these conditions. Here we propose a protocol to evaluate the antioxidant capacity of different compounds by the TBARS method in vitro through the ability to inhibit the synthesis of hydroxyl radical from the oxidation of deoxyribose by hydrogen peroxide H2O2 via Fenton reaction. This protocol was standardized at LAPCOM (Psychopharmacology and Behavior Laboratory at UFRGS) to assess biochemical parameters in vitro.
- Published
- 2021
48. Electron-Induced Repair of 2′-Deoxyribose Sugar Radicals in DNA: A Density Functional Theory (DFT) Study
- Author
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Michael D. Sevilla, Anil Kumar, and Michael L Bell
- Subjects
Free Radicals ,Radical ,sugar radical ,Protonation ,Electrons ,010402 general chemistry ,Photochemistry ,Solvated electron ,01 natural sciences ,Catalysis ,Article ,Nucleobase ,redox potential ,lcsh:Chemistry ,Inorganic Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Boltzmann population ,Electron affinity ,0103 physical sciences ,electron affinity ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Sugar ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Molecular Biology ,Spectroscopy ,Density Functional Theory ,5′,8-cyclo-guanine ,010304 chemical physics ,Deoxyribose ,Organic Chemistry ,General Medicine ,DNA ,0104 chemical sciences ,Computer Science Applications ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,chemistry ,Density functional theory ,Protons ,Oxidation-Reduction - Abstract
In this work, we used ωB97XD density functional and 6-31++G** basis set to study the structure, electron affinity, populations via Boltzmann distribution, and one-electron reduction potentials (E°) of 2′-deoxyribose sugar radicals in aqueous phase by considering 2′-deoxyguanosine and 2′-deoxythymidine as a model of DNA. The calculation predicted the relative stability of sugar radicals in the order C4′• >, C1′• >, C5′• >, C3′• >, C2′•. The Boltzmann distribution populations based on the relative stability of the sugar radicals were not those found for ionizing radiation or OH-radical attack and are good evidence the kinetic mechanisms of the processes drive the products formed. The adiabatic electron affinities of these sugar radicals were in the range 2.6–3.3 eV which is higher than the canonical DNA bases. The sugar radicals reduction potentials (E°) without protonation (−1.8 to −1.2 V) were also significantly higher than the bases. Thus the sugar radicals will be far more readily reduced by solvated electrons than the DNA bases. In the aqueous phase, these one-electron reduced sugar radicals (anions) are protonated from solvent and thus are efficiently repaired via the “electron-induced proton transfer mechanism”. The calculation shows that, in comparison to efficient repair of sugar radicals by the electron-induced proton transfer mechanism, the repair of the cyclopurine lesion, 5′,8-cyclo-2′-dG, would involve a substantial barrier.
- Published
- 2021
49. Exercise reduced the formation of new adipocytes in the adipose tissue of mice in vivo
- Author
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Jacqueline M. Stephens, Timothy D. Allerton, Marc K. Hellerstein, Jonathan J. Savoie, Mark Fitch, and Ursula A. White
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Male ,Physiology ,Social Sciences ,Adipose tissue ,White adipose tissue ,Biochemistry ,Running ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Glucose Metabolism ,Animal Cells ,Adipocyte ,Adipocytes ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Public and Occupational Health ,Connective Tissue Cells ,computer.programming_language ,Mammals ,Multidisciplinary ,Deoxyribose ,sed ,Eukaryota ,Sports Science ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Adipose Tissue ,Physiological Parameters ,Connective Tissue ,Vertebrates ,Carbohydrate Metabolism ,Medicine ,Female ,Anatomy ,Cellular Types ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Science ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Rodents ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,In vivo ,Physical Conditioning, Animal ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Deuterium Oxide ,Sports and Exercise Medicine ,Exercise ,Behavior ,Biological Locomotion ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Skeletal muscle ,DNA ,Cell Biology ,Physical Activity ,Metabolism ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Biological Tissue ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Physical Fitness ,Amniotes ,Sedentary Behavior ,business ,Zoology ,computer - Abstract
Exercise has beneficial effects on metabolism and health. Although the skeletal muscle has been a primary focus, exercise also mediates robust adaptations in white adipose tissue. To determine if exercise affects in vivo adipocyte formation, fifty-two, sixteen-week-old C57BL/6J mice were allowed access to unlocked running wheels [Exercise (EX) group; n = 13 males, n = 13 females] or to locked wheels [Sedentary (SED) group; n = 13 males, n = 13 females] for 4-weeks. In vivo adipocyte formation was assessed by the incorporation of deuterium (2H) into the DNA of newly formed adipocytes in the inguinal and gonadal adipose depots. A two-way ANOVA revealed that exercise significantly decreased new adipocyte formation in the adipose tissue of mice in the EX group relative to the SED group (activity effect; P = 0.02). This reduction was observed in male and female mice (activity effect; P = 0.03). Independent analysis of the depots showed a significant reduction in adipocyte formation in the inguinal (P = 0.05) but not in the gonadal (P = 0.18) of the EX group. We report for the first time that exercise significantly reduced in vivo adipocyte formation in the adipose tissue of EX mice using a physiologic metabolic 2H2O-labeling protocol.
- Published
- 2021
50. Substrate binding modes of purine and pyrimidine nucleotides to human ecto 5 nucleotidase CD73 and inhibition by their bisphosphonic acid derivatives
- Author
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Norbert Sträter, Uwe Mueller, Manfred S. Weiss, Franziska U. Huschmann, and Emma Scaletti
- Subjects
Purine ,Protein Folding ,Adenosine ,Ribonucleotide ,Fragment screening ,Drug development ,Large scale facilities for research with photons neutrons and ions ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Purinergic signalling ,eN ,medicine ,Humans ,Purine metabolism ,5'-Nucleotidase ,Molecular Biology ,Nucleoside binding ,Chemistry ,Hydrolysis ,Crystal structure ,Cell Biology ,Ribonucleoside ,E5NT ,Biochemistry ,Deoxyribose ,Purines ,Pyrimidine Nucleotides ,Original Article ,Nucleoside ,Protein Binding ,Signal Transduction ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Human ecto-5-nucleotidase (CD73) is involved in purinergic signalling, which influences a diverse range of biological processes. CD73 hydrolyses AMP and is the major control point for the levels of extracellular adenosine. Inhibitors of CD73 thus block the immunosuppressive action of adenosine, a promising approach for cancer immunotherapy. Interestingly, ADP and ATP are competitive inhibitors of CD73, with the most potent small-molecule inhibitors to date being non-hydrolysable ADP analogues. While AMP is the major substrate of the enzyme, CD73 has been reported to hydrolyse other 5′-nucleoside monophosphates. Based on a fragment screening campaign at the BESSY II synchrotron, we present the binding modes of various deoxyribo- and ribonucleoside monophosphates and of four additional fragments binding to the nucleoside binding site of the open form of the enzyme. Kinetic analysis of monophosphate hydrolysis shows that ribonucleotide substrates are favoured over their deoxyribose equivalents with AMP being the best substrate. We characterised the initial step of AMP hydrolysis, the binding mode of AMP to the open conformation of CD73 and compared that to other monophosphate substrates. In addition, the inhibitory activity of various bisphosphonic acid derivatives of nucleoside diphosphates was determined. Although AMPCP remains the most potent inhibitor, replacement of the adenine base with other purines or with pyrimidines increases the Ki value only between twofold and sixfold. On the other hand, these nucleobases offer new opportunities to attach substituents for improved pharmacological properties. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11302-021-09802-w.
- Published
- 2021
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