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Hidden in Plain Sight: Subtle Effects of the 8-Oxoguanine Lesion on the Structure, Dynamics, and Thermodynamics of a 15-Base Pair Oligodeoxynucleotide Duplex
- Source :
- Biochemistry. 50:8463-8477
- Publication Year :
- 2011
- Publisher :
- American Chemical Society (ACS), 2011.
-
Abstract
- The base lesion 8-oxoguanine is formed readily by oxidation of DNA, potentially leading to G → T transversion mutations. Despite the apparent similarity of 8-oxoguanine-cytosine base pairs to normal guanine-cytosine base pairs, cellular base excision repair systems effectively recognize the lesion base. Here we apply several techniques to examine a single 8-oxoguanine lesion at the center of a nonpalindromic 15-mer duplex oligonucleotide in an effort to determine what, if anything, distinguishes an 8-oxoguanine-cytosine (8oxoG-C) base pair from a normal base pair. The lesion duplex is globally almost indistinguishable from the unmodified parent duplex using circular dichroism spectroscopy and ultraviolet melting thermodynamics. The DNA mismatch-detecting photocleavage agent Rh(bpy)(2)chrysi(3+) cleaves only weakly and nonspecifically, revealing that the 8oxoG-C pair is locally stable at the level of the individual base pairs. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectra are also consistent with a well-conserved B-form duplex structure. In the two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect spectra, base-sugar and imino-imino cross-peaks are strikingly similar between parent and lesion duplexes. Changes in chemical shift due to the 8oxoG lesion are localized to its complementary cytosine and to the 2-3 bp immediately flanking the lesion on the lesion strand. Residues further removed from the lesion are shown to be unperturbed by its presence. Notably, imino exchange experiments indicate that the 8-oxoguanine-cytosine pair is strong and stable, with an apparent equilibrium constant for opening equal to that of other internal guanine-cytosine base pairs, on the order of 10(-6). This collection of experiments shows that the 8-oxoguanine-cytosine base pair is incredibly stable and similar to the native pair.
- Subjects :
- Guanine
Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
Base Sequence
DNA Repair
Chemistry
Base pair
Hoogsteen base pair
Thermodynamics
Nuclear Overhauser effect
Base excision repair
Wobble base pair
Biochemistry
Article
Nucleic acid secondary structure
Lesion
Oligodeoxyribonucleotides
Duplex (building)
medicine
medicine.symptom
Base Pairing
DNA Damage
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15204995 and 00062960
- Volume :
- 50
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Biochemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....f26facc6896703c5cc7629f572020ffc
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi201007t