Thermodynamic stability of base pairs between 2-hydroxyadenine and incoming nucleotides as a determinant of nucleotide incorporation specificity during replication
Author(s) -
Junji Kawakami
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/29.16.3289
Subject(s) - nucleotide , base pair , duplex (building) , biology , chemical stability , dna , nucleic acid sequence , stereochemistry , crystallography , biochemistry , chemistry , gene , organic chemistry
We investigated the thermodynamic stability of double-stranded DNAs with an oxidative DNA lesion, 2-hydroxyadenine (2-OH-Ade), in two different sequence contexts (5'-GA*C-3' and 5'-TA*A-3', A* represents 2-OH-Ade). When an A*-N pair (N, any nucleotide base) was located in the center of a duplex, the thermodynamic stabilities of the duplexes were similar for all the natural bases except A (N = T, C and G). On the other hand, for the duplexes with the A*-N pair at the end, which mimic the nucleotide incorporation step, the stabilities of the duplexes were dependent on their sequence. The order of stability is T > G > C >> A in the 5'-GA*C-3' sequences and T > A > C > G in the 5'-TA*A-3' sequences. Because T/G/C and T/A are nucleotides incorporated opposite to 2-OH-Ade in the 5'-GA*C-3' and 5'-TA*A-3' sequences, respectively, these results agree with the tendency of mutagenic misincorporation of the nucleotides opposite to 2-OH-Ade in vitro. Thus, the thermodynamic stability of the A*-N base pair may be an important factor for the mutation spectra of 2-OH-Ade.
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