169D

THE SOLUTION STRUCTURE OF THE R(GCG)D(TATACCC):D(GGGTATACGC) OKAZAKI FRAGMENT CONTAINS TWO DISTINCT DUPLEX MORPHOLOGIES CONNECTED BY A JUNCTION


Experimental Data Snapshot

  • Method: SOLUTION NMR
  • Conformers Submitted: 

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This is version 1.3 of the entry. See complete history


Literature

The solution structure of the r(gcg)d(TATACCC):d(GGGTATACGC) Okazaki fragment contains two distinct duplex morphologies connected by a junction.

Salazar, M.Fedoroff, O.Y.u.Zhu, L.Reid, B.R.

(1994) J Mol Biol 241: 440-455

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1006/jmbi.1994.1519
  • Primary Citation of Related Structures:  
    169D

  • PubMed Abstract: 

    Okazaki fragments are important intermediates in DNA replication. Chimeric duplexes that are structurally equivalent to Okazaki fragments also occur during reverse transcription of RNA retroviruses. Such duplexes consist of an RNA-DNA chimeric strand base-paired to a pure DNA strand; hence they have a hybrid duplex "left half" covalently linked to a "right half" that is pure DNA. We have determined the solution structure of the synthetic Okazaki fragment r(gcg)d(TATACCC):d(GGGTATACGC) by means of two-dimensional NMR, restrained molecular dynamics and full relaxation matrix simulation of the two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect spectra at various mixing times. The large negative x-displacement and large positive inclination in the hybrid section of the duplex are structural characteristics similar to those found in pure hybrid duplexes. However, the DNA sugar puckers and the width and depth of the minor groove in the pure DNA section are more like B-form DNA, especially beyond the junction. Thus, this Okazaki fragment duplex assumes a conformation in solution that is a chimeric mixture of hybrid-form (H-form) and B-form structures and the overall molecule cannot be classified as either an A-form or a B-form duplex. The co-existence of these two different conformations in a single duplex gives rise to a structural discontinuity with a bend of approximately 18.1 (+/- 0.4) degrees at the junction between the hybrid and DNA segments that may be important for reverse transcriptase binding and RNase H cleavage of such molecules. Despite the fact that the solution structure is quite different from the all A-form structure reported recently for the exact same molecule in the crystalline state, a surprising number of local helical parameters were found to be quite similar to those reported for the crystal structure.


  • Organizational Affiliation

    Chemistry Department, University of Washington, Seattle 98195.


Macromolecules

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Entity ID: 1
MoleculeChains LengthOrganismImage
DNA (5'-D(*GP*GP*GP*TP*AP*TP*AP*CP*GP*C)-3')10N/A
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  • Reference Sequence

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Entity ID: 2
MoleculeChains LengthOrganismImage
DNA/RNA (5'-R(*GP*CP*G)-D(P*TP*AP*TP*AP*CP*CP*C)-3')10N/A
Sequence Annotations
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  • Reference Sequence
Experimental Data & Validation

Experimental Data

  • Method: SOLUTION NMR
  • Conformers Submitted: 

Structure Validation

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Entry History 

Deposition Data

Revision History  (Full details and data files)

  • Version 1.0: 1994-07-31
    Type: Initial release
  • Version 1.1: 2008-03-24
    Changes: Version format compliance
  • Version 1.2: 2011-07-13
    Changes: Version format compliance
  • Version 1.3: 2022-02-16
    Changes: Data collection, Database references, Derived calculations, Other, Structure summary