A systematic molecular dynamics study of nearest-neighbor effects on base pair and base pair step conformations and fluctuations in B-DNA

Richard Lavery(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), K. Zakrzewska(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), David L. Beveridge(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Thomas C. Bishop(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), David A. Case(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Thomas E. Cheatham(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Surjit B. Dixit(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), B. Jayaram(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Filip Lankaš(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Charles A. Laughton(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), John H. Maddocks(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Alexis Michon(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Roman Osman(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Modesto Orozco(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Alberto Pérez(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Tanya Singh(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Nad’a Špačková(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Jiřı́ Šponer(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1)
Nucleic Acids Research
October 22, 2009
Cited by 311Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

It is well recognized that base sequence exerts a significant influence on the properties of DNA and plays a significant role in protein-DNA interactions vital for cellular processes. Understanding and predicting base sequence effects requires an extensive structural and dynamic dataset which is currently unavailable from experiment. A consortium of laboratories was consequently formed to obtain this information using molecular simulations. This article describes results providing information not only on all 10 unique base pair steps, but also on all possible nearest-neighbor effects on these steps. These results are derived from simulations of 50-100 ns on 39 different DNA oligomers in explicit solvent and using a physiological salt concentration. We demonstrate that the simulations are converged in terms of helical and backbone parameters. The results show that nearest-neighbor effects on base pair steps are very significant, implying that dinucleotide models are insufficient for predicting sequence-dependent behavior. Flanking base sequences can notably lead to base pair step parameters in dynamic equilibrium between two conformational sub-states. Although this study only provides limited data on next-nearest-neighbor effects, we suggest that such effects should be analyzed before attempting to predict the sequence-dependent behavior of DNA.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis