scholarly journals A stretched conformation of DNA with a biological role?

Author(s):  
Niklas Bosaeus ◽  
Anna Reymer ◽  
Tamás Beke-Somfai ◽  
Tom Brown ◽  
Masayuki Takahashi ◽  
...  

AbstractWe have discovered a well-defined extended conformation of double-stranded DNA, which we call Σ-DNA, using laser-tweezers force-spectroscopy experiments. At a transition force corresponding to free energy change ΔG = 1·57 ± 0·12 kcal (mol base pair)−1 60 or 122 base-pair long synthetic GC-rich sequences, when pulled by the 3′−3′ strands, undergo a sharp transition to the 1·52 ± 0·04 times longer Σ-DNA. Intriguingly, the same degree of extension is also found in DNA complexes with recombinase proteins, such as bacterial RecA and eukaryotic Rad51. Despite vital importance to all biological organisms for survival, genome maintenance and evolution, the recombination reaction is not yet understood at atomic level. We here propose that the structural distortion represented by Σ-DNA, which is thus physically inherent to the nucleic acid, is related to how recombination proteins mediate recognition of sequence homology and execute strand exchange. Our hypothesis is that a homogeneously stretched DNA undergoes a ‘disproportionation’ into an inhomogeneous Σ-form consisting of triplets of locally B-like perpendicularly stacked bases. This structure may ensure improved fidelity of base-pair recognition and promote rejection in case of mismatch during homologous recombination reaction. Because a triplet is the length of a gene codon, we speculate that the structural physics of nucleic acids may have biased the evolution of recombinase proteins to exploit triplet base stacks and also the genetic code.

2018 ◽  
Vol 64 (7) ◽  
pp. 483-491 ◽  
Author(s):  
Urmi Bajpai ◽  
Abhishek Kumar Mehta ◽  
Kandasamy Eniyan ◽  
Avni Sinha ◽  
Ankita Ray ◽  
...  

Bacteriophages are being considered as a promising natural resource for the development of alternative strategies against mycobacterial diseases, especially in the context of the wide-spread occurrence of drug resistance among the clinical isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. However, there is not much information documented on mycobacteriophages from India. Here, we report the isolation of 17 mycobacteriophages using Mycobacterium smegmatis as the bacterial host, where 9 phages also lyse M. tuberculosis H37Rv. We present detailed analysis of one of these mycobacteriophages — PDRPv. Transmission electron microscopy and polymerase chain reaction analysis (of a conserved region within the TMP gene) show PDRPv to belong to the Siphoviridae family and B1 subcluster, respectively. The genome (69 110 bp) of PDRPv is circularly permuted double-stranded DNA with ∼66% GC content and has 106 open reading frames (ORFs). On the basis of sequence similarity and conserved domains, we have assigned function to 28 ORFs and have broadly categorized them into 6 groups that are related to replication and genome maintenance, DNA packaging, virion release, structural proteins, lysogeny-related genes and endolysins. The present study reports the occurrence of novel antimycobacterial phages in India and highlights their potential to contribute to our understanding of these phages and their gene products as potential antimicrobial agents.


Genome ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 46 (6) ◽  
pp. 936-937 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter B Moens

The nature of meiotic genetic recombination was resolved at the DNA level by the 1953 Watson and Crick model. What remains to be determined are the roles of the various recombination proteins and the distribution and localization of recombination events in the meiotic prophase nucleus.Key words: Holliday model, Holliday junction, chromosome cores, meiosis, recombinase, checkpoints, gene conversion, cross over.


Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 1433
Author(s):  
Benoit Palancade ◽  
Rodney Rothstein

RNA-containing structures, including ribonucleotide insertions, DNA:RNA hybrids and R-loops, have recently emerged as critical players in the maintenance of genome integrity. Strikingly, different enzymatic activities classically involved in genome maintenance contribute to their generation, their processing into genotoxic or repair intermediates, or their removal. Here we review how this substrate promiscuity can account for the detrimental and beneficial impacts of RNA insertions during genome metabolism. We summarize how in vivo and in vitro experiments support the contribution of DNA polymerases and homologous recombination proteins in the formation of RNA-containing structures, and we discuss the role of DNA repair enzymes in their removal. The diversity of pathways that are thus affected by RNA insertions likely reflects the ancestral function of RNA molecules in genome maintenance and transmission.


1989 ◽  
Vol 17 (13) ◽  
pp. 5163-5172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Wolters ◽  
Burghardt Wittig

Symmetry ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 241
Author(s):  
Enrique Maciá

A fully analytical treatment of the base-pair and codon dynamics in double-stranded DNA molecules is introduced, by means of a realistic treatment that considers different mass values for G, A, T, and C nucleotides and takes into account the intrinsic three-dimensional, helicoidal geometry of DNA in terms of a Hamitonian in cylindrical coordinates. Within the framework of the Peyrard–Dauxois–Bishop model, we consider the coupling between stretching and stacking radial oscillations as well as the twisting motion of each base pair around the helix axis. By comparing the linearized dynamical equations for the angular and radial variables corresponding to the bp local scale with those of the longer triplet codon scale, we report an underlying hierarchical symmetry. The existence of synchronized collective oscillations of the base-pairs and their related codon triplet units are disclosed from the study of their coupled dynamical equations. The possible biological role of these correlated, long-range oscillation effects in double standed DNA molecules containing mirror-symmetric codons of the form XXX, XX’X, X’XX’, YXY, and XYX is discussed in terms of the dynamical equations solutions and their related dispersion relations.


2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (31) ◽  
pp. 20476-20488 ◽  
Author(s):  
Srikrishna Pramanik ◽  
Sabyasachi Chatterjee ◽  
Gopinatha Suresh Kumar ◽  
Parukuttyamma Sujatha Devi

Here, we have used food waste derived chicken egg shell membrane as a cost effective carbon source for the synthesis of heteroatom doped fluorescent carbon dots. We are able to apply these synthesized carbon dots as a new fluorescent probe for label free base pair selective and sequence specific double stranded DNA binding.


2011 ◽  
Vol 192 (5) ◽  
pp. 735-750 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheba Agarwal ◽  
Wiggert A. van Cappellen ◽  
Aude Guénolé ◽  
Berina Eppink ◽  
Sam E.V. Linsen ◽  
...  

Rad54, a member of the SWI/SNF protein family of DNA-dependent ATPases, repairs DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) through homologous recombination. Here we demonstrate that Rad54 is required for the timely accumulation of the homologous recombination proteins Rad51 and Brca2 at DSBs. Because replication protein A and Nbs1 accumulation is not affected by Rad54 depletion, Rad54 is downstream of DSB resection. Rad54-mediated Rad51 accumulation does not require Rad54’s ATPase activity. Thus, our experiments demonstrate that SWI/SNF proteins may have functions independent of their ATPase activity. However, quantitative real-time analysis of Rad54 focus formation indicates that Rad54’s ATPase activity is required for the disassociation of Rad54 from DNA and Rad54 turnover at DSBs. Although the non–DNA-bound fraction of Rad54 reversibly interacts with a focus, independent of its ATPase status, the DNA-bound fraction is immobilized in the absence of ATP hydrolysis by Rad54. Finally, we show that ATP hydrolysis by Rad54 is required for the redistribution of DSB repair sites within the nucleus.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Joanna Katsanos ◽  
Chioma Ngene ◽  
Jennifer Cook-Easterwood

The mycobacteriophages Burwell21 and Nivrat are two F1 cluster bacteriophages isolated from different soil samples in Charlotte, NC. Burwell21 has a 58,098-base-pair double-stranded DNA genome, with 99 protein-coding genes predicted, whereas Nivrat has a 58,009-base-pair genome, with 102 protein-coding genes predicted.


2014 ◽  
Vol 42 (21) ◽  
pp. 13214-13227 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tiina Sedman ◽  
Ilja Gaidutšik ◽  
Karin Villemson ◽  
YingJian Hou ◽  
Juhan Sedman

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