Browsing by Author "Merriman, Dawn K"
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Item Open Access Increasing the length of poly-pyrimidine bulges broadens RNA conformational ensembles with minimal impact on stacking energetics.(RNA (New York, N.Y.), 2018-07-16) Merriman, Dawn K; Yuan, Jiayi; Shi, Honglue; Majumdar, Ananya; Herschlag, Daniel; Al-Hashimi, Hashim MHelical elements separated by bulges frequently undergo transitions between unstacked and coaxially stacked conformations during the folding and function of non-coding RNAs. Here, we examine the dynamic properties of poly-pyrimidine bulges of varying length (n = 1, 2, 3, 4 and 7) across a range of Mg2+ concentrations using HIV-1 TAR RNA as a model system and solution NMR spectroscopy. In the absence of Mg2+ (25 mM monovalent salt), helices linked by bulges with n ≥ 3 residues adopt predominantly unstacked conformations (stacked population < 15%) whereas 1-bulge and 2-bulge motifs adopt predominantly stacked conformations (stacked population > 74%). The 2-bulge motif is biased toward linear conformations and increasing the bulge length leads to broader inter-helical distributions and structures that are on average more kinked. In the presence of 3 mM Mg2+, the helices predominantly coaxially stack (stacked population > 84%), regardless of bulge length, and the midpoint for the Mg2+-dependent stacking transition does not vary substantially (within 3-fold) with bulge length. In the absence of Mg2+, the difference between the free energy of inter-helical coaxial stacking across the bulge variants is estimated to be ≈2.9 kcal/mol, based on an NMR chemical shift mapping approach, with stacking being more energetically disfavored for the longer bulges. This difference decreases to ≈0.4 kcal/mol in the presence of 3 mM Mg2+ NMR residual dipolar coupling and resonance intensity data show increased dynamics in the stacked state with increasing bulge length in the presence of Mg2+ We propose that Mg2+ helps to neutralize the growing electrostatic repulsion in the stacked state with increasing bulge length thereby increasing the number of coaxial conformations that are sampled. Energetically compensated inter-helical stacking dynamics may help to maximize the conformational adaptability of RNA and allow a wide range of conformations to be optimally stabilized by proteins and ligands.Item Open Access Insights into Watson-Crick/Hoogsteen breathing dynamics and damage repair from the solution structure and dynamic ensemble of DNA duplexes containing m1A.(Nucleic acids research, 2017-05) Sathyamoorthy, Bharathwaj; Shi, Honglue; Zhou, Huiqing; Xue, Yi; Rangadurai, Atul; Merriman, Dawn K; Al-Hashimi, Hashim MIn the canonical DNA double helix, Watson-Crick (WC) base pairs (bps) exist in dynamic equilibrium with sparsely populated (∼0.02-0.4%) and short-lived (lifetimes ∼0.2-2.5 ms) Hoogsteen (HG) bps. To gain insights into transient HG bps, we used solution-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, including measurements of residual dipolar couplings and molecular dynamics simulations, to examine how a single HG bp trapped using the N1-methylated adenine (m1A) lesion affects the structural and dynamic properties of two duplexes. The solution structure and dynamic ensembles of the duplexes reveals that in both cases, m1A forms a m1A•T HG bp, which is accompanied by local and global structural and dynamic perturbations in the double helix. These include a bias toward the BI backbone conformation; sugar repuckering, major-groove directed kinking (∼9°); and local melting of neighboring WC bps. These results provide atomic insights into WC/HG breathing dynamics in unmodified DNA duplexes as well as identify structural and dynamic signatures that could play roles in m1A recognition and repair.