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Partial Base Flipping Is Sufficient for Strand Slippage near DNA Duplex Termini

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Laboratory of Computational and Structural Biology, Division of Genetics, Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health, and Department of Biomedical Sciences, School of Public Health, State University of New York at Albany, CMS 2008, 150 New Scotland Avenue, Albany, New York 12208, United States
Cite this: J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2013, 135, 22, 8274-8282
Publication Date (Web):May 3, 2013
https://doi.org/10.1021/ja401573j
Copyright © 2013 American Chemical Society
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Abstract

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Strand slippage is a structural mechanism by which insertion–deletion (indel) mutations are introduced during replication by polymerases. Three-dimensional atomic-resolution structural pathways are still not known for the decades-old template slippage description. The dynamic nature of the process and the higher energy intermediates involved increase the difficulty of studying these processes experimentally. In the present study, restrained and unrestrained molecular dynamics simulations, carried out using multiple nucleic acid force fields, are used to demonstrate that partial base-flipping can be sufficient for strand slippage at DNA duplex termini. Such strand slippage can occur in either strand, i.e. near either the 3′ or the 5′ terminus of a DNA strand, which suggests that similar structural flipping mechanisms can cause both primer and template slippage. In the repetitive mutation hot-spot sequence studied, non-canonical base-pairing with exposed DNA groove atoms of a neighboring G:C base-pair stabilizes a partially flipped state of the cytosine. For its base-pair partner guanine, a similar partially flipped metastable intermediate was not detected, and the propensity for sustained slippage was also found to be lower. This illustrates that a relatively small metastable DNA structural distortion in polymerase active sites could allow single base insertion or deletion mutations to occur, and stringent DNA groove molecular recognition may be required to maintain intrinsic DNA polymerase fidelity. The implications of a close relationship between base-pair dissociation, base unstacking, and strand slippage are discussed in the context of sequence dependence of indel mutations.

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Cited By


This article is cited by 8 publications.

  1. Xiaohui Wang, Zhaoxi Sun. Determination of Base-Flipping Free-Energy Landscapes from Nonequilibrium Stratification. Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling 2019, 59 (6) , 2980-2994. DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.9b00263.
  2. Ada Sedova and Nilesh K. Banavali . Geometric Patterns for Neighboring Bases Near the Stacked State in Nucleic Acid Strands. Biochemistry 2017, 56 (10) , 1426-1443. DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.6b01101.
  3. Swati R. Manjari, Janice D. Pata, and Nilesh K. Banavali . Cytosine Unstacking and Strand Slippage at an Insertion–Deletion Mutation Sequence in an Overhang-Containing DNA Duplex. Biochemistry 2014, 53 (23) , 3807-3816. DOI: 10.1021/bi500189g.
  4. Nilesh K. Banavali . Analyzing the Relationship between Single Base Flipping and Strand Slippage near DNA Duplex Termini. The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 2013, 117 (46) , 14320-14328. DOI: 10.1021/jp408957c.
  5. Dawid Koscielniak, Ewa Wons, Karolina Wilkowska, Marian Sektas. Non-programmed transcriptional frameshifting is common and highly RNA polymerase type-dependent. Microbial Cell Factories 2018, 17 (1) DOI: 10.1186/s12934-018-1034-4.
  6. Pablo D Dans, Jürgen Walther, Hansel Gómez, Modesto Orozco. Multiscale simulation of DNA. Current Opinion in Structural Biology 2016, 37, 29-45. DOI: 10.1016/j.sbi.2015.11.011.
  7. Md. Monirul Islam, Satoshi Fujii, Shinobu Sato, Tatsuo Okauchi, Shigeori Takenaka. Thermodynamics and kinetic studies in the binding interaction of cyclic naphthalene diimide derivatives with double stranded DNAs. Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry 2015, 23 (15) , 4769-4776. DOI: 10.1016/j.bmc.2015.05.046.
  8. Christophe Penno, Virag Sharma, Arthur Coakley, Mary O’Connell Motherway, Douwe van Sinderen, Lucyna Lubkowska, Maria L. Kireeva, Mikhail Kashlev, Pavel V. Baranov, John F. Atkins. Productive mRNA stem loop-mediated transcriptional slippage: Crucial features in common with intrinsic terminators. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2015, 112 (16) , E1984-E1993. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1418384112.

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