Volume 105, Issue 2 p. 65-82
Article

RNA approaches the B-form in stacked single strand dinucleotide contexts

Ada Sedova

Ada Sedova

Department of Biomedical Sciences, School of Public Health, State University of New York, Albany, NY

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Nilesh K. Banavali

Corresponding Author

Nilesh K. Banavali

Department of Biomedical Sciences, School of Public Health, State University of New York, Albany, NY

New York State Department of Health, Division of Genetics, Laboratory of Computational and Structural Biology, Wadsworth Center, NY

Correspondence to: Nilesh K. Banavali; e-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
First published: 07 October 2015
Citations: 6

This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The “Published Online” date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of any preprints from the past two calendar years by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at [email protected].

ABSTRACT

Duplex RNA adopts an A-form structure, while duplex DNA interconverts between the A- and B-forms depending on the environment. The C2′-endo sugar pucker seen in B-form DNA can occur infrequently in ribose sugars as well, but RNA is not understood to assume B-form conformations. Through analysis of over 45,000 stacked single strand dinucleotide (SSD) crystal structure conformations, this study demonstrates that RNA is capable of adopting a wide conformational range between the canonical A- and B-forms at the localized SSD level, including many B-form-like conformations. It does so through C2′-endo ribose conformations in one or both nucleotides, and B-form-like neighboring base stacking patterns. As chemical reactions on nucleic acids involve localized changes in chemical bonds, the understanding of how enzymes distinguish between DNA and RNA nucleotides is altered by the energetic accessibility of these rare B-form-like RNA SSD conformations. The existence of these conformations also has direct implications in parametrization of molecular mechanics energy functions used extensively to model nucleic acid behavior., 2016. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 105: 65–82, 2016

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