158d
From Proteopedia
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CRYSTALLOGRAPHIC ANALYSIS OF C-C-A-A-G-C-T-T-G-G AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR BENDING IN B-DNA
Overview
Stacked B-DNA double helices of sequence C-C-A-A-G-C-T-T-G-G exhibit the, same 23 degrees bend at -T-G-G C-C-A- across the nonbonded junction, between helices that is observed in the middle of the decamer helix of, sequence C-A-T-G-G-C-C-A-T-G, even though the space group (hexagonal vs, orthorhombic), crystal packing, and connectedness at the center of the, bent segment are quite different. An identical bend occurs across the, interhelix junction of every monoclinic crystal structure of sequence, C-C-A-x-x-x-x-T-G-G, suggesting that T-G-G-C-C-A constitutes a natural, bending element in B-DNA. The bend occurs by rolling stacked base pairs, about their long axes; there is no "tilt" component. Of the three possible, models for A-tract bending--bent-A-tract, junction bends, or, bent-non-A--which cannot be distinguished by solution measurements, all, crystallographic evidence over the past 10 years unanimously supports the, non-A regions as the actual bending loci.
About this Structure
158D is a Protein complex structure of sequences from [1] with CA as ligand. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.
Reference
Crystallographic analysis of C-C-A-A-G-C-T-T-G-G and its implications for bending in B-DNA., Grzeskowiak K, Goodsell DS, Kaczor-Grzeskowiak M, Cascio D, Dickerson RE, Biochemistry. 1993 Aug 31;32(34):8923-31. PMID:8364037
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