282d

From Proteopedia

Revision as of 22:45, 30 March 2008 by OCA (Talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search


PDB ID 282d

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate
, resolution 2.400Å
Ligands: , ,
Resources: FirstGlance, OCA, PDBsum, RCSB
Coordinates: save as pdb, mmCIF, xml



A CONTINOUS TRANSITION FROM A-DNA TO B-DNA IN THE 1:1 COMPLEX BETWEEN NOGALAMYCIN AND THE HEXAMER DCCCGGG


Overview

The antibiotic nogalamycin, a drug with high specificity for TG and CG steps in double-stranded DNA, has been crystallized as a 1:1 complex with the hexamer d(CCCGGG). The antibiotic is inserted at the central CG step of the duplex, with the two sugars oriented in the same direction and with strong interactions with the DNA within the grooves. The amino-glucose residue makes an integral part of a well defined major groove hydration network with van der Waals contacts and several strong hydrogen bonds to the duplex. The nogalose residue resides in the minor groove, making primarily van der Waals contacts. The single site allows an accurate molecular description of the intercalation, without perturbations from end effects observed previously. The local unwinding induced by nogalamycin is completely relaxed 2 base pairs away from the intercalation site. The two strands of the DNA show a continuous deformation from the A to the B form: 1) the cytosines toward the 5' end of the nogalomycin site in each strand have c3'-endo conformations while 5 guanosines toward the 3' ends have c2'-endo conformations; 2) within each strand, the phosphate-phosphate distances increase in a continuous manner from 5.7 A (A-form) to 7.1 A (B-form).

About this Structure

282D is a Protein complex structure of sequences from [1]. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.

Reference

A continuous transition from A-DNA to B-DNA in the 1:1 complex between nogalamycin and the hexamer dCCCGGG., Cruse WB, Saludjian P, Leroux Y, Leger G, Manouni DE, Prange T, J Biol Chem. 1996 Jun 28;271(26):15558-67. PMID:8662899

Page seeded by OCA on Mon Mar 31 01:45:49 2008

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

OCA

Personal tools