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Papers In Press, published online ahead of print May 23, 2002
J. Biol. Chem, 10.1074/jbc.M202989200
Submitted on March 27, 2002
Revised on May 7, 2002
Accepted on May 23, 2002

The influence of the thymine C5-methyl group on spontaneous base pair breathing in DNA

Sebastian Wärmländer, Judit E. Sponer, Jiri Sponer, and Mikael Leijon

Dept. of Biochemistry & Biophysics, Arrhenuis Laboratories, Stockholm SE-106 91

Corresponding Author: leijon{at}dbb.su.se

Sequences of four or more AT base pairs without a 5´-TA-3´ step, so-called A-tracts, influence the global properties of DNA by causing curvature of the helix axis if phased with the helical repeat and also influence nucleosome packaging. Hence it is interesting to understand this phenomenon on the molecular level and numerous studies have been devoted to investigations of dynamical and structural features of A-tract DNA. It was early observed that anomalously slow base pair opening kinetics were a striking physical property unique to DNA A-tracts (Leroy et al. Biochemistry (1988), 27, 8894-8898). Furthermore, a strong correlation between DNA curvature and anomalously slow base pair opening dynamics was found. In the present work it is shown, using imino proton exchange measurements by NMR spectroscopy that the main contribution to the dampening of the base pair opening fluctuations in A-tracts comes from the C5-methylation of the thymine base. Since the methyl group has been shown to have a very limited effect on the DNA curvature as well as the structure of the DNA helix, the thymine C5-methyl group stabilizes the helix directly. Empirical potential energy calculations show that methylation of the tract improves the stacking energy of a base pair with its neighbors in the tract by 3-4 kcal/mol.


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