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M(1)A and m(1)G disrupt A-RNA structure through the intrinsic instability of Hoogsteen base pairs.


ABSTRACT: The B-DNA double helix can dynamically accommodate G-C and A-T base pairs in either Watson-Crick or Hoogsteen configurations. Here, we show that G-C(+) (in which + indicates protonation) and A-U Hoogsteen base pairs are strongly disfavored in A-RNA. As a result,N(1)-methyladenosine and N(1)-methylguanosine, which occur in DNA as a form of alkylation damage and in RNA as post-transcriptional modifications, have dramatically different consequences. Whereas they create G-C(+) and A-T Hoogsteen base pairs in duplex DNA, thereby maintaining the structural integrity of the double helix, they block base-pairing and induce local duplex melting in RNA. These observations provide a mechanism for disrupting RNA structure through post-transcriptional modifications. The different propensities to form Hoogsteen base pairs in B-DNA and A-RNA may help cells meet the opposing requirements of maintaining genome stability, on the one hand, and of dynamically modulating the structure of the epitranscriptome, on the other.

SUBMITTER: Zhou H 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5016226 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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m(1)A and m(1)G disrupt A-RNA structure through the intrinsic instability of Hoogsteen base pairs.

Zhou Huiqing H   Kimsey Isaac J IJ   Nikolova Evgenia N EN   Sathyamoorthy Bharathwaj B   Grazioli Gianmarc G   McSally James J   Bai Tianyu T   Wunderlich Christoph H CH   Kreutz Christoph C   Andricioaei Ioan I   Al-Hashimi Hashim M HM  

Nature structural & molecular biology 20160801 9


The B-DNA double helix can dynamically accommodate G-C and A-T base pairs in either Watson-Crick or Hoogsteen configurations. Here, we show that G-C(+) (in which + indicates protonation) and A-U Hoogsteen base pairs are strongly disfavored in A-RNA. As a result,N(1)-methyladenosine and N(1)-methylguanosine, which occur in DNA as a form of alkylation damage and in RNA as post-transcriptional modifications, have dramatically different consequences. Whereas they create G-C(+) and A-T Hoogsteen base  ...[more]

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