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. 2000 Feb 22;39(7):1693-701.
doi: 10.1021/bi992055n.

Optical spectroscopic study of the effects of a single deoxyribose substitution in a ribose backbone: implications in RNA-RNA interaction

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Optical spectroscopic study of the effects of a single deoxyribose substitution in a ribose backbone: implications in RNA-RNA interaction

M Lindqvist et al. Biochemistry. .

Abstract

The 2'-OH group in the ribose sugars of an RNA molecule plays an important role in guiding tertiary interactions that stabilize different RNA structural motifs. Deoxyribose, or 2'-OH by 2'-H, substitution in both the single-stranded and the duplex part of an RNA backbone has been routinely used to evaluate what role the 2'-OH plays in different tertiary interactions that guide an RNA-RNA contact. A deoxyribose substitution not only has the effect of removing a hydrogen bond donating group, but also introduces a sugar moiety with a preference for C2'-endo pucker in a backbone of predominantly C3'-endo sugars. This study evaluates the effects of a single deoxyribose substitution in both single-stranded and double-helical forms of RNA oligomers. A single-stranded, nonrepetitive 7-mer oligoribonucleotide (7-mer RNA) and four different variants having the same base sequence but with a single deoxyribose sugar at different positions in the strands have been studied by ultraviolet (UV) absorption, circular dichroism (CD), and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. Duplexes were formed by association with the complementary strand of the 7-mer RNA. The results show that both RNA and DNA single strands have preorganized conformations with spectral properties resembling those of A- and B-form helices, respectively, with RNA being more heterogeneous than its DNA counterpart. A single deoxyribose substitution perturbs the structure of the RNA backbone, with the effect being more pronounced in the single-stranded than in the duplex structure. The perturbation depends on the position of the 2'-H substitution in the strand.

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