The conformational deformability of nucleic acids can influence their function and recognition by proteins. A class
of DNA binding proteins including the TATA box binding protein binds to the DNA minor groove, resulting in an opening of the
minor groove and DNA bending toward the major groove. Explicit solvent molecular dynamics simulations in combination with
the umbrella sampling approach have been performed to investigate the molecular mechanism of DNA minor groove
deformations and the indirect energetic contribution to protein binding. As a reaction coordinate, the distance between backbone
segments on opposite strands was used. The resulting deformed structures showed close agreement with experimental DNA
structures in complex with minor groove-binding proteins. The calculated free energy of minor groove deformation was ~4–6
kcal mol-1 in the case of a central TATATA sequence. A smaller equilibrium minor groove width and more restricted minor
groove mobility was found for the central AAATTT and also a significantly (~2 times) larger free energy change for opening the
minor groove. The helical parameter analysis of trajectories indicates that an easier partial unstacking of a central TA versus AT
basepair step is a likely reason for the larger groove flexibility of the central TATATA case.
Revised: April 7, 2011 |
Published: August 1, 2006
Citation
Zacharias M.W. 2006. "Minor Groove Deformability of DNA: A Molecular Dynamics Free Energy
Simulation Study." Biophysical Journal 91, no. 3:882-891. doi:10.1529/biophysj.106.083816