Triple helix formation with Drosophila satellite repeats. Unexpected stabilization by copper ions. - Archive ouverte HAL Access content directly
Journal Articles Biochemistry Year : 2004

Triple helix formation with Drosophila satellite repeats. Unexpected stabilization by copper ions.

Abstract

The Drosophila melanogaster (AAGAGAG)(n) satellite repeat represents up to 1.5% of the entire fly genome and may adopt non-B DNA structures such as pyrimidine triple helices. UV melting and electrophoretic mobility shift assay experiments were used to monitor the stability of intermolecular triple helices as a function of size, pH, and backbone or base modification. Three to four repeats of the heptanucleotide motif were sufficient to allow the formation of a stable complex, especially when modified TFOs were used. Unexpectedly, low concentrations (40-100 microM) of Cu(2+) were found to favor strongly pyrimidine triplex formation under near-physiological conditions. In contrast, a much higher magnesium concentration was required to stabilize these triplexes significantly, suggesting that copper may be an essential stabilizing factor for pyrimidine triplexes.
Embargoed file
Embargoed file
Ne sera jamais visible
Loading...

Dates and versions

inserm-00335093 , version 1 (28-10-2008)

Identifiers

Cite

Virginie Horn, Laurent Lacroix, Thierry Gautier, Masashi Takasugi, Jean-Louis Mergny, et al.. Triple helix formation with Drosophila satellite repeats. Unexpected stabilization by copper ions.. Biochemistry, 2004, 43 (35), pp.11196-205. ⟨10.1021/bi049287t⟩. ⟨inserm-00335093⟩
100 View
1 Download

Altmetric

Share

Gmail Facebook Twitter LinkedIn More