A series of pentaribonucleotides, ApGpXpGpU (where X identical to A, G, C, or U), was synthesized to investigate the effects of flanking G . C pairs on internal Watson-Crick, G . U, and nonbonded base pairs. Sequences ApGpApCpU (Tm = 26 degrees C) and ApGpCpCpU (Tm = 25 degrees C) were each found to form a duplex with non-base-paired internal residues that stacked with the rest of the sequence but were not looped out. ApGpGpCpU also forms a duplex (Tm = 30 degrees C) but with dangling terminal nonbonded adenosines rather than internal nonbonded guanosines. ApGpUpCpU prefers a stacked single-strand conformation. In addition, contribution to duplex stability from an internal A . U or G . C base pair is enhanced by 6 degrees C when flanked by G . C base pairs as compared to A . U base pairs. G . C base pairs flanking an internal G . U base pair were found to be more tolerant to the altered conformation of a G . U pair and result in an increase to stability comparable with that found for an internal A . U base pair.
A set of empirical parameters which allows the prediction of the proton NMR chemical shifts at 70 C of non-exchangeable heterobase and anomeric protons in oligoribonucleotides has been constructed. The set is based on the highly flexible nature of oligoribonucleotide single strands and the wide range of conformational states which can be populated at relatively high temperatures (70 C or greater). A pairwise subtractive procedure, using 129 ribonucleotide oligomers (all 16 dimers, all 64 trimers, 37 tetramers, and 12 pentamers), shows that significant contributions to the observed chemical shift of protons in a given nucleoside residue are made by first, second, and third neighbors on the 3' and the 5' sides. The majority of the neighbors cause shielding effects with the exception of some first neighbors on the 5' side of a given residue. The magnitude of the shielding effects is greatest for the purine heterobases and follows the order A greater than G greater than C greater than U, with first neighbors on the 3'side showing more pronounced effects than second neighbors and these in turn showing larger effects than third neighbors. Second neighbors on the 5' side showed consistently greater shieldings than first neighbors, a result attributed to the deshielding effects of the first 5' neighbor phosphate group. The parameter Tables are applied to the prediction of proton chemical shifts in one heptamer, four hexamers, and two pentamers and give average absolute differences between predicted and observed shifts less than 0.030 ppm. The parameter approach represents an excellent method of generating initial assignments of proton chemical shifts for any single strand oligoribonucleotide.
The proton nmr spectra of the oligoribonucleotides in the series CpXpG, ApXpG, CpApXpUpG, and ApGpXpC (X = A, G, C, and U), together with the reference compounds CpG, ApG, CpApUpG, and ApGpC, have been measured. A complete analysis of all the nonexchangeable base protons and the ribose H‐1′ protons was made. The insertion of a nucleotide X into a oligoribonucleotide led to shift changes at both nearest‐neighbor and next‐nearest‐neighbor positions, which were rationalized in terms of the shielding abilities of the various bases. The derived shielding trends in the ApGpXpC series of compounds were successfully used to predict the chemical shifts of resonances in the related ApGpXpCpU series.
A set of parameters, devised for the prediction of 1H NMR chemical shifts of heterobase and anomeric protons in the high temperature (greater than 70 degrees C) spectra of RNA oligomers has been found to be applicable to the corresponding DNA oligomers. Fifteen examples of DNA oligomers that have had high temperature spectra recorded and assigned show a mean absolute difference between predicted and assigned shifts of 0.045 ppm. The parameters for uridine H-5 are applied to the calculation of thymidine methyl group shifts and give excellent agreement with experimental assigned shifts. The RNA parameter set is a practical means of assigning heterobase and anomeric protons in DNA oligomers. A programme using the RNA parameter set has been written which enables the sequence of short DNA oligomers to be predicted from their 1H NMR spectra.
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