TY - JOUR
T1 - Unusual DNA conformations
T2 - Implications for telomeres
AU - Mills, Martin
AU - Lacroix, Laurent
AU - Arimondo, Paola B.
AU - Leroy, Jean Louis
AU - François, Jean Christophe
AU - Klump, Horst
AU - Mergny, Jean Louis
PY - 2002/8/23
Y1 - 2002/8/23
N2 - DNA is prone to structural polymorphism: its three-dimensional structure can differ markedly from the classical double helix. Nucleic acid structures composed of more than two strands have also been observed. The guanine-rich sequence of both the telomere and centromere can form a quadruplex based on G-quartets while the complementary cylosine-rich strand can fold into an intercalated tetramer called the i-motif. The G-quartet is a gold mine for structural biologists and the telomere has become a target for anti-cancer drug design since it was observed that deregulation of telomerase favors proliferation of certain tumors. Other DNA sequences may adopt unusual confor-mations. Polypurine-polypyrimidine sequences capable of forming a triple-stranded structure called H-DNA are found abundantly in the eukaryotic genome and may play a significant role in DNA metabolism, transcription and replication. Triplex-forming oligonucleotides are currently being developed as "anti-gene" agents. Unusual DNA structures may therefore be implicated in fundamental processes such as gene expression and represent unique targets for both structural-specific and sequence-specific agents. In this review, we present work characterizing some of these unusual conformations in terms of structure, stability and formation kinetics and discuss their biological implications.
AB - DNA is prone to structural polymorphism: its three-dimensional structure can differ markedly from the classical double helix. Nucleic acid structures composed of more than two strands have also been observed. The guanine-rich sequence of both the telomere and centromere can form a quadruplex based on G-quartets while the complementary cylosine-rich strand can fold into an intercalated tetramer called the i-motif. The G-quartet is a gold mine for structural biologists and the telomere has become a target for anti-cancer drug design since it was observed that deregulation of telomerase favors proliferation of certain tumors. Other DNA sequences may adopt unusual confor-mations. Polypurine-polypyrimidine sequences capable of forming a triple-stranded structure called H-DNA are found abundantly in the eukaryotic genome and may play a significant role in DNA metabolism, transcription and replication. Triplex-forming oligonucleotides are currently being developed as "anti-gene" agents. Unusual DNA structures may therefore be implicated in fundamental processes such as gene expression and represent unique targets for both structural-specific and sequence-specific agents. In this review, we present work characterizing some of these unusual conformations in terms of structure, stability and formation kinetics and discuss their biological implications.
U2 - 10.2174/1568011023353877
DO - 10.2174/1568011023353877
M3 - Review article
C2 - 12678729
AN - SCOPUS:0036336390
SN - 1568-0118
VL - 2
SP - 627
EP - 644
JO - Current Medicinal Chemistry - Anti-Cancer Agents
JF - Current Medicinal Chemistry - Anti-Cancer Agents
IS - 5
ER -