Calculation of hydrodynamic properties of small nucleic acids from their atomic structure

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Abstract

Hydrodynamic properties (translational diffusion, sedimentation coefficients and correlation times) of short B-DNA oligonucleotides are calculated from the atomic-level structure using a bead modeling procedure in which each non-hydrogen atom is represented by a bead. Using available experimental data of hydrodynamic properties for several oligonucleotides, the best fit for the hydrodynamic radius of the atoms is found to be ∼2.8 Å. Using this value, the predictions for the properties corresponding to translational motion and end-over-end rotation are accurate to within a few percent error. Analysis of NMR correlation times requires accounting for the internal flexibility of the double helix, and allows an estimation of ∼0.85 for the Lipari-Szabo generalized order parameter. Also, the degree of hydration can be determined from hydrodynamics, with a result of ∼0.3 g (water)/g (DNA). These numerical results are quite similar to those found for globular proteins. If the hydrodynamic model for the short DNA is simply a cylindrical rod, the predictions for overall translation and rotation are slightly worse, but the NMR correlation times and the degree of hydration, which depend more on the cross-sectional structure, are more severely affected.

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Fernandes, M. X., Ortega, A., López Martínez, M. C., & García de la Torre, J. (2002). Calculation of hydrodynamic properties of small nucleic acids from their atomic structure. Nucleic Acids Research, 30(8), 1782–1788. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/30.8.1782

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