Kolimi, Narendar and Rathinavelan, Thenmalarchelvi
(2018)
New structural insights into unusual nucleic acid conformations
in relevance to mechanisms and pathogeneses of
trinucleotide repeat expansion disorders.
PhD thesis, Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad.
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Abstract
Trinucleotide repeats belong to the family of microsatellites (a tract of 1 to 6 repetitive nucleotides)
that are commonly observed in eukaryotes and exhibit repeat length polymorphism. The inherent
ability of trinucleotide repeats to undergo abnormal expansion (viz., increase in repeat length) leads
to many incurable genetic disorders, the best known are, Huntington's disease (CAG repeat), fragile
X syndrome (CGG repeat), myotonic dystrophy 1 (CTG repeat), Friedreich’s ataxia (GAA repeat)
and spinocerebellar ataxias (CAG repeat) that are mainly neurodegenerative. Severity of these
disorders is proportional to the number of expanded repeats. Overexpansion of these repeats results
in the formation of unusual nucleic acid secondary structures such as hairpins, triplexes, tetraplexes
etc. Although many investigations have been carried out to understand the mechanism(s) behind
these disorders, the therapeutics of trinucleotide repeat expansion disorders are not well developed.
Thus, to facilitate the therapeutics of aforementioned neurological and neuromuscular disorders, the
impact of such an overexpansion on DNA & RNA conformations and the concomitant functional
implications have to be investigated.
We have carried out molecular dynamics simulations (MD), circular dichroism (CD) and
electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) to determine (i) the secondary structural characteristics
of DNA hairpin stems that contain CAG (A...A mismatch), GAC (A...A mismatch), CCG (C...C
mismatch) & CGG repeat sequences and (ii) the complex model of CAG repeats containing RNA
duplex with alternative pre-mRNA splicing regulator muscle blind like protein 1 (MBNL1). MD
results revealed that A...A mismatch containing CAG/GAC dictates local B- to Z-DNA
transformation irrespective of the starting glycosyl conformation, in sharp contrast to the canonical
DNA duplex. This result is further confirmed by CD studies. MD and CD studies further showed
that more than four C...C mismatches cannot be accommodated in a RNA duplex formed by CCG
repeat, instead, these favor i-motif structure. In contrast, CCG can form duplex structure at the
DNA level irrespective of the number of C...C mismatches. Strikingly, CGG repeats prefer to form
quadruplex structure both at DNA and RNA levels. The current investigation also explored the
binding mode of MBNL1 with RNA duplex that contain CAG repeats. Our study revealed for the
first time that MBNL1 binds to the minor groove of the RNA duplex. Thus, the conformational
preference for CNG (N=A/C/G) and GAC repeats presented here along with the minor groove
binding preference for MBNL1 with CAG repeats containing RNA duplex may facilitate the
understanding of trinucleotide repeat expansion mechanism(s) and pathogeneses as well as expedite
the drug discovery process to treat these diseases.
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