MODELING NUCLEIC ACID SYSTEMS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

MODELING NUCLEIC ACID SYSTEMS

Description:

DIHEDRAL ANGLES. All four PNA strands sample three regions, but with varying intensity ... DIHEDRAL ANGLES-DNA. In terms of the strands are similarly flexible. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:43
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: jennd5
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: MODELING NUCLEIC ACID SYSTEMS


1
MODELING NUCLEIC ACID SYSTEMS
  • Jenn Demers and Dany Floisand
  • Advisor Dr. Tricia Shepherd

2
WHY MODEL NUCLEIC ACIDS?
  • Experimental procedures are insufficient for
    understanding nucleic acids, but combined with
    molecular dynamics (MD) simulations the
    possibilities are endless

A. SEN P. NIELSEN, BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2006,
90, 1329-1337
Although our results so far do not allow us to
identify the origin of the different stabilities
of PNA?DNA Hybrids, the evidence does point to a
significant structural component
Can our MD simulations provide helpful insight?
3
NUCLEIC ACIDS REVIEW
4
NUCLEIC ACIDS REVIEW
5

NUCLEIC ACIDS REVIEW
6
  • RNA-PNA
  • PNA-DNA

7
  • AMBER 9.1
  • Other Programs
  • Prepare System
  • Construct Nucleic Acid
  • Equilibrate System
  • Minimize
  • Heat
  • Production Run
  • Dynamics
  • XLeap
  • Bonds/Charges
  • Adding Hydrogen Atoms
  • VMD
  • Visualizing Trajectories
  • Curves
  • Structural Analysis

8
  • Construct 8-mer Nucleic Acid duplexes
  • Systematically change PNA from 100 Pyrimidine to
    100 Purine
  • Neutralize PNA backbone

9
  • Adding Ions
  • Adding Water
  • Sodium Ions added to system to neutralize DNAs
    backbone.
  • Approximately 3500 water molecules added to each
    system.

10
  • Vary input parameters to change minimization
    preferences
  • Minimization
  • 0-off, 1-on
  • Minimization steps
  • Steps at steepest descent
  • Periodic boundary
  • 0-off, 1-Volume, 2-Pressure
  • Restraints on atoms
  • 0-off, 1-on
  • Non-bonded cutoff in Angstroms

11
  • Heat from 0 K to 300 K
  • DNA is restrained weakly during heating
  • Langevin dynamics are used to control temperature
    (ntt3)
  • gamma_ln1.0 collisions per ps-1
  • Average Kinetic Energy of the system is
    calculated at each time step

12
  • Minimization
  • 0-off
  • Constant pressure
  • pres01.0
  • Constant Temperature
  • tempi300.0, temp0300.0
  • Langevin dynamics to keep average kinetic energy
    constant

13
  • Number of MD steps
  • ntslim50000
  • dt0.002 ps per step
  • Data recorded to output files
  • Energy
  • ntpr250 steps
  • Trajectory
  • ntwx250 steps
  • Restart file
  • ntwr10000 steps

14
  • Production runs are completed on Supercomputer -
    Jake
  • Jake consists of
  • 220 Processors
  • 128 Gb RAM
  • 4 Tb Storage
  • 50,000 x 0.002 100
  • 50,000 steps
  • 0.002 ps per step
  • 100 ps per output file

1 ns of MD 8 days on a single processor
15
  • Construct
  • Minimize
  • Heat
  • Production

16
  • Stability varies depending on the location of
    the purine bases
  • Six hybrid duplexes of varying purine content
    were studied alongside their pure counterparts
  • Purine-rich PNA hybrid has a larger negative
    entropy term (entropically disfavored) than
    pyrimidine-rich PNA hybrid. However
  • Purine-rich PNA hybrid has a much larger
    negative enthalpy term (enthalpy favored) than
    pyrimidine-rich PNA hybrid.

The purine-rich strand is always listed first.
Greatest Thermal Stability
Least Thermal Stability
17
  • A-conformations sample North sugar puckering
  • B-conformations sample South sugar puckering

18
  • 100 DNA Purine samples a wider range of sugar
    pucker conformations
  • 25 and 0 DNA Purine sample a smaller array of
    pucker angles

100 DNA Purine strand is more flexible. How does
this affect the entropy?
19
  • DNA Backone
  • PNA Backbone

20
(No Transcript)
21
  • All four PNA strands sample three regions, but
    with varying intensity
  • No clear distinction on levels of flexibility

All four strands have similar ranges. How can we
know anything about stability and entropy?
22
  • 100 and 0 PNA Purine strands only sample two
    regions
  • 37.5 and 75 PNA Purine sample three regions

All our PNA strands have comparable flexibility.
Can we differentiate entropy values for each
strand?
23
  • 100 and 37.5 PNA Purine sample three regions
  • 75 and 0 PNA Purine sample only two regions

We can see no clear trend between of purine,
and PNA strand flexibility. Can DNA strands tell
us more?
24
  • 100 and 62.5 DNA Purine strands sample two
    distinct angle ranges
  • 25 and 0 DNA Purine strands sample a narrow
    range of angles

100 and 62.5 DNA Purine strands are more
flexible. Which has a larger entropy?
25
  • 100 and 62.5 DNA Purine strands sample a
    slightly larger range of angles than 25 and 0
    DNA Purine strands

In terms of ßthe strands are similarly
flexible. How will this affect the systems
entropy?
26
  • 100 and 62.5 DNA Purine sample a wider array
    of angles.
  • 25 and 0 sample nearly identical angles.

100 and 62.5 DNA Purine strands show a larger
variety. Can this change the systems entropy?
27
  • 100 and 62.5 DNA Purine sample a slightly
    higher range of angles than the 25 and 0 DNA
    Purine strands.

100 and 62.5 DNA Purine strands show a shift in
range. Does this increase their entropy?
28
  • 100 and 62.5 DNA Purine sample two ranges of
    angles
  • 25 and 0 DNA Purine sample a matching range of
    angles

100 and 62.5 DNA Purine strands sample more
angles. Does more angles to sample lead to more
stability?
29
  • 100 and 62.5 DNA Purine sample a wider range
    of angles
  • 25 and 0 DNA Purine sample a smaller similar
    range of angles

100 and 62.5 DNA Purine strands take on more
conformations. Is one conformation more stable
than another?
30
  • 100 and 62.5 DNA Purine strands consistently
    sample wide ranges and multiple regions
  • These hybrids however, lead to less stable helix
    conformations
  • Flexibility in the DNA backbone does not lead to
    stable helices
  • 25 and 0 DNA Purine strands often lead to a
    more narrow conformational sampling better
    binding
  • Purine-rich PNA hybrids lead to the most stable
    helix conformations

Our MD simulations indicate the key structural
factor may be due to the flexibility of the DNA
backbone
The purine-rich strand is listed first, unless
otherwise specified.
Greatest Stability
Least Stability
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com