Molecular Dynamics Study of the Interaction of Carbon Nanotubes with Telomeric DNA Fragment Containing Noncanonical G-Quadruplex and i-Motif Forms
T Panczyk and P Wojton and P Wolski, INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES, 21, 1925 (2020).
DOI: 10.3390/ijms21061925
This work deals with molecular dynamics simulations of systems composed of telomeric dsDNA fragments, iG, and functionalized carbon nanotubes, fCNT. The iG contains 90 nucleotides in total and in its middle part the noncanonical i-motif and G-quadruplex are formed. Two chiralities of the fCNT were used, i.e., (10,0) and (20,0) and these nanotubes were either on-tip functionalized by guanine containing functional groups or left without functionalization. We proposed a dedicated computational procedure, based on the replica exchange concept, for finding a thermodynamically optimal conformation of iG and fCNT without destroying the very fragile noncanonical parts of the iG. We found that iG forms a V-shape spatial structure with the noncanonical fragments located at the edge and the remaining dsDNA strands forming the arms of V letter. The optimal configuration of iG in reference to fCNT strongly depends on the on-tip functionalization of the fCNT. The carbon nanotube without functionalization moves freely between the dsDNA arms, while the presence of guanine residues leads to immobilization of the fCNT and preferential location of the nanotube tip near the junction between the dsDNA duplex and i-motif and G-quadruplex. We also studied how the presence of fCNT affects the stability of the i-motif at the neutral pH when the cytosine pairs are nonprotonated. We concluded that carbon nanotubes do not improve the stability of the spatial structure of i-motif also when it is a part of a bigger structure like the iG. Such an effect was described in literature in reference to carboxylated nanotubes. Our current results suggest that the stabilization of i-motif is most probably related to easy formation of semiprotonated cytosine pairs at neutral pH due to interaction with carboxylated carbon nanotubes.
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