The results of the Monte Carlo Metropolis simulation of water structure and of the hydration of nucleic acid fragments, complementary base pairs and mispairs, base pair stacks, and duplex fragments have been summarized. Systematic investigations suggest some general conclusions: (1) the hydration shell structure of the major and minor grooves of the duplex depends significantly on DNA conformation (or stack configuration) and nucleotide sequence, while global hydration characteristics (average energy, the number of water-water and water-base H-bonds) are only slightly dependent on these factors, (2) hydration economy takes place in the B-A transition due to an increase of the number of water molecules forming hydrogen bonds with two or more atoms of bases (water bridging), and (3) the hydration of the duplex could contribute to nucleic acid functioning via water-bridged mispair formation and stabilization of specific conformations.
The hydration shell of several conformations of the polynucleotides poly(dA).poly(dT), poly(dA).poly(dU), and poly(dA-dI).poly(dT-dC) has been simulated using the Monte Carlo method (Metropolis sampling). Calculations have shown that the structure of the hydration shell of the minor groove greatly depends on its width. In conformations with a narrowed minor groove, the first layer of the hydration shell of this groove has only one molecule per nucleotide pair that forms H bonds with purine N3 of one pair and pyrimidine O2 of the next pair. The second layer of the hydration shell of such conformations contains molecules that form H bonds between two adjacent molecules of the first layer. The probability of formation of hydration spine is about 20% while the bridges of the first layer are formed with a probability of about 70%. In the first layer of the minor groove of the B-DNA conformation with wide minor groove there are approximately two water molecules per base pair that form H bonds with purine N3 or pyrimidine O2 and with the sugar ring oxygen of the adjacent nucleotide. The probability of simultaneous H bonding of a water molecule with N3 (or O2) and O of sugar ring is about 30%. The results of simulation suggest that hydration spine proposed for the narrowed minor groove of oligonucleotide crystals [H. R. Drew, and R. E. Dickerson (1981) Journal of Molecular Biology, Vol. 151, pp. 535-556] can be formed in fibers of poly(dA).poly(dT), poly(dA).poly(dU), and poly(dA-dI).poly(dT-dC) as well as in DNA fragments of these sequences in solution.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Hydration properties of individual nucleic acid bases were calculated and compared with the available experimental data. Three sets of classical potential functions (PF) used in simulations of nucleic acid hydration were juxtaposed: (i) the PF developed by Poltev and Malenkov (PM), (ii) the PF of Weiner and Kollman (WK), which together with Jorgensen's TIP3P water model are widely used in the AMBER program, and (iii) OPLS (optimized potentials for liquid simulations) developed by Jorgensen (J). The global minima of interaction energy of single water molecules with all the natural nucleic acid bases correspond to the formation of two water-base hydrogen bonds (water bridging of two hydrophilic atoms of the base). The energy values of these minima calculated via PM potentials are in somewhat better conformity with mass-spectrometric data than the values calculated via WK PF. OPLS gave much weaker water-base interactions for all compounds considered, thus these PF were not used in further computations. Monte Carlo simulations of the hydration of 9-methyladenine, 1-methyluracil and 1-methylthymine were performed in systems with 400 water molecules and periodic boundary conditions. Results of simulations with PM potentials give better agreement with experimental data on hydration energies than WK PF. Computations with PM PF of the hydration energy of keto and enol tautomers of 9-methylguanine can account for the shift in the tautomeric equilibrium of guanine in aqueous media to a dominance of the keto form in spite of nearly equal intrinsic stability of keto and enol tautomers. The results of guanine hydration computations are discussed in relation to mechanisms of base mispairing errors in nucleic acid biosynthesis. The data presented in this paper along with previous results on simulation of hydration shell structures in DNA duplex grooves provide ample evidence for the advantages of PM PF in studies of nucleic-acid hydration.
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