scholarly journals Structure and Behaviour of Proteins, Nucleic Acids and Viruses from Vibrational Raman Optical Activity

2003 ◽  
Vol 17 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 101-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurence D. Barron ◽  
Ewan W. Blanch ◽  
Iain H. McColl ◽  
Christoper D. Syme ◽  
Lutz Hecht ◽  
...  

On account of its sensitivity to chirality Raman optical activity (ROA), which may be measured as a small difference in vibrational Raman scattering from chiral molecules in right- and left-circularly polarized incident light, is a powerful probe of structure and behaviour of biomolecules in aqueous solution. Protein ROA spectra provide information on the secondary and tertiary structure of the polypeptide backbone, hydration, side chain conformation and structural elements present in denatured states. Nucleic acid ROA spectra provide information on the sugar ring conformation, the base stacking arrangement and the mutual orientation of the sugar and base rings around the C–N glycosidic link. The ROA spectra of intact viruses provide information on the folds of the coat proteins and the nucleic acid structure. The large number of structure-sensitive bands in protein ROA spectra is especially favourable for fold determination using pattern recognition techniques. This article gives a brief account of the ROA technique and presents the ROA spectra of a selection of proteins, nucleic acids and viruses that illustrate the applications of ROA spectroscopy in biomolecular research.

1996 ◽  
Vol 50 (5) ◽  
pp. 619-629 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. D. Barron ◽  
L. Hecht ◽  
A. F. Bell ◽  
G. Wilson

Recent advances in Raman optical activity (ROA) instrumentation are outlined which have enhanced significantly the quality of vibrational ROA spectra of biopolymers in aqueous solution. Peptides, proteins, carbohydrates, glycoproteins, and nucleic acids now provide excellent ROA spectra which contain detailed information about solution structure. ROA spectra can be measured just as easily in D2O as in H2O solution, and, as illustrated for bovine serum albumin and concanavalin A, a comparison of the two can be highly informative. In addition to signatures of extended secondary structure, protein ROA spectra also contain signatures related to loops and turns which are valuable for studying tertiary structure and dynamics, exemplified here by a comparison of the ROA spectra of reduced lysozyme and unordered poly-L-lysine, by the ROA spectra of acid molten globule α-lactalbumin at different temperatures, which reveal a native-like tertiary fold, and by changes in the ROA spectrum of native lysozyme on binding to a saccharide inhibitor. Carbohydrate ROA spectra contain signatures of all the central features of their stereochemistry and, as shown by a comparison of laminaribiose with laminarin, can also probe extended secondary structure in polysaccharides. Results on a glycoprotein, orosomucoid, suggest that ROA can provide information about both the protein and the carbohydrate components. Preliminary results on nucleic acids are outlined with the ROA spectra of Poly(rA)·Poly(rU) and Poly(rI)·Poly(rC) shown as examples.


1904 ◽  
Vol 72 (477-486) ◽  
pp. 100-103 ◽  

We have lately shown the dextrorotatory character of the nucleo-proteids of the pancreas, thymus, and suprarenal gland. We have, in the course of our investigations, shown that the “nucleins” possess a stronger rotation than the “nucleoproteids” properly so called, and from which they are derived, and in the researches which we have planned, and which naturally are suggested by our previous work, the first step appeared to us to be to determine the optical activity of the nucleic acids corresponding to the nucleoproteids investigated by us. In the present paper we shall confine our attention to the optical activity of thymus-nucleic acid, prepared by the method of Kossel and Neumann. We adhered closely to the method recommended by these chemists, which furnishes with great ease a colourless product, yielding colourless and perfectly transparent solutions admirably adapted for polarimetric observations.


2001 ◽  
Vol 82 (6) ◽  
pp. 1499-1502 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ewan W. Blanch ◽  
David J. Robinson ◽  
Lutz Hecht ◽  
Laurence D. Barron

Vibrational Raman optical activity (ROA) spectra of tobacco rattle virus (TRV) and tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) were measured and compared with a view to obtaining new information about the coat protein subunit structure of TRV. A sharp strong positive band observed at ∼1344 cm−1 in the ROA spectra of the two viruses is evidence that both contain a significant amount of a hydrated form of α-helix, but more in TRV than in TMV. Although the ROA spectrum of TMV shows significant positive intensity in the range ∼1297–1312 cm−1 characteristic of α-helix in a hydrophobic environment, as expected from the helix interface residues in the four-helix bundles that constitute the basic motif of the TMV coat protein fold, that of TRV shows little positive ROA intensity here. Instead TRV shows a strong positive ROA band at ∼1315 cm−1, of much greater intensity than bands shown here by TMV, that is characteristic of polyproline II (PPII) helix. This suggests that the additional long central and C-terminal sequences of the TRV coat proteins contain a significant amount of PPII structure, plus perhaps some β-strand judging by a prominent sharp negative ROA band shown by TRV at ∼1236 cm−1, but little α-helix. The open flexible hydrated nature of PPII helical structure is consistent with the earlier suggestions that the additional sequences are exposed and, together with a larger amount of hydrated α-helix, could serve to fill the extra volume required by the larger diameter of the cylindrical TRV particles relative to those of TMV.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 3062-3062
Author(s):  
Anna Kalota ◽  
Lidia Karabon ◽  
Cezary S. Swider ◽  
Ekaterina Viazovkina ◽  
Mohamed Elzagheid ◽  
...  

Abstract The field of nucleic acid mediated gene silencing has been reinvigorated with the widespread adoption of RNA interference using siRNA. Since issues of delivery, stability, and duration of effect remain relevant to siRNA, and all other types of gene silencing nucleic acids, we are studying chemical modifications that may enhance the efficiency of molecules employed for this purpose. To this end, we synthesized 2′-deoxy-2′-fluoro-d-arabinonucleic acid (2′F-ANA) modifications of DNA as our prior work suggested that they would simultaneously raise the Tm of mRNA:DNA hybrids, increase resistance to nucleases, and very importantly, still permit RNaseH binding and catalysis of the target mRNA because the 2′F-ANA of the arabinose sugar ring projects, like DNA, into the major groove of the helix. Accordingly, we compared the gene silencing efficacy of 2′F-ANA modified oligonucleotides (ON) with traditional phosphorothioate (PS) antisense oligodeoxynucleotides (AS ODN) with respect to cellular delivery, intracellular stability, dose response, and duration of gene silencing in living myeloid leukemia cells. 2′F-ANA modification were made to form either “altimers” where triplets of nucleotides with F-ANA modified sugars alternated with triplets of nucleotides with deoxyribose sugars, or “gapmers” where 7, 2′fluorinated oligonucleotides flank 7 central unmodified nucleotides. The mRNA target for these comparative studies was a region within the c-myb mRNA that was previously shown by us to be accessible for hybridization in vivo (Nucleic Acids Res.32:5791, 2004). The nucleic acids were delivered by nucleofection into K562 cells. When analyzed at 24 hours, the PS ODN and 2′F-ANA ONs demonstrated an equivalent ability to silence c-myb mRNA and protein expression (>90% compared to untreated controls). Of significant interest however, the silencing effect of the 2′F-ANA ONs was still demonstrable 96 hours post nucleoporation whereas the PS ODN lost activity after 48 hours. Further, at doses where the traditional PS ODN had no silencing effect on c-myb mRNA or protein expression (1 μg/106 cells), the 2′F-ANA ON still gave >80% suppression of the target mRNA and protein. These effects were not dependent on delivery, which appeared to be equivalent for the two chemistries. Rather, when intracellular levels of delivered material were measured by semi-quantitative slot blotting, it was shown that intracellular levels of PS ODN declined rapidly after 24 hours, whereas ~90% of the 2′F-ANA introduced into the cells was still detectable 96 hours post nucleoporation. Whether this is due to relative inability to export the 2′F-ANA out of the cell, and or diminished intracellular degradation is being investigated. Although our primary results suggested that PS ODN are more rapidly degradated in cell lysate compared to 2′F-ANA ON. Therefore, our data suggest that 2′F-ANA AS ODN are efficient gene silencing molecules with advantages over PS ODN. These include significantly greater potency, and a duration of effect that is 3-4 times longer after a single dose. These findings suggest that appropriately targeted 2′F-ANA ON, in the form of single stranded antisense molecules, or siRNA, could well prove therapeutically useful for the treatment of cancer, and in other diseases where gene silencing is expected to beneficial.


2001 ◽  
Vol 123 (20) ◽  
pp. 4863-4864 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ewan W. Blanch ◽  
Lutz Hecht ◽  
Loren A. Day ◽  
Dennis M. Pederson ◽  
Laurence D. Barron

Author(s):  
Dimitrij Lang

The success of the protein monolayer technique for electron microscopy of individual DNA molecules is based on the prevention of aggregation and orientation of the molecules during drying on specimen grids. DNA adsorbs first to a surface-denatured, insoluble cytochrome c monolayer which is then transferred to grids, without major distortion, by touching. Fig. 1 shows three basic procedures which, modified or not, permit the study of various important properties of nucleic acids, either in concert with other methods or exclusively:1) Molecular weights relative to DNA standards as well as number distributions of molecular weights can be obtained from contour length measurements with a sample standard deviation between 1 and 4%.


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