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Abstract
G‐quadruplexes have attracted growing interest in recent years due to their occurrence in vivo and their possible biological functions. In addition to being promising targets for drug design, these four‐stranded nucleic acid structures have also been recognized as versatile tools for various technological applications. Whereas a large number of studies have yielded insight into their remarkable structural diversity, our current knowledge on G‐quadruplex stabilities as a function of sequence and environmental factors only gradually emerges with an expanding collection of thermodynamic data. This minireview provides an overview of general rules that may be used to better evaluate quadruplex thermodynamic stabilities but also discusses present challenges in predicting most stable folds for a given sequence and environment.
Abstract
Methylation of free hydroxyl groups is an important modification for flavonoids. It not only greatly increases absorption and oral bioavailability of flavonoids, but also brings new biological activities. Flavonoid methylation is usually achieved by a specific group of plant O‐methyltransferases (OMTs) which typically exhibit high substrate specificity. Here we investigated the effect of several residues in the binding pocket of the Clarkia breweri isoeugenol OMT on the substrate scope and regioselectivity against flavonoids. The mutation T133M, identified as reported in our previous publication, increased the activity of the enzyme against several flavonoids, namely eriodictyol, naringenin, luteolin, quercetin and even the isoflavonoid genistein, while a reduced set of amino acids at positions 322 and 326 affected both, the activity and the regioselectivity of the methyltranferase. On the basis of this work, methylated flavonoids that are rare in nature were produced in high purity.
Abstract
A DNA G‐quadruplex adopting a (3+1) hybrid structure was modified in two adjacent syn positions of the antiparallel strand with anti‐favoring 2′‐deoxy‐2′‐fluoro‐riboguanosine (FrG) analogues. The two substitutions promoted a structural rearrangement to a topology with the 5′‐terminal G residue located in the central tetrad and the two modified residues linked by a V‐shaped zero‐nucleotide loop. Strikingly, whereas a sugar pucker in the preferred north domain is found for both modified nucleotides, the FrG analogue preceding the V‐loop is forced to adopt the unfavored syn conformation in the new quadruplex fold. Apparently, a preferred C3′‐endo sugar pucker within the V‐loop architecture outweighs the propensity of the FrG analogue to adopt an anti glycosidic conformation. Refolding into a V‐loop topology is likewise observed for a sequence modified at corresponding positions with two riboguanosine substitutions. In contrast, 2′‐F‐arabinoguanosine analogues with their favored south‐east sugar conformation do not support formation of the V‐loop topology. Examination of known G‐quadruplexes with a V‐shaped loop highlights the critical role of the sugar conformation for this distinct structural motif.