- G-quadruplex
Nucleic acid sequences which are rich in
guanine are capable of forming four-stranded structures called G-quadruplexes (Also known as G-tetrads or G4-DNA). These consist of a square arrangement ofguanine s (a tetrad), stabilized by Hoogsteenhydrogen bond ing. They are further stabilized by the existence of amonovalent cation (especiallypotassium ) in the center of the tetrads. They can be formed ofDNA ,RNA , LNA and PNA, and may beintramolecular ,bimolecular ortetramolecular . Depending on the direction of the strands or parts of a strand that form the tetrads, structures may be described as parallel or antiparallel.Telomeric quadruplexes
Telomeric repeats in a variety of organisms have been shown to form these structures "in vitro", and they have also been shown to form "in vivo" in some cases. The
human telomeric repeat (which is the same for allvertebrate s) consists of many repeats of the sequence d(GGTTAG), and the quadruplexes formed by this structure have been well studied byNMR andX-ray crystal structure determination. The formation of these quadruplexes intelomere s has been shown to decrease the activity of theenzyme telomerase , which is responsible for maintaining length oftelomeres and is involved in around 85% of allcancer s. This is an active target of drug discovery.Non-telomeric quadruplexes
Recently, there has been increasing interest in quadruplexes in locations other than at the
telomere . This was given a large boost by the work by Hurley on the proto-oncogenec-myc [http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/99/18/11593] , which was shown to form a quadruplex in anuclease hypersensitive region critical for gene activity. Since then, many other genes have been shown to have G-quadruplexes in theirpromoter regions, including thechicken β-globingene , humanubiquitin -ligase RFP2 and the proto-oncogenesc-kit ,bcl-2 ,VEGF , H-ras and N-ras. This list is ever-increasing.Genome -wide surveys based on a quadruplex folding rule have been performed, which have identified 376,000 Putative Quadruplex Sequences (PQS) in thehuman genome , although not all of these probably form "in vivo". [http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/33/9/2908] A similar study has identified putative G-quadruplexes inprokaryotes [http://www.genome.org/cgi/content/short/16/5/644] .There are several possible models for how quadruplexes could control gene activity, either byupregulation ordownregulation . One model is shown below, with G-quadruplex formation in or near apromoter blocking transcription of the gene, and hence de-activating it. In another model, quadruplex formed at the non-coding DNA strand helps to maintain an open conformation of the coding DNA strand and enhance an expression of the respective gene.Ligands which bind quadruplexes
One way of inducing or stabilizing G-quadruplex formation, is to introduce a molecule which can bind to the G-quadruplex structure, and a number of ligands, both small molecules and
protein s, have been developed which can do so. This has become an increasingly large field of research.A number of naturally occurring proteins have been identified which selectively bind to G-quadruplexes. These include the
helicase s implicated in Bloom's and Werner's syndromes and theSaccharomyces cerevisiae protein RAP1. An artificially derived threezinc finger protein calledGq1 , which is specific for G-quadruplexes has also been developed, as have specific antibodies.Cationic porphyrins have been shown to bind intercalatively with G-quadruplexes, as well as the molecule
telomestatin .Quadruplex prediction techniques
Identifying and predicting sequences which have the capacity to form quadruplexes is an important tool in further understanding of their role. A rule for predicting the formation has been proposed, where sequences are predicted to fold based on the pattern d(G3+N1-7G3+N1-7G3+N1-7G3+), where N is any base (including
guanine ). This rule has been widely used in on-linealgorithm s.External links
Books
* [http://chemistry.rsc.org/Publishing/Books/0854043748.asp Quadruplex Nucleic Acids (ISBN 0854043748) Neidle & Balasubramanian (Eds.) 2006]
Quadruplex websites
* [http://www.quadruplex.org Quadruplex.org] - a website to serve the quadruplex community
* [http://www.quadruplex.org/?view=quadbase Quadbase] - downloadable data on predicted G-quadruplexes
* [http://tubic.tju.edu.cn/greglist/ Greglist] - a database listing potential G-quadruplex regulated genes
* [http://quadbase.igib.res.in: Database on Quadruplex information: QuadBase from IGIB]
* [http://bioinformatics.ramapo.edu/GRSDB2/ GRSDB] - a database of G-quadruplexes near RNA processing sites.
* [http://bioinformatics.ramapo.edu/GRS_UTRDB/ GRS_UTRdb] - a database of G-quadruplexes in the UTRs.
* [http://bioinformatics.ramapo.edu/GQRS/ G-quadruplex Resource Site]
=Research papers=
* [http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0300-9084(08)00047-3 In vivo veritas: Using yeast to probe the biological functions of G-quadruplexes. Johnson JE, Smith JS, Kozak ML, Johnson FB. Biochimie. 2008 Feb 21]
* [http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/33/9/2908 Prevalence of quadruplexes in the human genome, Huppert and Balasubramanian, NAR 2005 33(9) 2908-2916]
* [http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/33/9/2901 Highly prevalent putative quadruplex sequence motifs in human DNA, Todd, Johnston, and Neidle, NAR 2005 33(9) 2901-2907]
* [http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/34/19/5402 Quadruplex DNA: sequence, topology and structure, Burge, Parkinson, Hazel, Todd and Neidle, NAR 2006 34(19) 5402-5415]
* [http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/99/18/11593 Direct evidence for a G-quadruplex in a promoter region and its targeting with a small molecule to repress c-MYC transcription, Siddiqui-Jain "et al", PNAS 2002 99(18) 11593-8]
* [http://www.genome.org/cgi/content/short/16/5/644 Genome-wide prediction of G4 DNA as regulatory motifs: Role in Escherichia coli global regulation, Rawal P, Kummarasetti VB, Ravindran J, Kumar N, Halder K, Sharma R, Mukerji M, Das SK, Chowdhury S., Genome Res. 2006 16(5) 644-55]Tools to predict G-quadruplex motifs
* [http://www-shankar.ch.cam.ac.uk/quadparser.html Quadparser: Downloadable program for finding putative quadruplex-forming sequences]
* [http://bioinformatics.ramapo.edu/QGRS/ QGRS Mapper: a web-based application for predicting G-quadruplexes in nucleotide sequences and NCBI genes]
* [http://202.54.26.221/quadfinder/ Quadfinder: Tool for Prediction and Analysis of G Quadruplex Motifs in DNA/RNA Sequences from IGIB]
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