Triple-helix formation by an oligonucleotide containing one (dA)12 and two (dT)12 sequences bridged by two hexaethylene glycol chains

Abstract
The triple-helix formation by the oligonucleotide (dA)12-x-(dT)12-x-(dT)12, where x is a hexaethylene glycol group, was investigated by thermal denaturation analysis and circular dichroism spectroscopy. Thermal denaturation analysis showed that this single-stranded oligonucleotide is able to fold back on itself twice to give a triple helix at low temperature. Upon an increase in the temperature, two cooperative transitions were observed: formation of a double-stranded structure with a dangling x-(dT)12 extremity, then formation of a single-stranded coil structure. Due to the intramolecular character of the transition, the triplex is much more stable than that formed by the reference mixture (dA)12 + 2(dT)12. In 0.1 M NaCl, the triplex-to-coil transition occurred at about 30 degrees C whereas the duplex-to-coil was at about 60 degrees C. Upon an increase in the salt, the increase of temperature corresponding to the triplex-to-duplex transition was larger than that of the duplex-to-coil transition. MgCl2 showed higher efficiency than NaCl to promote triplex or duplex formation. The thermodynamic parameters delta H and delta S were determined at various ionic strengths for both transitions. Both the enthalpy change and entropy change associated with triplex-to-duplex transition (Hoogsteen base pairing) were smaller than those associated to the duplex-to-coil transition (Watson-Crick base pairing). When the ionic strength increased, the parameters -delta H and -delta S showed a very small decrease for the duplex-to-coil transition whereas a strong increase was observed with the triplex-to-duplex transition.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)