Jiri Sponer
Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
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Featured researches published by Jiri Sponer.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2010
Richard Lavery; Krystyna Zakrzewska; David L. Beveridge; Thomas C. Bishop; David A. Case; Thomas E. Cheatham; Surjit B. Dixit; B. Jayaram; Filip Lankaš; Charles A. Laughton; John H. Maddocks; Alexis Michon; Roman Osman; Modesto Orozco; Alberto Pérez; Tanya Singh; Nada Spackova; Jiri Sponer
It is well recognized that base sequence exerts a significant influence on the properties of DNA and plays a significant role in protein–DNA interactions vital for cellular processes. Understanding and predicting base sequence effects requires an extensive structural and dynamic dataset which is currently unavailable from experiment. A consortium of laboratories was consequently formed to obtain this information using molecular simulations. This article describes results providing information not only on all 10 unique base pair steps, but also on all possible nearest-neighbor effects on these steps. These results are derived from simulations of 50–100 ns on 39 different DNA oligomers in explicit solvent and using a physiological salt concentration. We demonstrate that the simulations are converged in terms of helical and backbone parameters. The results show that nearest-neighbor effects on base pair steps are very significant, implying that dinucleotide models are insufficient for predicting sequence-dependent behavior. Flanking base sequences can notably lead to base pair step parameters in dynamic equilibrium between two conformational sub-states. Although this study only provides limited data on next-nearest-neighbor effects, we suggest that such effects should be analyzed before attempting to predict the sequence-dependent behavior of DNA.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2014
Marco Pasi; John H. Maddocks; David L. Beveridge; Thomas C. Bishop; David A. Case; Thomas E. Cheatham; Pablo D. Dans; B. Jayaram; Filip Lankaš; Charles A. Laughton; Jonathan S. Mitchell; Roman Osman; Modesto Orozco; Alberto Pérez; Daiva Petkevičiūtė; Nada Spackova; Jiri Sponer; Krystyna Zakrzewska; Richard Lavery
We present the results of microsecond molecular dynamics simulations carried out by the ABC group of laboratories on a set of B-DNA oligomers containing the 136 distinct tetranucleotide base sequences. We demonstrate that the resulting trajectories have extensively sampled the conformational space accessible to B-DNA at room temperature. We confirm that base sequence effects depend strongly not only on the specific base pair step, but also on the specific base pairs that flank each step. Beyond sequence effects on average helical parameters and conformational fluctuations, we also identify tetranucleotide sequences that oscillate between several distinct conformational substates. By analyzing the conformation of the phosphodiester backbones, it is possible to understand for which sequences these substates will arise, and what impact they will have on specific helical parameters.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2011
R. V. Reshetnikov; Jiri Sponer; Olga I. Rassokhina; Alexei M. Kopylov; Philipp O. Tsvetkov; Alexander A. Makarov; Andrey V. Golovin
A combination of explicit solvent molecular dynamics simulation (30 simulations reaching 4 µs in total), hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics approach and isothermal titration calorimetry was used to investigate the atomistic picture of ion binding to 15-mer thrombin-binding quadruplex DNA (G-DNA) aptamer. Binding of ions to G-DNA is complex multiple pathway process, which is strongly affected by the type of the cation. The individual ion-binding events are substantially modulated by the connecting loops of the aptamer, which play several roles. They stabilize the molecule during time periods when the bound ions are not present, they modulate the route of the ion into the stem and they also stabilize the internal ions by closing the gates through which the ions enter the quadruplex. Using our extensive simulations, we for the first time observed full spontaneous exchange of internal cation between quadruplex molecule and bulk solvent at atomistic resolution. The simulation suggests that expulsion of the internally bound ion is correlated with initial binding of the incoming ion. The incoming ion then readily replaces the bound ion while minimizing any destabilization of the solute molecule during the exchange.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2013
Barira Islam; Miriam Sgobba; Charlie Laughton; Modesto Orozco; Jiri Sponer; Stephen Neidle; Shozeb Haider
The human telomeric DNA sequence with four repeats can fold into a parallel-stranded propeller-type topology. NMR structures solved under molecular crowding experiments correlate with the crystal structures found with crystal-packing interactions that are effectively equivalent to molecular crowding. This topology has been used for rationalization of ligand design and occurs experimentally in a number of complexes with a diversity of ligands, at least in the crystalline state. Although G-quartet stems have been well characterized, the interactions of the TTA loop with the G-quartets are much less defined. To better understand the conformational variability and structural dynamics of the propeller-type topology, we performed molecular dynamics simulations in explicit solvent up to 1.5 μs. The analysis provides a detailed atomistic account of the dynamic nature of the TTA loops highlighting their interactions with the G-quartets including formation of an A:A base pair, triad, pentad and hexad. The results present a threshold in quadruplex simulations, with regards to understanding the flexible nature of the sugar-phosphate backbone in formation of unusual architecture within the topology. Furthermore, this study stresses the importance of simulation time in sampling conformational space for this topology.
Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2010
R. V. Reshetnikov; Andrey V. Golovin; Spiridonova; A. M. Kopylov; Jiri Sponer
The thrombin-binding aptamer (15-TBA) is a 15-mer DNA oligonucleotide with sequence d(GGTTGGTGTGGTTGG). 15-TBA folds into a quadruplex DNA (G-DNA) structure with two planar G-quartets connected by three single-stranded loops. The arrangement of the 15-TBA-thrombin complex is unclear, particularly with respect to the precise 15-TBA residues that interact with the thrombin structure. Our present understanding suggests either the 15-TBA single stranded loops containing sequential thymidines (TT) or alternatively a single-stranded loop, containing a guanine flanked by 2 thymidines (TGT), physically associates with thrombin protein. In the present study, the explicit solvent molecular dynamics (MD) simulation method was utilized to further analyze the 15-TBA-thrombin three-dimensional structure. Functional annotation of the loop residues was made with long simulations in the parmbsc0 force field. In total, the elapsed time of simulations carried out in this study exceeds 12 microseconds, substantially surpassing previous G-DNA simulation reports. Our simulations suggest that the TGT-loop function is to stabilize the structure of the aptamer, while the TT-loops participate in direct binding to thrombin. The findings of the present report advance our understanding of the molecular structure of the 15-TBA-thrombin structure further enabling the construction of biosensors for aptamer bases and the development of anticoagulant agents.
Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2014
Konstantinos Gkionis; Holger Kruse; James Alexis Platts; Arnošt Mládek; Jaroslav Koča; Jiri Sponer
Molecular mechanical (MM) force fields are commonly employed for biomolecular simulations. Despite their success, the nonpolarizable nature of contemporary additive force fields limits their performance, especially in long simulations and when strong polarization effects are present. Guanine quadruplex D(R)NA molecules have been successfully studied by MM simulations in the past. However, the G-stems are stabilized by a chain of monovalent cations that create sizable polarization effects. Indeed, simulation studies revealed several problems that have been tentatively attributed to the lack of polarization. Here, we provide a detailed comparison between quantum chemical (QM) DFT-D3 and MM potential energy surfaces of ion binding to G-stems and assess differences that may affect MM simulations. We suggest that MM describes binding of a single ion to the G-stem rather well. However, polarization effects become very significant when a second ion is present. We suggest that the MM approximation substantially limits accuracy of description of energy and dynamics of multiple ions inside the G-stems and binding of ions at the stem-loop junctions. The difference between QM and MM descriptions is also explored using symmetry-adapted perturbation theory and quantum theory of atoms in molecules analyses, which reveal a delicate balance of electrostatic and induction effects.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Stephan A. Ohnmacht; Chiara Marchetti; Mekala Gunaratnam; Rachael J. Besser; Shozeb Haider; Gloria Di Vita; Helen Lowe; Maria Mellinas-Gomez; Seckou Diocou; Mathew Robson; Jiri Sponer; Barira Islam; R. Barbara Pedley; John A. Hartley; Stephen Neidle
We report here that a tetra-substituted naphthalene-diimide derivative (MM41) has significant in vivo anti-tumour activity against the MIA PaCa-2 pancreatic cancer xenograft model. IV administration with a twice-weekly 15 mg/kg dose produces ca 80% tumour growth decrease in a group of tumour-bearing animals. Two animals survived tumour-free after 279 days. High levels of MM41 are rapidly transported into cell nuclei and were found to accumulate in the tumour. MM41 is a quadruplex-interactive compound which binds strongly to the quadruplexes encoded in the promoter sequences of the BCL-2 and k-RAS genes, both of which are dis-regulated in many human pancreatic cancers. Levels of BCL-2 were reduced by ca 40% in tumours from MM41-treated animals relative to controls, consistent with BCL-2 being a target for MM41. Molecular modelling suggests that MM41 binds to a BCL-2 quadruplex in a manner resembling that previously observed in co-crystal structures with human telomeric quadruplexes. This supports the concept that MM41 (and by implication other quadruplex-targeting small molecules) can bind to quadruplex-forming promoter regions in a number of genes and down-regulate their transcription. We suggest that quadruplexes within those master genes that are up-regulated drivers for particular cancers, may be selective targets for compounds such as MM41.
Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2009
Claudio A. Morgado; Petr Jurečka; Daniel Svozil; Pavel Hobza; Jiri Sponer
We have carried out reference quantum-chemical calculations for about 100 geometries of the uracil dimer in stacked conformations. The calculations have been specifically aimed at geometries with unoptimized distances between the monomers including geometries with mutually tilted monomers. Such geometries are characterized by a delicate balance between local steric clashes and local unstacking and had until now not been investigated using reference quantum-mechanics (QM) methods. Nonparallel stacking geometries often occur in nucleic acids and are of decisive importance, for example, for local conformational variations in B-DNA. Errors in the short-range repulsion region would have a major impact on potential energy scans which were often used in the past to investigate local geometry variations in DNA. An incorrect description of such geometries may also partially affect molecular dynamics (MD) simulations in applications when quantitative accuracy is required. The reference QM calculations have been carried out using the MP2 method extrapolated to the complete basis-set limit and corrected for higher-order electron-correlation contributions using CCSD(T) calculations with a medium-sized basis set. These reference calculations have been used as benchmark data to test the performance of the DFT-D, SCS(MI)-MP2, and DFT-SAPT QM methods and of the AMBER molecular-mechanics (MM) force field. The QM methods show close to quantitative agreement with the reference data, albeit the DFT-D method tends to modestly exaggerate the repulsion of steric clashes. The force field in general also provides a good description of base stacking for the systems studied here. However, for geometries with close interatomic contacts and clashes, the repulsion effects are rather severely exaggerated. The discrepancy reported here should not affect the overall stability of MD simulations and qualitative applications of the force field. However, it may affect the description of subtle quantitative effects such as the local conformational variations in B-DNA. Preliminary calculations for two H-bonded uracil base pairs, including one with a C-H···O H-bond, indicate excellent performance of the tested QM methods for all intermonomer distances. The force field, on the other hand, is less satisfactory, especially in the repulsive regions.
Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2009
Ilyas Yildirim; Harry A. Stern; Jiri Sponer; Nada Spackova; Douglas H. Turner
Guanine-adenine (GA) base pairs play important roles in determining the structure, dynamics, and stability of RNA. In RNA internal loops, GA base pairs often occur in tandem arrangements and their structure is context and sequence dependent. Calculations reported here test the thermodynamic integration (TI) approach with the amber99 force field by comparing computational predictions of free energy differences with the free energy differences expected on the basis of NMR determined structures of the RNA motifs (5′-GCGGACGC-3′)2, (5′-GCiGGAiCGC-3′)2, (5′-GGCGAGCC-3′)2, and (5′-GGiCGAiGCC-3′)2. Here, iG and iC denote isoguanosine and isocytidine, which have amino and carbonyl groups transposed relative to guanosine and cytidine. The NMR structures show that the GA base pairs adopt either imino (cis Watson−Crick/Watson−Crick A-G) or sheared (trans Hoogsteen/Sugar edge A-G) conformations depending on the identity and orientation of the adjacent base pair. A new mixing function for the TI method is developed that allows alchemical transitions in which atoms can disappear in both the initial and final states. Unrestrained calculations gave ΔG° values 2−4 kcal/mol different from expectations based on NMR data. Restraining the structures with hydrogen bond restraints did not improve the predictions. Agreement with NMR data was improved by 0.7 to 1.5 kcal/mol, however, when structures were restrained with weak positional restraints to sample around the experimentally determined NMR structures. The amber99 force field was modified to partially include pyramidalization effects of the unpaired amino group of guanosine in imino GA base pairs. This provided little or no improvement in comparisons with experiment. The marginal improvement is observed when the structure has potential cross-strand out-of-plane hydrogen bonding with the G amino group. The calculations using positional restraints and a nonplanar amino group reproduce the signs of ΔG° from the experimental results and are, thus, capable of providing useful qualitative insights complementing the NMR experiments. Decomposition of the terms in the calculations reveals that the dominant terms are from electrostatic and interstrand interactions other than hydrogen bonds in the base pairs. The results suggest that a better description of the backbone is key to reproducing the experimental free energy results with computational free energy predictions.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010
Purshotam Sharma; Judit E. Šponer; Jiri Sponer; Sitansh Sharma; Dhananjay Bhattacharyya; Abhijit Mitra
Base pairs belonging to the cis Hoogsteen:sugar-edge (H:S) family play important structural roles in folded RNA molecules. Several of these are present in internal loops, where they are involved in interactions leading to planar dinucleotide platforms which stabilize higher order structures such as base triplets and quartets. We report results of analysis of 30 representative examples spanning 16 possible base pair combinations, with several of them showing multimodality of base pairing geometry. The geometries of 23 of these base pairs were modeled directly from coordinates extracted from RNA crystal structures. The other seven were predicted structures which were modeled on the basis of observed isosteric analogues. After appropriate satisfaction of residual valencies, these structures were relaxed using the B3LYP/6-31G(d,p) method and interaction energies were derived at the RIMP2/aug-cc-pVDZ level of theory. The geometries for each of the studied base pairs have been characterized in terms of the number and nature of H-bonds, rmsd values observed on optimization, base pair geometrical parameters, and sugar pucker analysis. In addition to its evaluation, the nature of intermolecular interaction in these complexes was also analyzed using Morokuma decomposition. The gas phase interaction energies range between -5.2 and -20.6 kcal/mol and, in contrast to the H:S trans base pairs, show enhanced relative importance of the electron correlation component, indicative of the greater role of dispersion energy in stabilization of these base pairs. The rich variety of hydrogen bonding pattern, involving the flexible sugar edge, appears to hold the key to several features of structural motifs, such as planarity and propensity to participate in triplets, observed in this family of base pairs. This work explores these aspects by integrating database analysis, and detailed base pairing geometry analysis at the atomistic level, with ab initio computation of interaction energies. The study, involving alternative classification of base pairs and triplets, provides insights into intrinsic properties of these base pairs and their possible structural and functional roles.