Martin Mills
University of Cape Town
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Publication
Featured researches published by Martin Mills.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2005
Samir Amrane; Barbara Saccà; Martin Mills; Madhu Chauhan; Horst H. Klump; Jean-Louis Mergny
Trinucleotide repeats are involved in a number of debilitating diseases such as myotonic dystrophy. Twelve to seventy-five base-long (CTG)n oligodeoxynucleotides were analysed using a combination of biophysical [UV-absorbance, circular dichroism and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC)] and biochemical methods (non-denaturing gel electrophoresis and enzymatic footprinting). All oligomers formed stable intramolecular structures under near physiological conditions with a melting temperature that was only weakly dependent on oligomer length. Thermodynamic analysis of the denaturation process by UV-melting and calorimetric experiments revealed an unprecedented length-dependent discrepancy between the enthalpy values deduced from model-dependent (UV-melting) and model-independent (calorimetry) experiments. Evidence for non-zero molar heat capacity changes was also derived from the analysis of the Arrhenius plots and DSC profiles. Such behaviour is analysed in the framework of an intramolecular ‘branched-hairpin’ model, in which long CTG oligomers do not fold into a simple long hairpin–stem intramolecular structure, but allow the formation of several independent folding units of unequal stability. We demonstrate that, for sequences ranging from 12 to 25 CTG repeats, an intramolecular structure with two loops is formed which we will call ‘bis-hairpin’. Similar results were also found for CAG oligomers, suggesting that this observation may be extended to various trinucleotide repeats-containing sequences.
Nucleosides, Nucleotides & Nucleic Acids | 1998
Martin Mills; Horst H. Klump
Abstract A DNA triple helix formed according to the Purine-motif can accommodate both purines and pyrimidines in the third strand in a pH independent manner. This motif is thus a more versatile means of targeting double stranded DNA than the pH dependent Pyrimidine motif. In this paper we assess the impact of systematically replacing thymine with adenine, inosine or cytosine in the third strand. To this aim we have designed a double length, 22—mer “purine” strand to target a 9-mer pyrimidine strand such that the extending tail acts as the third strand (reversed-Hoogsteen strand) which is antiparallel to the purine strand of the underlying WC duplex. By systematically replacing thymines with adenines in the reversed-Hoogsteen strand there is an increase in the stability (T m) of the triplex, particularly when the sequence closest to the loop consists of a stack of purines. Further substitution towards the 3′ end of the third strand reverses the stability. Systematic mutations in the third strand next to th...
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1999
Martin Mills; Paola B. Arimondo; Laurent Lacroix; Thérèse Garestier; Claude Helene; Horst H. Klump; Jean-Louis Mergny
Current Medicinal Chemistry - Anti-cancer Agents | 2002
Martin Mills; Laurent Lacroix; Paola B. Arimondo; Jean-Louis Leroy; Jean-Christophe François; Horst H. Klump; Jean-Louis Mergny
Biochemistry | 2002
Martin Mills; Paola B. Arimondo; Laurent Lacroix; Thérèse Garestier; Horst H. Klump; Jean-Louis Mergny
Biochemistry | 1996
Martin Mills; Jens Völker; Horst H. Klump
Small Molecule DNA and RNA Binders: From Synthesis to Nucleic Acid Complexes | 2004
Patrizia Alberti; Magali Hoarau; Lionel Guittat; Masashi Takasugi; Paola B. Arimondo; Laurent Lacroix; Martin Mills; Marie-Paule Teulade-Fichou; Jean-Pierre Vigneron; Jean-Marie Lehn; Patrick Mailliet; Jean-Louis Mergny
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2008
Martin Mills; Jean-Louis Mergny; Horst H. Klump
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2006
Horst H. Klump; M. Chauhan; Martin Mills; C. Lin
South African journal of chemistry | 1997
Martin Mills; Horst H. Klump