13 research outputs found
Some 6-aza-5-substituted-2 '-deoxyuridines show potent and selective inhibition of herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase
The synthesis and X-ray crystal structures of a series of 5-substituted-6-aza-2'-deoxyuridines is reported. These nucleoside analogues inhibit the phosphorylation of thymidine by HSV-1 TK but have no effect on the corresponding human enzyme. Detailed examination of one analogue proves it to be a competitive inhibitor of thymidine with a Ki of 0.34 mu M and is a very poor substrate. The analogues are not substrates for the enzyme and also do not inhibit the degradation of thymidine by thymidine phosphorylase. Molecular modelling showed that the inhibitors fit well in the active site of HSV-1 TK, provided the conformation of the sugar moiety is the same for thymidine in the complex.status: publishe
Oligonucleotides Containing 6-Aza-2-deoxyuridine: Synthesis, Nucleobase Protection, pH-Dependent Duplex Stability, and Metal-DNA Formation
Viral RNAs Are Unusually Compact
A majority of viruses are composed of long single-stranded genomic RNA molecules encapsulated by protein shells with diameters of just a few tens of nanometers. We examine the extent to which these viral RNAs have evolved to be physically compact molecules to facilitate encapsulation. Measurements of equal-length viral, non-viral, coding and non-coding RNAs show viral RNAs to have among the smallest sizes in solution, i.e., the highest gel-electrophoretic mobilities and the smallest hydrodynamic radii. Using graph-theoretical analyses we demonstrate that their sizes correlate with the compactness of branching patterns in predicted secondary structure ensembles. The density of branching is determined by the number and relative positions of 3-helix junctions, and is highly sensitive to the presence of rare higher-order junctions with 4 or more helices. Compact branching arises from a preponderance of base pairing between nucleotides close to each other in the primary sequence. The density of branching represents a degree of freedom optimized by viral RNA genomes in response to the evolutionary pressure to be packaged reliably. Several families of viruses are analyzed to delineate the effects of capsid geometry, size and charge stabilization on the selective pressure for RNA compactness. Compact branching has important implications for RNA folding and viral assembly