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. 1998 Nov 15;26(22):5142–5151. doi: 10.1093/nar/26.22.5142

Structural flexibility of a DNA hairpin located in the long terminal repeat of the Drosophila 1731 retrotransposon.

A Slama-Schwok 1, E Brossalina 1, Y Demchenko 1, M Best-Belpomme 1, V Vlassov 1
PMCID: PMC147971  PMID: 9801312

Abstract

The structure of the DNA binding site of the Nuclear single-stranded Binding Factor (NssBF), located in the long terminal repeat of the Drosophila 1731 retrotransposon, was investigated by melting temperature experiments, chemical probing and fluorescence measurements using a macrocyclic bis-acridine. The most probable structure of this element, named Bc, mainly involves two hairpins in equilibrium at pH 6.0 at low concentration. The hairpins differ in their apical loop size; 4 and 8 nt. The structural flexibility of Bc probably derives from the three consecutive CATA repeats complementary to the GTAT nucleotides of the palindrome. In contrast, the Bc complementary strand adopts a single hairpin. Since Bc is implicated in repression of transcription via binding of two specific factors, its structural flexibility could be associated with this process.

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