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1 he anti, anti glycosyl conformation found in B form DNA.
2 nsient grip-and-release structural change in B form DNA.
3 in conformation incompatible with binding to B-form DNA.
4  into the minor groove spine of hydration in B-form DNA.
5 rgoes a structural transition from A-like to B-form DNA.
6 of bases showed CD spectra characteristic of B-form DNA.
7 t 1-2 nm, which can accommodate the width of B-form DNA.
8 l an enzyme that "clamps" around essentially B-form DNA.
9 use its sugar puckers are primarily those of B-form DNA.
10 in the primary solvation of the minor groove B-form DNA.
11 DNA section assumes a conformation closer to B-form DNA.
12 disrupt base stacking in RAED-THA adducts on B-form DNA.
13 s are characterized as A-form DNA and one as B-form DNA.
14  to non-CpG methylated dinucleotide sites in B-form DNA.
15  original isolation report and does not bind B-form DNA.
16 termining stacking geometries in RNA than in B-form DNA.
17 lical conformations different from canonical B-form DNA.
18 d moderate structural distortion relative to B-form DNA.
19  transcription factors NF-kappaB and IRF3 by B-form DNA.
20 tial distribution of counterions relative to B-form DNA.
21 ed conformation of adjacent T and A bases in B-form DNA.
22 -T19) are closer to each other than those in B-form DNA.
23 CSA magnitude is considerably larger than in B-form DNA.
24 dent modifications in helix conformation for B-form DNA.
25 size, shape, and electrostatic similarity to B-form DNA.
26 oteins or any DNA-protein complex containing B-form DNA.
27 rcular dichroism spectra are consistent with B-form DNA.
28 odel based on the geometry and energetics of B-form DNA.
29 ainder of the spectrum is similar to that of B-form DNA.
30 tructural mimic of the phosphate backbone of B-form DNA.
31 ontacts approaching into the minor groove of B-form DNA.
32  coil containing as little as 360-370 bp of 'B'-form DNA.
33  intermediate between that of A-form RNA and B-form DNA, a feature that may be exploited by the enzym
34 a indicate that the ITR structure is largely B form DNA, although there is a slight blue shift compar
35 starting from both A- and B-form structures, B-form DNA and A-form RNA.
36 ckdown blocks both cytosolic double-stranded B-form DNA and double-stranded RNA-induced IRF3 activati
37  the conformational pathway connecting A and B-form DNA and illustrate how both proteins and drugs ta
38                      hUPF1 unwinds non-B and B-form DNA and RNA substrates in vitro.
39 ese domains bind A-form DNA in preference to B-form DNA and that the -59 to -31 region of the GATA-2
40 resembles a midpoint in a trajectory between B-form DNA and the kinked DNA observed in UDG:DNA produc
41  by solution conditions known to destabilize B-form DNA and to stabilize A-form structures.
42 s with the stacking arrangement (e.g., A- or B-form DNA) and with the identity of the nucleobase with
43 city of ~10 base pairs, the helical pitch of B-form DNA, and a decay length of ~15 base pairs.
44 re much wider and more shallow than those of B-form DNA, and the helix turn is slower, with ca. 12 ba
45 iation in the ethyl cross-linked duplex from B-form DNA, are consistent with this expectation.
46                 As a consequence, the use of B-form DNA as the carrier of genetic information must ha
47 ation abrogated the ability of intracellular B-form DNA, as well as members of the herpesvirus family
48                       An extended stretch of B-form DNA asymmetrically runs across the whole dimer, w
49 endent configuration-space free energies for B-form DNA at the coarse-grain level of rigid bases.
50 ix, can invade mixed-sequence double-helical B-form DNA (B-DNA).
51  DNA (xDNA) retains many features of natural B-form DNA, but with a few structural alterations due to
52 o optimize the deoxyribose-based cleavage of B-form DNA by Ni(II) x Xaa-Xaa-His metallopeptides.
53 ctural requirement for unwinding of standard B-form DNA by these helicases.
54 te DNA structures other than double-stranded B-form DNA can potentially impede cellular processes suc
55                                     However, B-form DNA can support only 1 bit of sequence conservati
56 ng of Mg(2+) to a double-helical sequence of B-form DNA (CGCGAATTCGCG) but the technique is readily a
57 revealed that the structural features of non-B form DNA co-factors are important for PARP-1 catalysis
58  in the promoter, perhaps by stabilizing non-B-form DNA conformations.
59 shed through contacts in the major groove of B-form DNA, contacts in the minor groove cannot easily d
60                                      Rods of B-form DNA could be envisioned as protected from digesti
61  that DNA binding proteins generally use non-B-form DNA distortion such as base flipping to initiate
62 ative studies on A-form DNA-RNA duplexes and B-form DNA-DNA duplexes with a single-stranded tail iden
63 or sequences that resist transformation from B-form DNA.DNA structures.
64 ponding bases in A-form (RNA/DNA duplex) and B-form (DNA/DNA duplex) DNA.
65 (Poltheta-pol) in the closed conformation on B-form DNA/DNA via an induced fit mechanism.
66 hed helical A-form RNA segment and a helical B-form DNA dodecamer at natural (13)C abundance.
67 , we determined four crystal structures of a B-form DNA dodecamer duplex containing ClU:A or ClU:G ba
68  aggregates in a conformation similar to the B-form DNA double helix.
69 o canonical bases and fold into the familiar B-form DNA double-helix, endowing ALIEN DNA with valuabl
70 e atomic-resolution crystal structure of the B-form DNA duplex [d(CGCGAA)Td(TCGCG)](2) containing a s
71 d T-A pair and other mismatched pairs in the B-form DNA duplex context, which is consistent with the
72 gle molecular dynamics, shows an undisturbed B-form DNA duplex with dangling 3'-termini.
73 ANA residues in crystal structures of A- and B-form DNA duplexes at atomic resolution, we demonstrate
74 ationally in aqueous solution, in A-form and B-form DNA duplexes, and within the active site of a DNA
75 ry structures to primarily well-established, B-form DNA duplexes, which can be readily and reliably p
76 ids than through the d(A)-d(T) bridge of the B-form DNA duplexes.
77 e-base inclinations for A- (DNA and RNA) and B-form (DNA) duplexes differ considerably.
78 ously including local structural failure and B-form DNA for both underwinding and extreme overwinding
79  Twist agree well with experimental data for B-form DNA from the Nucleic Acids Database, even though
80 duplex DNA does not require large changes in B-form DNA geometry.
81                        Crystal structures of B-form DNA have provided insights into the global and lo
82  the B-form double helix, biasing toward non-B-form DNA helix conformations at zero tension and facil
83 eptor molecules where the chiral bridge is a B-form DNA helix consisting of 4 to 6 base pairs.
84 or groove does not significantly disrupt the B-form DNA helix.
85 an be accommodated within the major grove of B-form DNA in a manner that positions nearly all of the
86  spontaneous conversion of the A-form DNA to B-form DNA in unconstrained simulations.
87 ) selectively binds to stretches of A.T-rich B-form DNA in vitro by recognition of substrate structur
88 t evolution, suggesting the existence of non-B-form DNA in vivo.
89 condary structures in addition to the normal B-form DNA, including hairpins and quadruplexes.
90  Human genomic regions predicted to form non-B-form DNA induced gross chromosomal rearrangements in y
91 escently labeled proteins, whereas remaining B-form DNA is accounted for by using specific fluorescen
92 kbone atoms (suggesting that the backbone in B-form DNA is compatible with having the bases adopt the
93     Although the right-handed double helical B-form DNA is most common under physiological conditions
94 re Distance (RMSD) from canonical A-form and B-form DNA is used as an order parameter to characterize
95 ole protein mimics a 42-base pair stretch of B-form DNA making ArdA by far the largest DNA mimic know
96 s simulations starting from canonical A- and B-form DNA models.
97 CoHexCl3 (cobalt hexamine chloride) around a B-form DNA molecule.
98 free form of both classes approximates ideal B-form DNA more closely.
99                          Short complementary B-form DNA oligomers, 6 to 20 base pairs in length, are
100 e the solution structure and fluctuations of B-form DNA on a length scale comparable to a protein-bin
101 t tool for studying structural variations in B-form DNA over a wide range of sequences.
102 ne (G), and buried in the structure of naked B-form DNA, oxoG and G are practically indistinguishable
103 FN induction was mediated by double-stranded B form DNA, regardless of its sequence, CpG content, or
104 ve to S1 nuclease and likely to assume a non-B-form DNA secondary structure within the supercoiled pl
105             DNA G-quadruplexes (G4s) are non-B-form DNA secondary structures that threaten genome sta
106 e complex, which is too small to span a 6 bp B-form DNA sequence, nonetheless makes major groove cont
107 lly recognizes the A form RNA strand and the B form DNA strand.
108  DNA superhelicity can destabilize the local B-form DNA structure and can drive transitions to other
109 ess induces local variation in the canonical B-form DNA structure by introducing kinks and defects th
110           Rather the Bcl-2 Mbr assumes a non-B-form DNA structure within the chromosomes of human cel
111 thus revealing an important link between non-B form DNA structures and Hop1 in meiotic chromosome syn
112                       G-Quadruplexes are non-B form DNA structures present at regulatory regions in t
113 traction due to their propensity to form non-B-form DNA structures, which hinder DNA polymerases and
114 some, pausing sequences, DNA lesions and non-B-form DNA structures.
115 GC-rich regulatory elements that possess non-B-form DNA structures.
116 been held to discuss other noncanonical (non-B-form) DNA structures, their properties, and their biol
117 LM and WRN proteins on both G-quadruplex and B-form DNA substrates.
118 ty, BLM catalyzes both the disruption of non-B-form DNA, such as G-quadruplexes, and the branch migra
119 /DNA helix and that the ensuing synthesis of B-form DNA terminates primer synthesis.
120 s a major groove that more closely resembles B-form DNA than RNA.
121  the initial nonspecific binding of BamHI to B-form DNA that differs from that seen in the crystal st
122 nd dendritic cells (exposed to intracellular B-form DNA, the DNA virus herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1)
123 lts indicate that, with respect to canonical B-form DNA, the extreme bending of the DNA in the comple
124 h the quaternary structure resembles that of B-form DNA, there is a base-pair step to the 5' side of
125 ex adducts changes its position from that in B form DNA to avoid steric clashes with the 5'-G* and th
126 r Esigma(70) and show how an ncRNA can mimic B-form DNA to directly regulate transcription by the DNA
127 alf the mean minor groove width of canonical B-form DNA to fit onto the protein surface.
128 rts any DNA secondary structure from typical B-form DNA to single-stranded DNA to G-quadruplexes.
129 erence to the conformational transition from B-form DNA to Z-form DNA for (dm(5)C-dG)(4), a transitio
130 D spectra of the modified duplexes indicated B-form DNA topology.
131  exhibit the most intrinsic deformation from B-form DNA turn are also the most dynamically deformable
132             PARP-1 binds damaged DNA and non-B form DNA, where it covalently modifies repair enzymes
133 odel of the 1,4 GG interstrand cross-link on B-form DNA, which shows that the NH(2) protons have no c
134 at can be templated spatially by A-tracts of B-form DNA while retaining coherent energy transfer.
135 cture reveals that two p53DBD dimers bind to B form DNA with no relative twist and that a p53 tetrame
136 les of <1 degrees ), more rigid than generic B-form DNA, with slight base-pair inclination, high prop
137 ts a regular conformation similar to that of B-form DNA, with small dihedral adjustments due to the l
138  C residues at the site of the cross-link in B-form DNA without causing distortion of the helix, wher
139  Each unnatural self-pair is accommodated in B-form DNA without detectable structural perturbation, a
140                    Unlike conventional A- or B-form DNA, Z-form DNA is a configuration that exclusive

 
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