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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Conformationally Constrained Nucleic Acids as Potential RNA Targeting Therapeutics

Chuanzheng, Zhou January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
2

Some Aspects of Nucleic Acids Chemistry

Zamaratski, Edouard January 2000 (has links)
<p>This thesis is divided into two parts based on a total of 8 papers: Part 1: <i>Synthesis, physicochemical and biochemical studies of chemically modified oligonucleotides and their duplexes and triplexes</i>. Potency of the chromophore conjugated DNA oligonucleotides as antigene and antisense gene repressors was evaluated. The effect of geometry, bulk and ¥ð-electron density of a series of chromophores, tethered at the 5'-end of oligonucleotides, as well as the effect of the linker nature, length and the attachment site of the chromophore to the oligo were explored based on the stability of the duplexes and triplexes. A dramatic improvement in the triplex stability with <i>ara</i>-U linked phenazine oligo (potent antigene) was achieved (¥ÄT<sub>m</sub> = 16.5¢ª C). A number of selected phenazine and dipyridophenazine tethered antisense oligos (AONs) and their phosphorothioate analogues were shown to form the AON/RNA hybrid duplexes with enhanced thermal stability. CD experiments revealed that these duplexes have the global structure unaltered from that of the native counterpart. RNase H degradation studies on three RNA targets having different degrees of folded structures showed that tethering of phenazine and dipyridophenazine increases the hydrolysis rates (potent antisense) of the target RNA, and that chemical nature of the chromophore influences the RNase H cleavage pattern. Further investigation at the RNA saturated conditions revealed that 3'-tethered chromophores influence the substrate recognition, and the kinetics of the cleavage by RNase H. Conjugation of different chromophores, charged polyaromatic systems and metal complexes with polyaromatic ligands at different sites of the AON revealed that RNase H is very sensitive to any modifications in the middle region of the AON/RNA duplex. On the contrary, any modification at the 3'-end of the AON regardless of the bulk of the substituent or presence of positive charge can be easily tolerated by the enzyme. Sensitivity of the RNase H towards the local structural changes in the AON/RNA hybrid was probed with a number of AONs containing a single 1-(1',3'-O-anhydro-©¬-<u>D</u>-psicofuranosyl)thymine with locked 3'-<i>endo</i> sugar conformation at different sites of AON. RNase H degradation studies revealed that the local conformational changes brought by the constrained nucleoside, although invisible by CD, span in the hybrid as far as 5 nucleotides toward the 5'-end of the AONs (3'-end of RNA), showing the unique transmission of the structural distortion from a single modification site. The results also showed that the structural requirements for the substrate binding and substrate cleavage by RNase H appear to be different. Part 2: <i>Preparation of biologically important isotope labelled oligo-RNAs for the NMR structure determination in solution</i>. Synthesis of the non-uniformly <sup>13</sup>C<sub>5</sub> labelled 29mer HIV-1 TAR RNA was achieved by solid-phase synthesis using <sup>13</sup>C<sub>5</sub> labelled ribonucleosides from <sup>13</sup>C<sub>6</sub>-<u>D</u>-glucose). Two hammerhead forming RNAs (16mer and 25mer) were synthesized according to the Uppsala NMR-window strategy, where the sugar residues of the nucleosides forming stem I, II and the loop of the stem III of the resulting hammerhead complex were deuterated. UV melting and high resolution NMR structural studies showed that the 16mer RNA under quasiphysiological condition folds to a very stable hairpin structure, which prevents formation of a hammerhead RNA with the 25mer, primarily owing to thermodynamic reasons.</p>
3

Some Aspects of Nucleic Acids Chemistry

Zamaratski, Edouard January 2000 (has links)
This thesis is divided into two parts based on a total of 8 papers: Part 1: Synthesis, physicochemical and biochemical studies of chemically modified oligonucleotides and their duplexes and triplexes. Potency of the chromophore conjugated DNA oligonucleotides as antigene and antisense gene repressors was evaluated. The effect of geometry, bulk and ¥ð-electron density of a series of chromophores, tethered at the 5'-end of oligonucleotides, as well as the effect of the linker nature, length and the attachment site of the chromophore to the oligo were explored based on the stability of the duplexes and triplexes. A dramatic improvement in the triplex stability with ara-U linked phenazine oligo (potent antigene) was achieved (¥ÄTm = 16.5¢ª C). A number of selected phenazine and dipyridophenazine tethered antisense oligos (AONs) and their phosphorothioate analogues were shown to form the AON/RNA hybrid duplexes with enhanced thermal stability. CD experiments revealed that these duplexes have the global structure unaltered from that of the native counterpart. RNase H degradation studies on three RNA targets having different degrees of folded structures showed that tethering of phenazine and dipyridophenazine increases the hydrolysis rates (potent antisense) of the target RNA, and that chemical nature of the chromophore influences the RNase H cleavage pattern. Further investigation at the RNA saturated conditions revealed that 3'-tethered chromophores influence the substrate recognition, and the kinetics of the cleavage by RNase H. Conjugation of different chromophores, charged polyaromatic systems and metal complexes with polyaromatic ligands at different sites of the AON revealed that RNase H is very sensitive to any modifications in the middle region of the AON/RNA duplex. On the contrary, any modification at the 3'-end of the AON regardless of the bulk of the substituent or presence of positive charge can be easily tolerated by the enzyme. Sensitivity of the RNase H towards the local structural changes in the AON/RNA hybrid was probed with a number of AONs containing a single 1-(1',3'-O-anhydro-©¬-<u>D</u>-psicofuranosyl)thymine with locked 3'-endo sugar conformation at different sites of AON. RNase H degradation studies revealed that the local conformational changes brought by the constrained nucleoside, although invisible by CD, span in the hybrid as far as 5 nucleotides toward the 5'-end of the AONs (3'-end of RNA), showing the unique transmission of the structural distortion from a single modification site. The results also showed that the structural requirements for the substrate binding and substrate cleavage by RNase H appear to be different. Part 2: Preparation of biologically important isotope labelled oligo-RNAs for the NMR structure determination in solution. Synthesis of the non-uniformly 13C5 labelled 29mer HIV-1 TAR RNA was achieved by solid-phase synthesis using 13C5 labelled ribonucleosides from 13C6-<u>D</u>-glucose). Two hammerhead forming RNAs (16mer and 25mer) were synthesized according to the Uppsala NMR-window strategy, where the sugar residues of the nucleosides forming stem I, II and the loop of the stem III of the resulting hammerhead complex were deuterated. UV melting and high resolution NMR structural studies showed that the 16mer RNA under quasiphysiological condition folds to a very stable hairpin structure, which prevents formation of a hammerhead RNA with the 25mer, primarily owing to thermodynamic reasons.
4

Studies on the Non-covalent Interactions (Stereoelectronics, Stacking and Hydrogen Bonding) in the Self-assembly of DNA and RNA

Acharya, Parag January 2003 (has links)
<p>This thesis is based on ten publications (Papers I-X). The phosphodiester backbone makes DNA or RNA to behave as polyelectrolyte, the pentose sugar gives the flexibility, and the aglycones promote the self-assembly or the ligand-binding process. The hydrogen bonding, stacking, stereoelectronics and hydration are few of the important non-covalent forces dictating the self-assembly of DNA/RNA. The pH-dependent thermodynamics clearly show (Papers I and II) that a change of the electronic character of aglycone modulates the conformation of the sugar moiety by the tunable interplay of stereoelectronic anomeric and <i>gauche</i> effects, which are further transmitted to steer the sugar-phosphate backbone conformation in a cooperative manner. 3'<i>-</i>anthraniloyl<b> </b>adenosine<b> </b>(a mimic of 3'-teminal CC<u>A</u><sub>OH</sub> of the aminoacyl-tRNA<sup>Phe</sup>) binds to EF-Tu*GTP in preference over 2'<i>-</i>anthraniloyl<b> </b>adenosine<b>, </b>thereby showing (Paper III) that the 2’-<i>endo</i> sugar conformation is a more suitable mimic of the transition state geometry than the 3’<i>-endo</i> conformation in discriminating between correctly and incorrectly charged aminoacyl-tRNA<sup>Phe</sup> by EF-Tu during protein synthesis. The presence of 2'-OH in RNA distinguishes<sup> </sup>it from DNA both functionally<sup> </sup>as well as structurally. This work (Paper IV) provides straightforward NMR evidence to show that the 2'-OH is intramolecularly hydrogen bonded with the vicinal 3'-oxygen, and the exposure of the 3'<i>-</i>phosphate of the ribonucleotides to the bulk water determines the availability of the bound water around the vicinal 2'-OH, which then can play various functional role through inter- or intramolecular interactions. The pH-dependent <sup>1</sup>H NMR study with nicotinamide derivatives demonstrates (Paper V) that the cascade of intramolecular cation (pyridinium)-π(phenyl)-CH(methyl) interaction in edge-to-face geometry is responsible for perturbing the p<i>K</i><sub>a</sub> of the pyridine-nitrogen as well as for the modulation of the aromatic character of the neighboring phenyl moiety, which is also supported by the T<sub>1</sub> relaxation studies and <i>ab initio</i> calculations. It has been found (Papers VI-IX) that the variable intramolecular electrostatic interaction between electronically coupled nearest neighbor nucleobases (steered by their respective microenvironments) can modulate their respective pseudoaromatic characters. The net result of this pseudoaromatic cross-modulation is the creation of a unique set of aglycones in an oligo or polynucleotide, whose physico-chemical properties are completely dependent upon the propensity and geometry of the nearest neighbor interactions (extended genetic code). The propagation of the interplay of these electrostatic interactions across the hexameric ssDNA chain is considerably less favoured (effectively up to the fourth nucleobase) compared to that of the isosequential ssRNA (up to the sixth nucleobase). The dissection of the relative strength of basepairing and stacking in a duplex shows that stability of DNA-DNA duplex weakens over the corresponding RNA-RNA duplexes with the increasing content of A-T/U base pairs, while the strength of stacking of A-T rich DNA-DNA duplex increases in comparison with A-U rich sequence in RNA-RNA duplexes (Paper X).</p>
5

Studies on the Non-covalent Interactions (Stereoelectronics, Stacking and Hydrogen Bonding) in the Self-assembly of DNA and RNA

Acharya, Parag January 2003 (has links)
This thesis is based on ten publications (Papers I-X). The phosphodiester backbone makes DNA or RNA to behave as polyelectrolyte, the pentose sugar gives the flexibility, and the aglycones promote the self-assembly or the ligand-binding process. The hydrogen bonding, stacking, stereoelectronics and hydration are few of the important non-covalent forces dictating the self-assembly of DNA/RNA. The pH-dependent thermodynamics clearly show (Papers I and II) that a change of the electronic character of aglycone modulates the conformation of the sugar moiety by the tunable interplay of stereoelectronic anomeric and gauche effects, which are further transmitted to steer the sugar-phosphate backbone conformation in a cooperative manner. 3'-anthraniloyl<b> </b>adenosine<b> </b>(a mimic of 3'-teminal CC<u>A</u>OH of the aminoacyl-tRNAPhe) binds to EF-Tu*GTP in preference over 2'-anthraniloyl<b> </b>adenosine<b>, </b>thereby showing (Paper III) that the 2’-endo sugar conformation is a more suitable mimic of the transition state geometry than the 3’-endo conformation in discriminating between correctly and incorrectly charged aminoacyl-tRNAPhe by EF-Tu during protein synthesis. The presence of 2'-OH in RNA distinguishes it from DNA both functionally as well as structurally. This work (Paper IV) provides straightforward NMR evidence to show that the 2'-OH is intramolecularly hydrogen bonded with the vicinal 3'-oxygen, and the exposure of the 3'-phosphate of the ribonucleotides to the bulk water determines the availability of the bound water around the vicinal 2'-OH, which then can play various functional role through inter- or intramolecular interactions. The pH-dependent 1H NMR study with nicotinamide derivatives demonstrates (Paper V) that the cascade of intramolecular cation (pyridinium)-π(phenyl)-CH(methyl) interaction in edge-to-face geometry is responsible for perturbing the pKa of the pyridine-nitrogen as well as for the modulation of the aromatic character of the neighboring phenyl moiety, which is also supported by the T1 relaxation studies and ab initio calculations. It has been found (Papers VI-IX) that the variable intramolecular electrostatic interaction between electronically coupled nearest neighbor nucleobases (steered by their respective microenvironments) can modulate their respective pseudoaromatic characters. The net result of this pseudoaromatic cross-modulation is the creation of a unique set of aglycones in an oligo or polynucleotide, whose physico-chemical properties are completely dependent upon the propensity and geometry of the nearest neighbor interactions (extended genetic code). The propagation of the interplay of these electrostatic interactions across the hexameric ssDNA chain is considerably less favoured (effectively up to the fourth nucleobase) compared to that of the isosequential ssRNA (up to the sixth nucleobase). The dissection of the relative strength of basepairing and stacking in a duplex shows that stability of DNA-DNA duplex weakens over the corresponding RNA-RNA duplexes with the increasing content of A-T/U base pairs, while the strength of stacking of A-T rich DNA-DNA duplex increases in comparison with A-U rich sequence in RNA-RNA duplexes (Paper X).
6

Efficient Carbohydrate Synthesis By Intra- and Supramolecular Control

Dong, Hai January 2009 (has links)
The Lattrell-Dax method of nitrite-mediated substitution of carbohydrate triflates is an efficient method to generate structures of inverse configuration. In this study, the effects of the neighboring group on the Lattrell-Dax inversion were explored. A new carbohydrate/anion host-guest system was discovered and the ambident reactivity of the nitrite anion was found to cause a complicated behavior of the reaction. It has been demonstrated that a neighboring equatorial ester group plays a highly important role in this carbohydrate epimerization reaction, restricting the nitrite N-attack, thus resulting in O-attack only and inducing the formation of inversion compounds in good yields. Based on this effect, efficient synthetic routes to a range of carbohydrate structures, notably β-D-mannosides and β-D-talosides, were designed by use of double parallel and double serial inversion. A supramolecularly activated, triggered cascade reaction was also developed. This cascade reaction is triggered by a deprotonation process that is activated by anions. It was found that the anions can activate this reaction following their hydrogen bonding tendencies to the hydroxyl group in aprotic solvents. / QC 20100709
7

Aspects of Antisense and Antigene Chemistry of Oligonucleotides Tethered to Intercalators

Ossipov, Dimitri January 2002 (has links)
<p>Synthetic and physicochemical studies on appropriately functionalized ODN-conjugates have been performed to evaluate their abilities to act as antisense agents against RNA or as intramolecular DNA cross-linking agents. Intercalating aromatic systems [phenazine (Pnz), dipyridophenazine (DPPZ)] and metallointercalators such as Ru<sup>2+</sup>(phen)<sub>2</sub>(DPPZ) and Ru<sup>2+</sup>(tpy)(DPPZ)<b>L</b> [where <b>L</b> = chemically or photochemically labile ligand, phen = phenanthroline, tpy = terpyridine], which are covalently tethered to the oligo-deoxynucleotides (ODNs), have been chosen for this purpose. The ODN-conjugates were typically prepared by automated solid phase synthesis using phosphoramidite building blocks, or on solid supports, both functionalized with the chromophore groups. The photosensitive metal complex, Ru<sup>2+</sup>(tpy)(DPPZ)(CH<sub>3</sub>CN), has been incorporated by post-synthetic coupling to the amino-linker modified ODNs <i>via</i> an amide bond. The intercalating ability of the tethered chromophores gave enhanced stability of the duplexes and triplexes formed with ODN-conjugates and their complementary targets: DNA, RNA, or double-stranded DNA. The conjugation of DPPZ chromophore to ODN (at 3', 5' or at the middle) led us to incorporate Ru<sup>2+</sup>(phen)<sub>2</sub>(DPPZ) through the DPPZ ligand, for the first time. The corresponding (Ru<sup>2+</sup>-ODN)•DNA duplexes showed dramatic stabilization (ΔT<sub>m</sub> = 19.4 – 22.0ºC). The CD and DNase I footprinting experiments suggest that the stabilization is owing to metallointercalation by threading of the Ru<sup>2+</sup>(phen)<sub>2</sub> moiety through the ODN•DNA duplex core, thus "stapling" the two helical strands from the minor to major groove. On the other hand, Ru<sup>2+</sup>(tpy)(DPPZ)(CH<sub>3</sub>CN)-ODN conjugates represent a new class of oligonucleotides containing the photoactivatible Ru<sup>2+</sup> complexes, which can successfully crosslink to the complementary strand. The mechanism of cross-linking upon photoirradiation of [Ru<sup>2+</sup>(tpy)(DPPZ)(CH<sub>3</sub>CN)-ODN]•DNA involves <i>in situ</i> conversion to the reactive [Ru<sup>2+</sup>(tpy)(DPPZ)(H<sub>2</sub>O)-ODN]•DNA which are subsequently cross-linked through the G residue of the complementary DNA strand. All starting materials and products have been purified by HPLC and/or by PAGE and subsequently characterized by MALDI-TOF as well as ESI mass spectroscopy. Terminal conjugation of the planar Pnz and DPPZ groups through the flexible linkers were also shown to improve thermal stability of the ODN•RNA hybrid duplexes without alteration of the initial AB-type global helical structure as revealed from CD experiments. As a result, RNase H mediated cleavage of the RNA strand in the intercalator-tethered ODN•RNA duplexes was more efficient compared to the natural counterpart. The RNase H cleavage pattern was also found to be dependent on the chemical nature of the chromophore. It appeared that introduction of a tether at the 3'-end of the ODN can be most easily tolerated by the enzyme regardless of the nature of the appending chromophore. The tethered DPPZ group has also been shown to chelate Cu<sup>2+</sup> and Fe<sup>3+</sup>, like phenanthroline group, followed by the formation of redox-active metal complex which cleaves the complementary DNA strand in a sequence-specific manner. This shows that the choice of appropriate ligand is useful to (i) attain improved intercalation giving Tm enhancement, and (ii) sequence-specifically inactivate target RNA or DNA molecules using multiple modes of chemistry (RNase H mediated cleavage, free-radical, oxidative pathways or photocross-linkage).</p>
8

Studies on Nucleic Acids – Structure and Dynamics

Isaksson, Johan January 2005 (has links)
<p>This thesis is based on six papers, Papers I-VI, focusing on the interplay between the stabilizing elements of nucleic acids self-assembly; hydrogen bonding, stacking and solvent effects. In Paper I we investigate how the substitution of the O4' for CH<sub>2</sub> in the sugar moiety of adenosine (2'-deoxyaristeromycin) at the A<sup>6</sup> position of the Dickerson-Drew dodecamer makes the two modified bases exist in a dynamic equilibrium between Hoogsteen and Watson-Crick base pairing in the NMR time scale. Paper II is a structural study of the incorporation of 1-(1',3'-<i>O</i>-anhydro-<i>β</i>-D-psicofuranosyl)thymine in the T<sup>7</sup> position of the Dickerson-Drew dodecamer. NMR constrained molecular dynamics and hydration studies show the base-base distortions caused by the introduction of a North-type locked sugar in an otherwise B-type DNA•DNA duplex. Paper III shows that the stacking distortion caused by the 1-(1',3'-<i>O</i>-anhydro-<i>β</i>-D-psicofuranosyl)thymine building block perturbs the charge transfer similar to a DNA mismatch. Paper IV highlights how the sequence context affects the physico-chemical properties, monitored by the p<i>K</i><i>a</i> of guanine itself as well as how the charge perturbation is experienced by the neighboring bases, in ssDNA and ssRNA. Paper V focuses on the differences between the structural equilibria of single-stranded ssDNA and ssRNA. Directional differences in single-stranded stacking between ssDNA and ssRNA are identified and provide a basis to explain directional differences in p<i>K</i><i>a</i> modulation and dangling-end stabilization. In Paper VI the thermodynamic gains of dangling ends on DNA and RNA core duplexes are found to correlate with the X-ray geometries of dangling nucleobases relative to the hydrogen bonds of the closing base pairs.</p>
9

Aspects of Antisense and Antigene Chemistry of Oligonucleotides Tethered to Intercalators

Ossipov, Dimitri January 2002 (has links)
Synthetic and physicochemical studies on appropriately functionalized ODN-conjugates have been performed to evaluate their abilities to act as antisense agents against RNA or as intramolecular DNA cross-linking agents. Intercalating aromatic systems [phenazine (Pnz), dipyridophenazine (DPPZ)] and metallointercalators such as Ru2+(phen)2(DPPZ) and Ru2+(tpy)(DPPZ)<b>L</b> [where <b>L</b> = chemically or photochemically labile ligand, phen = phenanthroline, tpy = terpyridine], which are covalently tethered to the oligo-deoxynucleotides (ODNs), have been chosen for this purpose. The ODN-conjugates were typically prepared by automated solid phase synthesis using phosphoramidite building blocks, or on solid supports, both functionalized with the chromophore groups. The photosensitive metal complex, Ru2+(tpy)(DPPZ)(CH3CN), has been incorporated by post-synthetic coupling to the amino-linker modified ODNs via an amide bond. The intercalating ability of the tethered chromophores gave enhanced stability of the duplexes and triplexes formed with ODN-conjugates and their complementary targets: DNA, RNA, or double-stranded DNA. The conjugation of DPPZ chromophore to ODN (at 3', 5' or at the middle) led us to incorporate Ru2+(phen)2(DPPZ) through the DPPZ ligand, for the first time. The corresponding (Ru2+-ODN)•DNA duplexes showed dramatic stabilization (ΔTm = 19.4 – 22.0ºC). The CD and DNase I footprinting experiments suggest that the stabilization is owing to metallointercalation by threading of the Ru2+(phen)2 moiety through the ODN•DNA duplex core, thus "stapling" the two helical strands from the minor to major groove. On the other hand, Ru2+(tpy)(DPPZ)(CH3CN)-ODN conjugates represent a new class of oligonucleotides containing the photoactivatible Ru2+ complexes, which can successfully crosslink to the complementary strand. The mechanism of cross-linking upon photoirradiation of [Ru2+(tpy)(DPPZ)(CH3CN)-ODN]•DNA involves in situ conversion to the reactive [Ru2+(tpy)(DPPZ)(H2O)-ODN]•DNA which are subsequently cross-linked through the G residue of the complementary DNA strand. All starting materials and products have been purified by HPLC and/or by PAGE and subsequently characterized by MALDI-TOF as well as ESI mass spectroscopy. Terminal conjugation of the planar Pnz and DPPZ groups through the flexible linkers were also shown to improve thermal stability of the ODN•RNA hybrid duplexes without alteration of the initial AB-type global helical structure as revealed from CD experiments. As a result, RNase H mediated cleavage of the RNA strand in the intercalator-tethered ODN•RNA duplexes was more efficient compared to the natural counterpart. The RNase H cleavage pattern was also found to be dependent on the chemical nature of the chromophore. It appeared that introduction of a tether at the 3'-end of the ODN can be most easily tolerated by the enzyme regardless of the nature of the appending chromophore. The tethered DPPZ group has also been shown to chelate Cu2+ and Fe3+, like phenanthroline group, followed by the formation of redox-active metal complex which cleaves the complementary DNA strand in a sequence-specific manner. This shows that the choice of appropriate ligand is useful to (i) attain improved intercalation giving Tm enhancement, and (ii) sequence-specifically inactivate target RNA or DNA molecules using multiple modes of chemistry (RNase H mediated cleavage, free-radical, oxidative pathways or photocross-linkage).
10

Studies on Nucleic Acids – Structure and Dynamics

Isaksson, Johan January 2005 (has links)
This thesis is based on six papers, Papers I-VI, focusing on the interplay between the stabilizing elements of nucleic acids self-assembly; hydrogen bonding, stacking and solvent effects. In Paper I we investigate how the substitution of the O4' for CH2 in the sugar moiety of adenosine (2'-deoxyaristeromycin) at the A6 position of the Dickerson-Drew dodecamer makes the two modified bases exist in a dynamic equilibrium between Hoogsteen and Watson-Crick base pairing in the NMR time scale. Paper II is a structural study of the incorporation of 1-(1',3'-O-anhydro-β-D-psicofuranosyl)thymine in the T7 position of the Dickerson-Drew dodecamer. NMR constrained molecular dynamics and hydration studies show the base-base distortions caused by the introduction of a North-type locked sugar in an otherwise B-type DNA•DNA duplex. Paper III shows that the stacking distortion caused by the 1-(1',3'-O-anhydro-β-D-psicofuranosyl)thymine building block perturbs the charge transfer similar to a DNA mismatch. Paper IV highlights how the sequence context affects the physico-chemical properties, monitored by the pKa of guanine itself as well as how the charge perturbation is experienced by the neighboring bases, in ssDNA and ssRNA. Paper V focuses on the differences between the structural equilibria of single-stranded ssDNA and ssRNA. Directional differences in single-stranded stacking between ssDNA and ssRNA are identified and provide a basis to explain directional differences in pKa modulation and dangling-end stabilization. In Paper VI the thermodynamic gains of dangling ends on DNA and RNA core duplexes are found to correlate with the X-ray geometries of dangling nucleobases relative to the hydrogen bonds of the closing base pairs.

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