Abstract
Capillary vibrating sharp-edge spray ionization (cVSSI) combined with hydrogen/deuterium exchange-mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) has been utilized to characterize different solution-phase DNA conformers including DNA G-quadruplex topologies as well as triplex DNA and duplex DNA. In general, G-quadruplex DNA shows a wide range of protection of hydrogens extending from ~12% to ~21% deuterium incorporation. Additionally, parallel, antiparallel, and hybrid G-quadruplex topologies exhibit slight differences in deuterium uptake levels. Notably, the exchange levels for hybrid sub topologies of G-quadruplex DNA (Hybrid 1 and Hybrid 2) are significantly different although the DNA sequences are highly comparable. For the quadruplex-forming sequences, correlation analysis suggests protection of base hydrogens involved in tetrad hydrogen bonding. For duplex DNA ~19% deuterium incorporation is observed while only ~16% is observed for triplex DNA. This increased protection of hydrogens may be due to the added backbone scaffolding and Hoogsteen base pairing of the latter species. These experiments lay the groundwork for future studies aimed at determining the structural source of this protection as well as the applicability of the approach for ascertaining different oligonucleotide folds and co-existing conformations.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information
Description
This file contains the supporting information for manuscript submission for publication considerationi.
Actions