dna packing: characterizing intermolecular contacts of dna bryson w. finklea st. john's college...

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DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

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Page 1: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

DNA PACKING:

Characterizing Intermolecular

Contacts of DNA

Bryson W. Finklea

St. John's College

DIMACS REU

Page 2: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Outline:

● Background

● Symmetry

● My Project

Page 3: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Outline:

● Background

● Symmetry

● My Project

Page 4: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Different representations of the same DNA(18 base pairs color-coded according to base identity)

Background

(http://siggy.chem.ucla.edu/~tim/chemistry/DNA.jpg)

Page 5: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

In nature each human cell has 3 billion DNA base pairs

(about 2 meters long)

Background

(Human Genome Project Information of the DOE)

Page 6: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Cube built from DNAin nanotechnology lab

In nature each human cell has 3 billion DNA base pairs

(about 2 meters long)

Background

(Human Genome Project Information of the DOE) (Dr. Nadrian Seeman, Department of Chemistry, New York University)

Page 7: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Background

Molecular Crystals(often microscopic)*

(www.scripps.edu/newsandviews/e_20010129/chang-2.html)

*These are similar examples from proteins instead of DNA.

Page 8: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

DNA X-Ray Diffraction Pattern*

Background

Molecular Crystals(often microscopic)*

(www.scripps.edu/newsandviews/e_20010129/chang-2.html) (http://userpage.chemie.fu-berlin.de/~psf/ifv_psfx.htm)

*These are similar examples from proteins instead of DNA.

Page 9: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Outline:

● Background

● Symmetry

● My Project

Page 10: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Crystal – a solid with regularly repeating arrangement of atoms

Unit Cell – •the basic unit of symmetry•an arrangement of atoms that repeats in every direction

3D Symmetry

(Unknown)

Page 11: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Example of 2D symmetry in a

wallpaper pattern

(http://www.clarku.edu/~djoyce/wallpaper/)

Page 12: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Example of 2D symmetry in a

wallpaper pattern

To show symmetry:

●pick a point

Page 13: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Example of 2D symmetry in a

wallpaper pattern

To show symmetry:

●pick a point

●find all equivalent points

Page 14: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Example of 2D symmetry in a

wallpaper pattern

To show symmetry:

●pick a point

●find all equivalent points

●the points form a 2D lattice

Page 15: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Example of 2D symmetry in a

wallpaper pattern

● Connecting 4 lattice points to form a parallelogram gives a possible unit cell

● Unit cell – the basic unit that repeats in every direction

● Different unit cells can be chosen

●But some unit cells are preferable for higher symmetry

Page 16: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Symmetry is defined by symmetry elements

Four possible symmetry elements in 2D:•Rotation points (by 60°, 90°, 120°, or 180°)•Reflection axes•Glide reflection axes (reflection and translation)•Inversion points•(Translation)

Symmetry operations –the actual changes carried outin relation to a symmetry element

3D Symmetry

Page 17: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Symmetry elements of this wallpaper group

Reflection Axis

Glide Reflection Axis

90° Rotation Point

180° Rotation Point

Example of 2D symmetry in a

wallpaper pattern

(http://www.clarku.edu/~djoyce/wallpaper/)

Page 18: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Symmetry elements of this wallpaper group

Reflection Axis

Glide Reflection Axis

90° Rotation Point

180° Rotation Point

Example of 2D symmetry in a

wallpaper pattern

●Unit cell

Page 19: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Symmetry elements of this wallpaper group

Reflection Axis

Glide Reflection Axis

90° Rotation Point

180° Rotation Point

●Asymmetric Unit –the simplest unit on which the symmetry operations can act to produce the entire symmetrical structure*

Example of 2D symmetry in a

wallpaper pattern

●Unit cell*

* Although the spirit of what I show is correct, it appears from the following website that my choice of conventional unit cell and choice of asymmetric unit may be unconventional or even wrong. See the last example in the n=4 section of the following website: http://jwilson.coe.uga.edu/EMT668/EMAT6680.F99/McCallum/WALLPA~1/SEVENT~1.HTM

Page 20: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Generalized 3D unit cell—a parallelepiped

3D Symmetry

(Unknown)

Page 21: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

3D Symmetry

Crystal – a solid with regularly repeating arrangement of atoms

Unit Cell – •the basic unit of symmetry•an arrangement of atoms that repeats in every direction

(Different colors are different copies of the same asymmetric unit)

Page 22: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Six symmetry elements in 3D:•Rotation axes (by 60°, 90°, 120°, or 180°)•Reflection planes•Glide reflection planes (reflection and translation)•Inversion points•(Translation)

•Screw Axes (translation and rotation)•Rotary inversion axes (rotation and inversion)

Sets of symmetry operations form algebraic groups calledspace groups.

•230 space groups

3D Symmetry

Page 23: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Asymmetric unit Unit cell 27 adjacent unit cells

3D Symmetry

Page 24: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Outline:

● Background

● Symmetry

● My Project

Page 25: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA

Data from Nucleic Acid Database (NDB):●orthogonal coordinates of atoms in an asymmetric unit●equivalent positions in equation form (info from symmetry elements)●unit cell dimensions and angles

To revise a computer program to:●reconstruct coordinates of the atoms in a unit cell●…then in a 3x3x3 block of unit cells●make measurements of interesting properties of contacts between molecules of DNA (Examples: distances, angles between axes,…)

My Project

Page 26: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Asymmetric unit Unit cell 27 adjacent unit cells

3D Symmetry

Page 27: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Final Presentation:

●Details on computer program structure and images created using its output

●Specification of important DNA molecular contacts and report of findings

●Perhaps more details on mathematics of space groups, including notation used

Page 28: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

References:

DNA for the layman:

Understanding DNA, Calladine and Drew, 3rd edition.

Symmetry in crystals, including space group theory:

Crystal Structure Analysis for Chemist and Biologists, Glusker, et al, Ch. 1, 2, and 4.

X-Ray Analysis and the Structure of Organic Molecules,Dunitz, Ch. 2.

Molecular structure databases (on web):

Nucleic Acid Database (NDB), Protein Data Bank (PDB),Cambridge Structural Database (CSB)

Page 29: DNA PACKING: Characterizing Intermolecular Contacts of DNA Bryson W. Finklea St. John's College DIMACS REU

Acknowledgments

DIMACS REUNSF Support

Advisor:

Wilma Olson, Department of Chemistry,

Rutgers University

Additional Advisors:

A.R. Srinivasan, Department of Chemistry

Rutgers University

Andrew Colasanti, Department of Molecular BiologyRutgers University(background: http://www.karolinskaeducation.ki.se/services/courses/selection_courses_se.html)