Chapter 2 – Orientation for the Bio-Curious 33
The nucleotide subunits can link to each other in two places, defined by the numbered
positions of the carbon atoms in the structure, in either the 3′ or the 5′ position (Figure 2.3d),
via a nucleosidic bond, again involving the loss of a molecule of water, which still permit
further linking of additional nucleotides from both the end 3′ and 5′ positions that were not
utilized in internucleotide binding, which can thus be subsequently repeated for adding more
subunits. In this way, a chain consisting of a potentially very long sequence of nucleotides
can be generated; natural DNA molecules in live cells can have a contour length of several
microns.
DNA strands have an ability to stably bind via base pair interactions (also known as
Watson–Crick base pairing) to another complementary strand of DNA. Here, the indi
vidual nucleotides can form stable multiple hydrogen bonds to nucleotides in the com
plementary strand due to the tessellating nature of either the C–G (three internucleotide
H-bonds) or A–T (two internucleotide H-bonds) structures, generating a double-helical
structure such that the H-bonds of the base pairs span the axial core of the double helix,
while the negatively charged phosphate groups protrude away from the axis on the outside
of the double helix, thus providing additional stability through minimization of electro
static repulsion.
This base pairing is utilized in DNA replication and in reading out of the genetic code
stored in the DNA molecule to make proteins. In DNA replication, errors can occur spon
taneously from base pairing mismatch for which noncomplementary nucleotide bases are
paired, but there are error-checking machines that can detect a substantial proposal of
these errors during replication and correct them. Single-stranded DNA can exist, but in
the living cell, this is normally a transient state that is either stabilized by the binding of
specific proteins or will rapidly base pair with a strand having a complementary nucleotide
sequence.
Other interactions can occur above and below the planes of the nucleotide bases due
to the overlap of delocalized electron orbitals from the nucleotide rings, called “stacking
interactions,” which may result in heterogeneity in the DNA helical structures that are
dependent upon both the nucleotide sequence and the local physical chemistry environment,
which may result in different likelihood values for specific DNA structures than the base
pairing interactions along might suggest. For the majority of time under normal conditions
inside the cell, DNA will adopt a right-handed helical conformation (if the thumb of your
right hand was aligned with the helix axis and your relaxed, index finger of that hand would
follow the grooves of the helix as they rotate around the axis) called “B-DNA” (Figure 2.3d),
whose helical width is 2.0 nm and helical pitch is 3.4 nm consisting of a mean of 10.5 base
pair turns. Other stable helical conformations exist including A-DNA, which has a smaller
helical pitch and wider width than B-DNA, as well as Z-DNA, which is a stable left-handed
double helix. In addition, more complex structures can form through base pairing of mul
tiple strands, including triple-helix structures and Holliday junctions in which four indi
vidual strands may be involved.
The importance of the phosphate backbone of DNA, that is, the helical lines of phos
phate groups that protrude away from the central DNA helix to the outside, should not be
underestimated, however. A close inspection of native DNA phosphate backbones indicate
that this repeating negative charge is not only used by certain enzymes to recognize spe
cific parts of DNA to bind to but perhaps more importantly is essential for the structural
stability of the double helix. For example, replacing the phosphate groups chemically using
noncharged groups results in significant structural instability for any DNA segment longer
than 100 nucleotide base pairs. Therefore, although the Watson–Crick base pair model
includes no role for the phosphate background in DNA, it is just as essential.
KEY POINT 2.9
Although DNA can adopt stable double-helical structures by virtue of base pairing,
several different double-helical structures exist, and DNA may also adopt more com
plex nonhelical structures.