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Molecular modeling and dynamics studies of HIV-1 kissing loop structures

  1. Author:
    Pattabiraman, N.
    Martinez, H. M.
    Shapiro, B. A.
  2. Author Address

    Georgetown Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Oncol, 3970 Reservoir Rd NW, Washington, DC 20057 USA NCI, SAIC, Adv Biomed Comp Ctr, Frederick, MD 21702 USA NCI, Ctr Canc Res, Lab Expt & Computat Biol, Frederick, MD 21702 USA Pattabiraman N Georgetown Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Oncol, 3970 Reservoir Rd NW, Washington, DC 20057 USA
    1. Year: 2002
  1. Journal: Journal of Biomolecular Structure & Dynamics
    1. 20
    2. 3
    3. Pages: 397-411
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    Recognition of an RNA loop by another RNA loop is involved in several biological functions. The dimerization. of two copies of the HIV-1 genomic RNA is thought to be involved in several steps of the retroviral life cycle. It has been shown that the dimerization of the two HIV-1 RNA genomes is initiated by the so-called "kissing loop". The 9nt kissing loop consists of a palindromic 6nt sequence that forms Watson-Crick base-pairs at the kissing site in HIV-1. We report the results of our molecular modeling and dynamics studies on two major subtype isolates (MAL and LAI) of HIV-1 kissing loop structures. From our modeling studies, we conclude that the conformation of the loop in the monomer might be closer to the "A-RNA-like" conformation in order to form an initial kissing structure. This is achieved by the stacking interactions of the bases at the 3' end of the loop and by the intramolecular tertiary interactions of a single linker nucleotide. We discuss the effect of the loop size and the structural limitations on the formation of kissing loop structures. Also, we propose a possible mechanism to convert the kissing loop structure to a stable extended duplex structure without unwinding the stems.

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