While DNA inside the cells is predominantly canonical right-handed double helix, guanine-rich DNAs have potential to fold into four-stranded structures that contain stacks of G-quartets (G4 DNA quadruplex). Genome sequencing… Click to show full abstract
While DNA inside the cells is predominantly canonical right-handed double helix, guanine-rich DNAs have potential to fold into four-stranded structures that contain stacks of G-quartets (G4 DNA quadruplex). Genome sequencing has revealed G4 sequences tend to localize at the gene control regions, especially in the promoters of oncogenes. A growing body of evidence indicates that G4 DNA quadruplexes might have important regulatory roles in genome function, highlighting the need for techniques to detect genome-wide folding of DNA into this structure. Potassium permanganate in vivo treatment of cells results in oxidizing of nucleotides in single-stranded DNA regions that accompany G4 DNA quadruplexes formation, providing an excellent probe for the conformational state of DNA inside the living cells. Here, we describe a permanganate-based methodology to detect G4 DNA quadruplex, genome-wide. This methodology combined with high-throughput sequencing provides a snapshot of the DNA conformation over the whole genome in vivo.
               
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