Hurrying for a meeting this morning, I did not notice the new set of 4 structures you attached when I posted my previous reply. Now things are becoming quite interesting. My arguments with regard to the first set of four structures you provided (
Srini_PP.pdb, Srini_MM.pdb, Srini_PM.pdb and Srini_MP.pdb) still hold, i.e., PP=MM, and PM≈MP. There is no such things as "four distinctly different structures" there.
The new set of four structures (
Srini_pp1.pdb, Srini_mm1.pdb, Srini_pm1.pdb, Srini_mp1.pdb), hereafter referred as PP1, MM1, PM1 and MP1, are completely different from the first set. 3DNA has no problem in identifying the four distinct forms, based on exactly the same algorithm as described in the
1997 JMB SCHNAaP paper. For example, for MM1, the output from 3DNA is as below:
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Structure classification:
This is a right-handed unknown R-form structure
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More specifically, Figure 7 of the SCHNAaP paper answers this question:
Figure 7. A representation of four possible arrangements for antiparallel nucleic acid duplexes. Left-handed W and Z-DNA are shown on the left (the characteristic zig-zag backbone pattern is not represented for simplicity). Right-handed A/B and hypothetical R-DNA are shown on the right. The Twist free ladder forms are shown in the middle column. In the top row, the minor groove faces the viewer, while in the bottom row, the major groove faces the viewer. The SCHNAaP coordinate system is also shown. These structures were generated using SCHNArP (see accompanying paper) with Twist= ±36° (0° for the ladder forms), Rise=3.34 Å, and all other step parameters are set to zero. Color scheme: the minor groove side, dark green; the major groove side, light green; and the backbone, red.
In connection with the new set of 4 structures, they correspond to the four forms classified in 3DNA (SCHNAaP) as below:
- PM1: W-form, left-handed
- MP1: Z-form, left-handed
- PP1: A/B-form, right-handed
- MM1: R-form, right-handed
Also as in SCHNAaP, right-handed structures (PP1/MM1) have positive Twist, and left-handed structures (PM1/MP1) have negative Twist. Moreover, they all have
positive Rise.
I am really pleased to see the model structures representing the 4 possible distinct forms of double helices. I will consider to include them in future releases of the 3DNA distribution.
Xiang-Jun