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Research Article

Predicting DNA duplex stability from the base sequence

K J Breslauer, R Frank, H Blöcker, and L A Marky
PNAS June 1, 1986 83 (11) 3746-3750; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.83.11.3746
K J Breslauer
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R Frank
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H Blöcker
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L A Marky
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Abstract

We report the complete thermodynamic library of all 10 Watson-Crick DNA nearest-neighbor interactions. We obtained the relevant thermodynamic data from calorimetric studies on 19 DNA oligomers and 9 DNA polymers. We show how these thermodynamic data can be used to calculate the stability and predict the temperature-dependent behavior of any DNA duplex structure from knowledge of its base sequence. We illustrate our method of calculation by using the nearest-neighbor data to predict transition enthalpies and free energies for a series of DNA oligomers. These predicted values are in excellent agreement with the corresponding values determined experimentally. This agreement demonstrates that a DNA duplex structure thermodynamically can be considered to be the sum of its nearest-neighbor interactions. Armed with this knowledge and the nearest-neighbor thermodynamic data reported here, scientists now will be able to predict the stability (delta G degree) and the melting behavior (delta H degree) of any DNA duplex structure from inspection of its primary sequence. This capability should prove valuable in numerous applications, such as predicting the stability of a probe-gene complex; selecting optimal conditions for a hybridization experiment; deciding on the minimum length of a probe; predicting the influence of a specific transversion or transition on the stability of an affected DNA region; and predicting the relative stabilities of local domains within a DNA duplex.

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Predicting DNA duplex stability from the base sequence
K J Breslauer, R Frank, H Blöcker, L A Marky
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Jun 1986, 83 (11) 3746-3750; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.83.11.3746

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Predicting DNA duplex stability from the base sequence
K J Breslauer, R Frank, H Blöcker, L A Marky
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Jun 1986, 83 (11) 3746-3750; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.83.11.3746
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