Abstract
We report that oligodeoxynucleotides which form stem-loop hairpin structures and which have pyrimidine-rich loops can form strong complexes with complementary single-stranded DNA sequences. Stem-loop oligonucleotides were constructed with a 25-nt T-rich loop and with variable Watson-Crick stems. The complexes of these oligomers with the sequence dAgwere studied by thermal denaturation. Evidence is presented that the complexes are one-to-one, bimolecular complexes in which the pyrimidine loop bases comprise the outer strands in a pyr · pur · pyr triplex, in effect chelating the purine strand in the center of the loop. Melting temperatures for the loop complexes are shown to be up to 29 °C higher than Watson- Crick duplex of the same length. It is shown that the presence of a stem increases stability of the triplex relative to an analogous oligomer without a stem. The effect of stem length on the stability of such a complex is examined. Such hairpin oligomers represent a new approach to the sequence-specific binding of single-stranded RNA and DNA. In addition, the finding raises the possibility that such a complex may exist in natural RNA folded sequences.