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The sequence-dependent structural variability and conformational dynamics of DNA play pivotal roles in many biological milieus, such as in the site-specific binding of transcription factors to target regulatory elements. To better understand DNA stru cture, function, and dynamics in general, and protein-DNA recognition in the kB family of genetic regulatory elements in particular, we performed molecular dynamics simulations of a 20-base pair DNA encompassing a cognate kB site recognized by the proto-oncogenic c-Rel subfamily of NF-kB transcription factors. Simulations of the kB DNA in explicit water were extended to microsecond duration, providing a broad, atomically-detailed glimpse into the structural and dynamical behavior of double helical DNA over many timescales. Of particular note, novel (and structurally plausible) conformations of DNA developed only at the long times sampled in this simulation -- including a peculiar state arising at ~ 0.7 us and characterized by cross-strand intercalative stacking of nucleotides within a longitudinally-sheared base pair, followed (at ~ 1 us) by spontaneous base flipping of a neighboring thymine within the A-rich duplex. Results and predictions from the us-scale simulation include implications for a dynamical NF-kB recognition motif, and are amenable to testing and further exploration via specific experimental approaches that are suggested herein.
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