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1.
The interactions and binding characteristics of DNA dyes used in the flow cytometric analysis of chromatin were studied using human chromosomes and mouse thymocyte nuclei. The kinetics of dye binding and the relationship between fluorescence intensity and dye concentration are presented. Under the conditions used, Hoechst 33258, propidium iodide and chromomycin A3 reach an equilibrium with thymocyte nuclei after approximately 5 min, 20 min and more than 1 h, respectively. The same binding kinetics are observed with Hoechst 33258 and chromomycin when nuclei are stained with a mixture of the two dyes. Sodium citrate, which improves the resolution of flow karyotypes, causes a rapid increase in Hoechst and propidium iodide fluorescence, but a decrease in the fluorescence of chromomycin. The relative peak positions of chromosomes in a flow karyotype are unaffected by sodium citrate addition. The spectral interaction between Hoechst and chromomycin is quantified. There is variation among the human chromosome types in the amount of energy transferred from Hoechst to chromomycin. By measuring the Hoechst and chromomycin fluorescence of each chromosome after Hoechst excitation, it is shown that the amount of energy transferred is correlated to the ratio of the amount of Hoechst to chromomycin bound. Although the energy transfer between the two dyes is considerable, this has little effect on the reproducibility of flow karyotype measurements. The relative peak positions of all human chromosomes in a 64 X 64 channel flow karyotype, except for the 13 and Y chromosomes, vary in the order of 0.5 channel over a 16-fold change in either Hoechst or chromomycin concentration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Summary The interactions and binding characteristics of DNA dyes used in the flow cytometric analysis of chromatin were studied using human chromosomes and mouse thymocyte nuclei. The kinetics of dye binding and the relationship between fluorescence intensity and dye concentration are presented. Under the conditions used, Hoechst 33258, propidium iodide and chromomycin A3 reach an equilibrium with thymocyte nuclei after approximately 5 min, 20 min and more than 1 h, respectively. The same binding kinetics are observed with Hoechst 33258 and chromomycin when nuclei are stained with a mixture of the two dyes. Sodium citrate, which improves the resolution of flow karyotypes, causes a rapid increase in Hoechst and propidium iodide fluorescence, but a decrease in the fluorescence of chromomycin. The relative peak positions of chromosomes in a flow karyotype are unaffected by sodium citrate addition. The spectral interaction between Hoechst and chromomycin is quantified. There is variation among the human chromosome types in the amount of energy transferred from Hoechst to chromomycin. By measuring the Hoechst and chromomycin fluorescence of each chromosome after Hoechst excitation, it is shown that the amount of energy transferred is correlated to the ratio of the amount of Hoechst to chromomycin bound. Although the energy transfer between the two dyes is considerable, this has little effect on the reproducibility of flow karyotype measurements. The relative peak positions of all human chromosomes in a 64×64 channel flow karyotype, except for the 13 and Y chromosomes, vary in the order of 0.5 channel over a 16-fold change in either Hoechst or chromomycin concentration. This implies that, with the present flow cytometers, variation in staining conditions will have minimal effects on the reproducibility of the relative peak positions in flow karyotypes.In honour of Prof. P. van Duijn  相似文献   

3.
H M Shapiro  S Stephens 《Cytometry》1986,7(1):107-110
The laser dyes oxazine 750 (OX750), LD700, and rhodamine 800 (R800) can be used in an instrument employing a low-power helium-neon laser source for flow cytometry of DNA content in ethanol-fixed or detergent-permeabilized cells. Cells in near-isotonic medium are stained with 10-30 microM dye, and fluorescence excited at 633 nm is measured at wavelengths above 665 nm. The dyes do not appear to stain RNA, and the intensity of DNA staining is not changed when 2 microM Hoechst 33342 is added to cells simultaneously with a red-excited dye. The effects on fluorescence of addition of DNA to LD700 or R800 in aqueous solution are strongly influenced by the base composition of the DNA; binding mechanisms remain to be determined.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: Different plant species vary as to the ratio of nucleotide base pairs of genomic DNA. A correlation between genome size and base pair ratio has been claimed. Base composition can be analyzed by base-specific dyes. METHODS: Genome size is determined by flow cytometry of suspensions of nuclei stained by the base independent dye, PI. For estimation of the AT frequency, the AT-specific dyes 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole, dihydrochloride (DAPI) and Hoechst 33342 (HO) were used. We define a dye factor (DF) as the ratio of the two estimates (peak ratios) of nuclear fluorescence intensities of sample relative to reference plant nuclei using a given dye and an intercalating fluorochrome. RESULTS: No significant correlation between genome size and the DF for DAPI was found when 54 plant species were investigated. However, similarities within and differences among the plant families were shown. The comparison of DAPI and HO DFs gave no consistent differences as would be predicted from the model of different binding site length of dyes. This result may be explained by the nonrandom distribution of base pairs. CONCLUSIONS: There is no general correlation between genome size and AT/GC ratio in higher plants. Similar AT/GC ratios within a plant family result from the general similarity of the DNA sequences within a family. The fluorescence of base-specific dyes is influenced by the nonrandom distribution of bases in the DNA molecule.  相似文献   

5.
Photo-bleaching and photon saturation in flow cytometry.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
G van den Engh  C Farmer 《Cytometry》1992,13(7):669-677
In flow cytometry, small particles travel at a high speed through a bright light spot. The high light intensity at the point of measurement causes measurable photon saturation. This observation indicates that the rate at which individual dye molecules emit photons is close to the maximum emission rate. Despite the short exposure time, individual molecules may go through a few hundred excitation cycles while they are in the light beam. The absorbed light dose causes significant dye destruction. This article presents experimental procedures to determine the extent of photon saturation and photo-bleaching of dyes bound to cell nuclei in a flow cytometer. Measurements of Hoechst and propidium iodide bound to chromatin show that the amount of dye bleached per emitted photon is the same at low and high illumination intensities. This finding indicates that photon emission and dye destruction are both the result of the absorption of single excitation photons. The experimental observations allow rough estimates of the lifetime of the excited state and the lifetime of the molecule. The lifetime of the Hoechst 33258 bound to DNA is estimated to be 100 excitation-relaxation cycles. The average propidium iodide molecule lasts approximately 200 excitation-relaxation cycles. The theoretical considerations show that the optimal illumination conditions are different for bleaching and nonbleaching dyes. An optical arrangement for high precision measurements of bleaching dyes is presented.  相似文献   

6.
S A Latt  M Marino  M Lalande 《Cytometry》1984,5(4):339-347
The spectroscopic properties of three new dyes, EK4, VL772, and LL585, free and bound to nucleic acids, are presented, with particular emphasis on their potential use in flow cytometry. Two of these dyes, EK4 and LL585, exhibit red fluorescence, while dye VL772 exhibits yellow fluorescence. Dye LL585 exhibits specificity for DNA, relative to RNA, and a marked enhancement of fluorescence efficiency upon binding to DNA, needed for a red fluorescent DNA-specific stain for flow cytometry. The dye penetrates live cells, although uniformity of nuclear fluorescence, as evidenced by DNA flow histograms, is better if the cells are first permeabilized with Triton X-100. Dye VL772 exhibits yellow fluorescence and little DNA-RNA discrimination, but may prove useful in conjunction with dye LL585 when simultaneous assay of cellular RNA and DNA is desired. Dye EK4 shares properties of the other two dyes but fluoresces with much less efficiency. Dyes LL585 and VL772, used singly, as a pair, or in combination with blue-fluorescing DNA specific dyes, such as bisbenzimidazole derivatives, should permit new, convenient analyses of the content and organization of cellular nucleic acids.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND:The detection of DNA-incorporated bromodeoxyuridine (BrdUrd) in mammalian cells is a well-known and important technique to study cell cycle. The use of TO-PRO-3 for detection of BrdUrd substitution of DNA by dual-laser flow cytometry has been investigated. METHODS:Fluorescence enhancement of TO-PRO-3 in BrdUrd-labeled cells is registered in combination with the fluorescence emission of the intercalating dye propidium iodide (PI) as a total DNA stain to give bivariate DNA/BrdUrd histograms. By the low concentration of only 0.3 mircoM TO-PRO-3, BrdUrd detection is optimized, and undisturbed total DNA content by PI can be detected as well. TO-PRO-3 is excited by a red HeNe laser and PI by an argon ion laser. RESULTS:In order to understand the binding of TO-PRO-3, energy transfer from PI to TO-PRO-3 has been measured as well as the influence of an external DNA binding dye such as Hoechst 33258 with Adenine-Thymine (AT) binding specificity. Cell cycle studies of human SCL-2 keratinocytes and mouse 3T3 cells prove the method to be as generally applicable as the classical BrdUrd/Hoechst quenching technique, but without need for expensive ultraviolet laser excitation. No BrdUrd sensitivity could be found for the similar dyes TO-PRO-1 and YO-PRO-3, whereas TO-PRO-5 and YOYO-3 showed only very little sensitivity to BrdUrd labeling as compared with TO-PRO-3. CONCLUSIONS:Cell cycle studies of mammalian cells can be done by dual-laser flow cytometry without the need for ultraviolet lasers by using the BrdUrd-dependent fluorescence enhancement of TO-PRO-3. Total DNA content can be measured simultaneously using PI.  相似文献   

8.
BACKGROUND: Many methods in flow cytometry rely on staining DNA with a fluorescent dye to gauge DNA content. From the relative intensity of the fluorescence signature, one can then infer position in cell cycle, amount of DNA (i.e., for sperm selection), or, as in the case of flow karyotyping, to distinguish individual chromosomes. This work examines the staining of murine thymocytes with a common DNA dye, Hoechst 33342, to investigate nonlinearities in the florescence intensity as well as chromatic shifts. METHODS: Murine thymocytes were stained with Hoechst 33342 and measured in a flow cytometer at two fluorescence emission bands. In other measurements, cells were stained at different dye concentrations, and then centrifuged. The supernatant was then used for a second round of staining to test the amount of dye uptake. Finally, to test for resonant energy transfer, we measured fluorescence anisotropy at two different wavelengths. RESULTS: The fluorescence of cells stained with Hoechst 33342 is a nonlinear process that shows an overall decrease in intensity with increased dye uptake, and spectral shift to the red. Along with the spectral shift of the fluorescence to the longer wavelengths, we document decreases in the fluorescence anisotropy that may indicate resonant energy transfer. CONCLUSIONS: At low concentrations, Hoechst 33342 binds to the minor groove of DNA and shows an increase in fluorescence and a blue shift upon binding. At higher concentrations, at which the dye molecules can no longer bind without overlapping, the blue fluorescence decreases and the red fluorescence increases until there is approximately one dye molecule per DNA base pair. The ratio of the blue fluorescence to the red fluorescence is an accurate indicator of the cellular dye concentration.  相似文献   

9.
H B Steen  T Stokke 《Cytometry》1986,7(1):104-106
Fluorescence spectra of ethanol-fixed rat thymocytes stained with the DNA-specific dye Hoechst 33258 have been measured in an arc lamp-based flow cytometer including a grating monochromator in front of the fluorescence detector. Spectral resolution was 5-10 nm. Increasing dye concentration was found to yield an increasing shift of the fluorescence spectrum toward longer wavelengths, thus supporting previous work on soluble DNA that indicated several different binding modes of this dye. The results show that similar data may be obtained for all commonly used DNA-specific dyes. It appears that this type of spectral information may be used to probe the structure of cell chromatin.  相似文献   

10.
Accurate measurement of single DNA fragments by DNA fragment sizing flow cytometry (FSFC) depends upon precise, stoichiometric DNA staining by the intercalating dye molecules. In this study, we determined the binding characteristics of a commercially available 532 nm wavelength-excitable dye and used this information to develop a universal DNA staining protocol for DNA FSFC using a compact frequency-doubled Nd:YAG laser excitation source. Among twelve 532 nm wavelength-excitable nucleic acid staining dyes tested, SYTOX Orange stain showed the highest fluorescence intensity along with a large fluorescence enhancement upon binding to double-stranded DNA ( approximately 450-fold). Furthermore, using SYTOX Orange stain, accurate fragment-size-distribution histograms were consistently obtained without regard to the staining dye to base pair (dye/bp) ratio. A model describing two binding modes, intercalation (primary, yielding fluorescence) and external binding (secondary, involving fluorescence quenching), was proposed to interpret the performance of the dyes under different dye/bp ratios. The secondary equilibrium dissociation constant was found to be the most critical parameter in determining the sensitivity of each fluorophore to the staining dye/bp ratio. The measurements of both equilibrium dissociation constants provided us with a theoretical framework for developing a universal protocol which was successfully demonstrated over a wide range of DNA concentrations on a compact flow cytometer equipped with a frequency-doubled, diode-pumped, solid-state Nd:YAG laser for rapid and sensitive DNA fragment sizing.  相似文献   

11.
Fluorescence spectra of Hoechst 33258 bound to rat thymocytes were measured by flow cytometry. At low dye concentrations (less than or equal to 2 micrograms/ml) the fluorescence maximum was situated at 460 nm irrespective of solvent composition. With higher dye concentrations the fluorescence maximum was shifted upwards, the intensity decreased and the width of the fluorescence peak increased. Linear combinations of a spectrum obtained at a low dye concentration (0.5 microgram/ml, type 1 binding) and one obtained at a high dye concentration (42.4 micrograms/ml, type 2 binding) failed to reproduce spectra measured at intermediate dye concentrations (0.15 M NaCl). Hence, Hoechst 33258 forms at least three different fluorescing complexes with DNA in chromatin. The shift in the fluorescence maximum of the Hoechst 33258/chromatin complex towards higher wavelengths decreased with ionic strength. 25% ethanol in the 0.15 M NaCl staining buffer reduced the wavelength shift at high dye concentrations, indicating that the strength of type 2 binding depends on DNA conformation in addition to ionic strength. The fluorescence spectrum was independent of whether DNA in chromatin was complexed with histones or not. However, histone-depleted thymocytes fluoresced more intensely than cells in which DNA was complexed with histones, the difference being greater at low concentrations of Hoechst 33258. Hence, type 2 binding to DNA in chromatin appears to be less restricted by histones than type 1 binding.  相似文献   

12.
T Stokke  H B Steen 《Cytometry》1986,7(3):227-234
The binding of Hoechst 33258 to rat thymocytes, human lymphocytes, and NHIK 3025 tissue culture cells was studied by measuring the fluorescence and light scattering of the cells as functions of dye concentration using flow cytometry. The results indicated that there were two different modes of binding of Hoechst 33258 to chromatin in situ at physiological pH. Type 1 binding, which dominated at total dye/phosphate ratios below 0.1 (0.15, M), was characterized by a binding constant of the order 10(7) M-1 and fluorescence with high quantum yield. Further binding of the dye resulted in a reduced blue/green fluorescence ratio, indicating that secondary sites were occupied. Binding at secondary sites above a certain density (0.1 less than or equal to bound dye/phosphate less than or equal to 0.2) induced strong quenching of fluorescence and precipitation of chromatin. Precipitation was quantitated by measuring the large-angle (greater than or equal to 15 degrees) light scattering of the cells above 400 nm, i.e., outside the Hoechst 33258/DNA absorption spectrum, as a function of dye concentration. In contrast, the light scattering at 365 nm, i.e., within the absorption spectrum of Hoechst 33258/DNA, was independent of the total dye/phosphate ratio. The coefficient of variation of the light-scattering (greater than or equal to 400 nm) histograms decreased with Hoechst 33258 concentration. Type 2 binding to histone-depleted chromatin was cooperative (Hill-coefficient approximately 2) and the apparent binding constant was 2-3 X 10(5) M-1 as determined from quenching and precipitation data.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
A generic oligodeoxyribonucleotide microchip was used to determine the sequence specificity of Hoechst 33258 binding to double-stranded DNA. The generic microchip contained 4096 oxctadeoxynucleo-tides in which all possible 4(6)= 4096 hexadeoxy-nucleotide sequences are flanked on both the 3'- and 5'-ends with equimolar mixtures of four bases. The microchip was manufactured by chemical immobilization of presynthesized 8mers within polyacrylamide gel pads. A selected set of immobilized 8mers was converted to double-stranded form by hybridization with a mixture of fluorescently labeled complementary 8mers. Massive parallel measurements of melting curves were carried out for the majority of 2080 6mer duplexes, in both the absence and presence of the Hoechst dye. The sequence-specific affinity for Hoechst 33258 was calculated as the increase in melting temperature caused by ligand binding. The dye exhibited specificity for A:T but not G:C base pairs. The affinity is low for two A:T base pairs, increases significantly for three, and reaches a plateau for four A:T base pairs. The relative ligand affinity for all trinucleotide and tetranucleotide sequences (A/T)(3)and (A/T)(4)was estimated. The free energy of dye binding to several duplexes was calculated from the equilibrium melting curves of the duplexes formed on the oligonucleotide microchips. This method can be used as a general approach for massive screening of the sequence specificity of DNA-binding compounds.  相似文献   

14.
When the fluorescence signal of a dye is being quantified, the staining protocol is an important factor in ensuring accuracy and reproducibility. Increasingly, lipophilic dyes are being used to quantify cellular lipids in microalgae. However, there is little discussion about the sensitivity of these dyes to staining conditions. To address this, microalgae were stained with either the lipophilic dyes often used for lipid quantification (Nile Red and BODIPY) or a lipophilic dye commonly used to stain neuronal cell membranes (DiO), and fluorescence was measured using flow cytometry. The concentration of the cells being stained was found not to affect the fluorescence. Conversely, the concentration of dye significantly affected the fluorescence intensity from either insufficient saturation of the cellular lipids or formation of dye precipitate. Precipitates of all three dyes were detected as events by flow cytometry and fluoresced at a similar intensity as the chlorophyll in the microalgae. Prevention of precipitate formation is, therefore, critical to ensure accurate fluorescence measurement with these dyes. It was also observed that the presence of organic solvents, such as acetone and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), were not required to increase penetration of the dyes into cells and that the presence of these solvents resulted in increased cellular debris. Thus, staining conditions affected the fluorescence of all three lipophilic dyes, but Nile Red was found to have a stable fluorescence intensity that was unaffected by the broadest range of conditions and could be correlated to cellular lipid content.  相似文献   

15.
If two fluorescent dyes with different binding or fluorescence specificities are used simultaneously to stain DNA or chromosomes, the ratio of their fluorescent signals can provide information about base composition or base analogue substitution. Energy transfer between such dye pairs, possible if the fluorescence spectrum of one overlaps the absorption spectrum of the other, can modify observed fluorescence. Microfluorometric measurements were used to document the occurrence of energy transfer between quinacrine or 33258 Hoechst as energy donor and ethidium or 7-aminoactinomycin D as acceptor when used jointly to stain cytologic preparations of human metaphase chromosomes. Use of 7-aminoactinomycin D, a dye with G-C binding specificity, as energy acceptor permitted the identification of human chromosome regions presumptively enriched for clusters of A-T base pairs, based on the resistance of A-T specific fluorescence, from quinacrine or 33258 Hoechst, to energy transfer dependent quenching. The results provide information about basic structural features of metaphase chromosomes, and the associated methodology may prove useful in accentuating specific fluorescent polymorphic chromosome regions.  相似文献   

16.
A number of DNA-binding dyes, with spectral properties making them suitable as components of energy donor-acceptor pairs, are described. If such pairs are used to stain metaphase chromosomes, and if the energy acceptor (e.g., actinomycin D or methyl green) has a binding specificity opposite to the binding or fluorescence specificity of the donor (e.g., 33258 Hoechst, quinacrine or chromomycin A3), contrast in donor fluorescence can be enhanced, leading to patterns selectively highlighting standard or reverse chromosome bands or particular polymorphic regions. Such results presumably reflect chromosomal regions enriched in 10-20 base pair clusters to which the donor binds and fluoresces but to which the acceptor cannot bind. For other pairs, involving counterstains such as netropsin or echinomycin, which are not suitable as energy acceptors, specific changes observed in polymorphic region fluorescence are most likely due to binding competition between dyes. Dye pairs producing contrast by either method can be used to differentiate between homologous chromosomes or to facilitate detection of specific chromosomal rearrangements. Preliminary data indicate that contrast enhancement generated in fixed metaphase chromosomes spread on microscopic slides can also be observed in suspensions of unfixed metaphase chromosomes, reinforcing the expectation that the methodology described will be of use in flow cytometry.  相似文献   

17.
For flow cytometry-based detection as well as susceptibility testing and counting, staining of the bacterial cells is essential. In an attempt to develop rapid preparatory procedures for nucleic acid staining of wild type Gram positive bacteria, the uptake of fluorescent dyes in viable S. aureus, E. faecalis, and B. cereus cells was studied by flow cytometry under conditions intended to block probe efflux and increase cell wall permeability. The aim of the study was to develop procedures which allow rapid nucleic acid staining independent of fixation, since ethanol fixation is time-consuming and may mask phenomena associated with viability and lead to uncontrolled loss and aggregation of cells. The dye uptake was measured repeatedly after treating cells with metabolic inhibitors in order to block probe efflux, or cold shock (0 degree C) to increase permeability. The probes used were mithramycin (Mi), ethidium bromide (EB), DAPI, Hoechst 33342 and Hoechst 33258. None of the procedures facilitated uptake of the dyes to a level similar to that obtained in fixed control cells in all of the species. After metabolic inhibition of B. cereus cells, DAPI and Hoechst fluorescence increased to a level similar to or above that found in fixed cells, indicating that the uptake of these dyes is limited by energy-dependent efflux. A similar increase of DAPI fluorescence was observed after cold shock suggesting the uptake of this dye to be limited also by permeability in B. cereus. The Mi and EB fluorescence increased to the level of the fixed control cells under all conditions tested, suggesting free probe influx in this species. Generally, probe uptake in S. aureus and E. faecalis was lower than in B. cereus cells, and no permeabilizing effect of cold shock was observed. In some experiments the fluorescence exceeded that of ethanol fixed control cells, indicating that the fixation may cause conformational changes in DNA.  相似文献   

18.
The interactions of two phenazine derivatives, one with a neutral chromophore (glycoside) and the other with a cationic one (quaternary salt), with various synthetic single- and double-stranded polynucleotides and natural DNA were studied by fluorescence techniques, conducting measurements of steady-state fluorescence intensity and polarization degree as well as fluorescence lifetime. These dyes show fluorescence quenching upon intercalation into the GC sequences of the double-stranded nucleic acids and an increase in fluorescence emission and lifetime upon incorporation into the AT and AU sequences. GC base pairs in continuous deoxynucleotide sequences were found to be preferred as binding sites for both phenazines, in contrast to AT base pairs. On the contrary, the continuous ribonucleotide GC sequence binds the phenazines more weakly than does the AU sequence. With regard to the interaction of the phenazines with single-stranded polynucleotides, a stacking interaction of the dye chromophores with the nucleic bases was observed. In that case the guanine residue quenches the cationic phenazine fluorescence, while the stacking interaction with the other bases results in an increase in the fluorescence quantum yield. Unlike the cationic dye, the fluorescence of the neutral phenazine was quenched by both purine bases.  相似文献   

19.
The human chromosomes 1, 9, 16, 21, and Y were analysed cytofluorometrically with the AT-specific DNA ligands quinacrine mustard (QM), Hoechst 33′258, and DAPI, and the GC-specific DNA ligand mithramycin. All three AT dyes give similar results, though QM produces more distinct banding than DAPI or Hoechst. The sum of AT and GC fluorescence is very well correlated to the amount of DNA estimated densitometrically. The AT/GC ratios of chromosomes 16, 22, and Y differ clearly from that of whole nuclei, and accord fairly well with the results obtained by flow cytometry. For the Y a significant difference in calculated base content between donors was found with all three AT dyes even though differences in the karyotypes were not distinguishable by the eye.  相似文献   

20.
The binding of Hoechst 33258 and DAPI to five different (A/T)4 sequences in a stable DNA hairpin was studied exploiting the substantial increase in dye fluorescence upon binding. The two dyes have comparable affinities for the AATT site (e.g. association constant K(a)=5.5 x 10(8) M(-1) for DAPI), and their affinities decrease in the series AATT > TAAT approximately equal to ATAT > TATA approximately equal to TTAA. The extreme values of K(a) differ by a factor of 200 for Hoechst 33258 but only 30 for DAPI. The binding kinetics of Hoechst 33258 were measured by stopped-flow under pseudo-first order conditions with an (A/T)4 site in excess. The lower-resolution experiments can be well represented by single exponential processes, corresponding to a single-step binding mechanism. The calculated association-rate parameters for the five (A/T)4 sites are similar (2.46 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1) to 0.86 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1)) and nearly diffusion-controlled, while the dissociation-rate parameters vary from 0.42 s(-1) to 96 s(-1). Thus the association constants are kinetically controlled and are close to their equilibrium-determined values. However, when obtained with increased signal-to-noise ratio, the kinetic traces for Hoechst 33258 binding at the AATT site reveal two components. The concentration dependencies of the two time constants and amplitudes are consistent with two different kinetically equivalent two-step models. In the first model, fast bimolecular binding is followed by an isomerization of the initial complex. In the second model, two single-step associations form two complexes that mutually exclude each other. For both models the four reaction-rate parameters are calculated. Finally, specific dissociation kinetics, using poly[d(A-5BrU)], show that the kinetics are even more complex than either two-step model. We correlate our results with the different binding orientations and locations of Hoechst 33258 in the DNA minor groove found in several structural studies in the literature.  相似文献   

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