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1.
Abstract

In order to target the major groove of DNA, we have designed novel peptide derivatives of 7-H pyridocarbazole, which is the chromophoric ring of ditercalinium, a potent antitumor bisin- tercalator. We will present here the results obtained with a compound that has a D-Asn tethered to the pyridinium nitrogen of the ring by a protonated β-alanyl-ethyl chain. We have investigated two alternative means of intercalation of the chromophore: first, into the (pur-pur) sequences, d(CpG)2 and d(CpA)·d(TpG); second, into the (pur-pyr) sequences, d(GpC)2and d(GpT)·d(ApC). For the first intercalative mode, the best bound triplet sequences are d(ACG)·d(CGT) and d(ACA) d(TGT), namely with an adenine immediately upstream from the intercalation site. In these complexes, the chromophore has its concave side in the major groove, its long axis nearly colinear with the mean long axis of the two base pairs of the intercalation site, and a bidentate H-bonded configuration occurs which involves the C=0 and NH groups of the D-Asn side chain and HN6 and N7 (resp.) of the adenine base upstream. One alkylammonium proton is H-bonded to N7 of the guanine of the intercalation site, on the strand opposite to the one bearing the adenine. In the second intercalative mode, the chromophore's concave site now faces one DNA strand, and both alkylammonium protons are involved in H-bonds with N7 and O6 of the 3′ guanine on the same strand. The peptide's complexes with sequences having A, G, or C upstream of this guanine were computed to be energetically competitive with those with the best (pyr-pur) triplets. This provides a rare example of energetically favourable drug intercalation in-between (pur-pyr) sequences as compared to the standard (pyr-pur) ones. The synthesis of this compound was performed, and a series of footprinting experiments undertaken on a total of approximately 300 nucleotides. These experiments were consistent with the inferences from the theoretical computations.  相似文献   

2.
Summary

Proline-rich peptides are known to adopt preferentially the extended polyproline II (PPII) helical conformation, which is involved in several protein-protein recognition events. By resorting to molecular modelling techniques, we wished to investigate the extent to which PPII helices could be used for the formation of isohelical peptide-DNA complexes leading to the selective recognition of the major groove of B-DNA. For that purpose, we have grafted to a cationic intercalator, 9-amino-acridine, an oligopeptide having the sequence: Pro-Arg-Pro-Pro-Arg-Pro-Pro-Arg-Pro-Pro-Asp-Pro-Pro. Each residue in the sequence was set in the D configuration, to prevent enzymatic hydrolysis, and each Arg residue was designed to target O6/N7 of a guanine base following the intercalation site. The Asp residue was designed to target a cytosine base, whilst simultaneously forming a bidentate complex with the Arg three residues upstream. Energy-minimization, using the JUMNA procedure, led to the following conclusions: 1) major groove binding is favoured over minor groove or exclusive binding to the phosphates by large energy differences, of over 50 and 90 kcal/mole, respectively; 2) the two best bound sequences are those having three successive guanine bases on the same DNA strand, immediately adjacent to the intercalation site. Sequence d(CGGGC G), encountered in the Primer Binding Site of the HIV retrovirus, thus ranks amongst the best-bound sequences; 3) replacement of an individual guanine amongst the three ones upstream of the intercalation site, by an adenine base, weakens by > 6 kcal/mole the binding energetics; 4) the conformational rigidity of the DNA-bound PPII helix should enable for a modulation of the base sequence selectivity, by appropriate replacements of the Arg and Asp residues. Thus sequence CGGCAAG, also encountered in the HIV genome, could be targeted by an oligopeptide having the sequence Pro-Arg-Pro-Pro-Asp-Pro-Pro- Asn-Pro-Pro-Asn-Pro-Pro-Arg-Ala.  相似文献   

3.
K X Chen  N Gresh    B Pullman 《Nucleic acids research》1988,16(7):3061-3073
Computations by the SIBFA method on the intercalative interaction energies of tilorone and m-AMSA with B-DNA representative oligonucleotides account for the specificity of these antitumor drugs for AT sites and minor groove intercalation. In tilorone this specificity is due to the strong preference of the side chains for the minor groove, which overcomes the preference of the chromophore for a GC intercalation site. In m-AMSA the specificity is due to the combined preference of both the chromophore and the anilino side chain for AT intercalation site and minor groove, respectively. o-AMSA is shown to manifest a similar (although significantly less pronounced specificity) as m-AMSA but a higher affinity for DNA. A comparison of the energetics and stereochemistry of intercalative binding to DNA of m-AMSA (AT minor groove specific) and 9-aminoacridine-4-carboxamide (GC major groove specific), which possess the same chromophore and differ only by the nature and position of the side chains, shows the possibility of important variations in the intercalative behaviour of chromophoric drugs as a function of the substituent groups attached to them.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract

A new program, CONAN has been designed for CONformational ANalysis of oligonucleotide duplexes with natural and modified bases. It allows to model both regular DNA fragments with different types of symmetry and irregular ones including bends, junctions, mismatched pairs and base lesions. Computations and minimization of the energy are performed in a space of internal structural variables chosen to build start structure easier and conveniently analyze the results obtained. These internal structural variables determine mutual base-base and base-sugar arrangement and sugar puckering. The analytical closure procedure is applied both to sugar rings and to backbone fragments between adjacent sugars. For more effective energy minimization, analytical gradient is calculated. The CONAN was applied to the search for low-energy conformations of poly(dA-dT)·poly(dA-dT) and poly(dG-dC)·poly(dG-dC) duplexes. Extended regions of low-energy A and B conformations are revealed and characterized. These regions contain structures with different relative values of helical twist, τ, for pur-pyr and pyr-pur steps, namely, conformations with τ(pur-pyr)>τ(pyr-pur) and with τ(pur-pyr)<τ(pyr-pur). Two types of sugar puckering were found for B-form low-energy conformations, the first type with all C2′-endo sugar residues and the second one—;with C2′-endo purines and O1′-endo pyrimidines. The calculated conformations are compared with X-ray diffraction data for crystals and fibers and NMR data for solution.  相似文献   

5.
Using site-specific intercalation directed by intermolecular triplex formation, the conformation of an intercalation site in DNA was examined by footprinting with the purine-specific (A much greater than G) reagent diethylpyrocarbonate. Site specific intercalation was achieved by covalently linking an intercalator to the 5' end of a homopyrimidine oligodeoxynucleotide, which bound to a homopurinehomopyrimidine stretch in a recombinant plasmid via intermolecular triplex formation. This directs intercalation to a single site in 3kb of DNA at the 5' triplex-duplex junction. Footprinting with diethylpyrocarbonate and dimethylsulphate revealed strong protection from modification of adenine residues within the triple-helix in concordance with their Hoogsteen pairing with the third strand, and a strong hypersensitivity to diethylpyrocarbonate at the first adenine of the duplex. This result indicates that intercalation at this site induces a conformational change at the 5' triplex-duplex junction. Furthermore, the same diethlypyrocarbonate hypersensitivity was observed with an unmodified triple-strand forming oligonucleotide and a range of intercalating molecules present in solution. Thus the 5' triplex-duplex junction is a strong binding site for some intercalating molecules and the junction undergoes a conformational change which is sensitive to diethylpyrocarbonate upon insertion of the planar aromatic chromophore. This conformational change can be used to direct a single-strand cut in duplex DNA to a defined site.  相似文献   

6.
Theoretical computations are performed of the comparative binding affinities of five polymethylene carboxamide derivatives of 9-aminoacridine to a series of double-stranded hexanucleotides. The purpose of this investigation is to ascertain whether minor groove recognition of a guanine base adjacent to the intercalation site can occur, and be preferentially stabilized, for a given length of the polymethylene side chain, encompassing from n = 2 up to n = 6 methylene groups. For that purpose, several representative sequences were investigated, in which intercalation of the 9-aminoacridine chromophore occurred at a central d(CpG) or d(TpA) step. Investigated were the self-complementary sequences d(CGCGCG)2, d(GCCGGC)2, d(TATATA)2 and d(ATTAAT)2, as well as the 'mixed' sequences d(ACTAAT) .d(ATTAGT) and d(TGTATA). d(TATACA). For n = 3 up to n = 6, such a recognition was enabled only when the guanine base was located downstream of the intercalation site, i.e. with steps d(CGG) and d(TAG). It occurred by means of a bidentate interaction involving, on the one hand, H(N2) and N3 of the base, and, on the other hand, the carbonyl oxygen and the cis amino hydrogen of the terminal formamide moiety of the ligand. Because of the flexibility of the side chain, however, alternative binding modes were also found to occur competitively, involving backbone-only interactions of the side chain. On the basis of the present computations, upon binding to the sequence d(GCCGGC)2, an optimal value of n = 5 could be derived, with the corresponding acridine derivative eliciting both a significant prevalence of the bidentate over backbone only binding mode, and the most favourable energy balance within the investigated series. This privileged value of n = 5 is fully consistent with the experimental results of Markovits et al. and Gaugain et al. The very flexibility of the side chain, however, hampered any preferential recognition of a triplet sequence with a downstream guanine, such as d(CGG) or d(TAG), to be elicited over sequences such as d(TAA), d(TAT) or d(TAC).  相似文献   

7.
Perturbations to the 1H and 31P chemical shifts of DNA resonances together with twenty-four intermolecular nuclear Overhauser effects show that the anthracycline antibiotic arugomycin intercalates between the basepairs of the hexamer duplex d(5'-GCATGC)2 at the 5'-CpA and 5'-TpG binding sites. In the complex two drug molecules are bound per duplex with full retention of the dyad symmetry. Arugomycin adopts a threaded binding orientation with chains of sugars positioned in both the major and minor groove of the helix simultaneously. The complex is stabilized by hydrogen bonding, electrostatic and van der Waals interactions principally in the major groove and involving substituents on the rigidly oriented bicycloamino-glucose sugar of the antibiotic. A specific hydrogen bond is identified between the C2'-hydroxyl and the guanine N7 at the intercalation site. Together, interactions in the major groove appear to account for the intercalation specificity of arugomycin that requires both a guanine and thymine at the intercalation site. We are unable to identify any sequence specific interactions between the minor groove and the arugarose sugar (S1) which binds only weakly, through van der Walls contacts, over the d(GCA).d(TGC) trinucleotide sequence. The data indicate that the sugar chains of arugomycin are flexible and play little part in the interaction of the antibiotic with DNA. The intensity of sequential internucleotide NOEs identifies the intercalation site as being assymmetric. A family of conformers computed using restrained energy minimisation and molecular dynamics indicate that basepair buckling is a feature of the anthracycline intercalation site that may serve to maximise intermolecular van der Waals interactions by wrapping the basepairs around the antibiotic chromophore.  相似文献   

8.
Selective strand scission by intercalating drugs at DNA bulges   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
A bulge is an extra, unpaired nucleotide on one strand of a DNA double helix. This paper describes bulge-specific strand scission by the DNA intercalating/cleaving drugs neocarzinostatin chromophore (NCS-C), bleomycin (BLM), and methidiumpropyl-EDTA (MPE). For this study we have constructed a series of 5'-32P end labeled oligonucleotide duplexes that are identical except for the location of a bulge. In each successive duplex of the series, a bulge has been shifted stepwise up (from 5' to 3') one strand of the duplex. Similarly, in each successive duplex of the series, sites of bulge-specific scission and protection were observed to shift in a stepwise manner. The results show that throughout the series of bulged duplexes NCS-C causes specific scission at a site near a bulge, BLM causes specific scission at a site near a bulge, and MPE-Fe(II) causes specific scission centered around the bulge. In some sequences, NCS-C and BLM each cause bulge-specific scission at second sites. Further, bulged DNA shows sites of protection from NCS-C and BLM scission. The results are consistent with a model of bulged DNA with (1) a high-stability intercalation site at the bulge, (2) in some sequences, a second high-stability intercalation site adjacent to the first site, and (3) two sites of relatively unstable intercalation that flank the two stable intercalation sites. On the basis of our results, we propose a new model of the BLM/DNA complex with the site of intercalation on the 3' side (not in the center) of the dinucleotide that determines BLM binding specificity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
K X Chen  N Gresh    B Pullman 《Nucleic acids research》1987,15(5):2175-2189
Theoretical computations are performed of the intercalative binding of the neocarzinostatin chromophore (NCS) with the double-stranded oligonucleotides d(CGCG)2, d(GCGC)2, d(TATA)2 and d(ATAT)2. Minor groove binding is preferred over major groove binding. It is found that the long axis of the stacked naphtoate ring lies approximately parallel to the long axis of the base pairs of the intercalation site. The galactosamine ammonium group interacts with specific sites of the groove (O2/N3 of bases 2 and O1' of sugar S3), whereas the dodecadyine ring system wraps around the groove towards the backbone. An overall AT versus GC preference is derived. Intercalation in a central purine-(3', 5')-pyrimidine sequence appears to be preferred over that in a central pyrimidine-(3', 5')-purine sequence.  相似文献   

10.
Alternating d(GA)n DNA sequences form antiparallel stranded homoduplexes which are stabilized by the formation of G.A pairs. Three base pairings are known to occur between adenine and guanine: AH+ (anti).G(syn), A(anti).G(anti) and A(syn).G(anti). Protonation of the adenine residues is not involved in the stabilization of this structure, since it is observed at any pH value from 8.3 to 4.5; at pH < or = 4.0 antiparallel stranded d(GA.GA) DNA is destabilized. The results reported in this paper strongly suggest that antiparallel stranded d(GA.GA) homoduplexes are stabilized by the formation of alternating A(anti).G(anti) and G(anti).A(syn) pairs. In this structure, all guanine residues are in the anti conformation with their N7 position freely accessible to DMS methylation. On the other hand, adenines in one strand adopt the anti conformation, with their N7 position also free for reaction, while those of the opposite strand are in the syn conformation, with their N7 position hydrogen bonded to the guanine N1 group of the opposite strand. A regular right-handed helix can be generated using alternating G(anti).A(syn) and A(anti).G(anti) pairs.  相似文献   

11.
R Maroun  N Gresh 《Biopolymers》1989,28(4):835-849
Theoretical computations are performed of the intercalative binding to a model d(CpG)2 minihelix of 7-H pyrido[4.3C]carbazole, the precursor of the antitumor bisintercalating drug ditercalinium. The conformations of the intercalation site are generated by the AGNAS procedure (algorithm to generate nucleic acid structures) of Miller and co-workers. The ligand-nucleotide interactions and the nucleotide conformational energies are computed with the SIBFA procedures (sum of interactions between fragments ab initio computed), which use formulas of empirical origin that reproduce ab initio SCF (self-consistent field) computations. Among the candidate intercalation sites most favored energetically, one has a pattern of conformational angles related to the one determined crystallographically by Sobell et al. in a series of x-ray structural studies of small intercalator-dinucleotide monophosphate complexes. Optimal values of the unwinding angle, found in the range of -12 degrees to -14 degrees, are consistent with available experimental data on DNA.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract

A theoretical model is proposed for the covalent binding of (+) 7 β,8α-dihydroxy-9α, 10α- epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene denoted by BPDE I(+), to N2 on guanine. The DNA must kink a minimum of 39° to allow proper hybrid configurations about the C10 and N2 atoms involved in bond formation and to allow stacking of the pyrene moiety with the non-bonded adjacent base pair. Conservative (same sugar puckers and glycosidic angles as in B-DNA) and non-conservative (alternating sugar puckers as in intercalation sites) conformations are found and they are proposed structures in pathways connecting B-DNA, an intercalation site, and a kink site in the formation of a covalently intercalative bound adduct of BPDE I(+) to N2 on guanine. Stereographic projections are presented for (3′) and (5′) binding in the DNA. Experimental data for bending of DNA by BPDE, orientation of BPDE in DNA and unwinding of superhelical DNA is explained. The structure of a covalent intercalative complex is predicted to result from the reaction. Also, an anti ? syn transition of guanine results in a structure which allows the DNA to resume its overall B-form. The only change is that guanine has been rotated by 200° about its glycosidic bond so that the BPDE I(+) is bound in the major groove. The latter step may allow the DNA to be stored with an adduct which may produce an error in the genetic code.  相似文献   

13.
We have investigated some properties related to interaction with DNA and recognition of AT-rich sequences of netropsin-oxazolopyridocarbazole (Net-OPC) (Mrani et al., 1990), which is a hybrid groove-binder-intercalator. The hybrid molecule Net-OPC binds to poly[d(A-T)] at two different sites with Kapp values close to 7 x 10(6) and 6 x 10(8) M-1 (100 mM NaCl, pH 7.0). Data obtained from melting experiments are in agreement with these values and indicate that Net-OPC displays a higher binding constant to poly[d(A-T)] than does netropsin. On the basis of viscometric and energy transfer data, the binding of Net-OPC to poly[d(A-T)] is suggested to involve both intercalation and external binding of the OPC chromophore. In contrast, on poly[d(G-C)], Net-OPC binds to a single type of site composed of two base pairs in which the OPC chromophore appears to be mainly intercalated. The binding constant of Net-OPC to poly[d(G-C)] was found to be about 350-fold lower than that of the high-affinity binding site in poly[d(A-T)]. As evidenced by footprinting data, Net-OPC selectively recognizes TTAA and CTT sequences and strongly protects the 10-bp AT-rich DNA region 3'-TTAAGAACTT-5' containing the EcoRI site. The binding of Net-OPC to this sequence results in a strong and selective inhibition of the activity of the restriction endonuclease EcoRI on the plasmid pBR322 as substrate. The extent of inhibition of the rate constant of the first strand break catalyzed by the enzyme is about 100-fold higher than the one observed in the presence of netropsin under similar experimental conditions.  相似文献   

14.
Nicking of duplex DNA by the iron-mediated Fenton reaction occurs preferentially at a limited number of sequences. Of these, purine-T-G-purine (RTGR) is of particular interest because it is a required element in the upstream regulatory regions of many genes involved in iron and oxidative-stress responses. In order to study the basis of this preferential nicking, NMR studies were undertaken on the RTGR-containing duplex oligonucleotide, d(CGCGATATGACACTAG)/d(CTAGTGTCATATCGCG). One-dimensional and two-dimensional 1H NMR measurements show that Fe(2+) interacts preferentially and reversibly at the ATGA site within the duplex at a rate that is rapid relative to the chemical-shift timescale, while selective paramagnetic NMR line-broadening of the ATGA guanine H8 suggests that Fe(2+) interacts with the guanine N7 moiety. Localization at this site is supported by Fe(2+) titrations of a duplex containing a 7-deazaguanine substitution in place of the guanine in the ATGA sequence. The addition of a 100-fold excess of Mg(2+) over Fe(2+) does not affect the Fe(2+)-dependent broadening. When the ATGA site in the duplex is replaced by ATGT, an RTGR site (GTGA) is created on the opposite strand. Preferential iron localization then takes place at the 3' guanine in GTGA but no longer at the guanine in ATGT, consistent with the lack of preferential cleavage of ATGT sites relative to ATGA sites.  相似文献   

15.
DNA covalent binding studies with enantiomers of trans-7,8-dihydroxy- anti-9,10-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydro-benzo[a]pyrene (anti-BPDE) have been carried out by means of spectroscopic techniques (UV, CD, and fluorescence). Synthetic polynucleotides are employed to investigate binding differences between the G.C and A.T base pairs and to elucidate the bases for the stereoselective covalent binding of DNA toward anti-BPDE. The results indicate that of all the polynucleotides studied, only poly(dA-dT).poly(dA-dT) exhibits predominant intercalative covalent binding towards (+)-anti-BPDE and suffers the least covalent modification. Only minor intercalative covalent contributions are found in alternating polymer poly(dA-dC).poly(dG-dT). These observations parallel the DNA physical binding results of anti-BPDE and its hydrolysis products. They support the hypothesis that intercalative covalent adducts derive from intercalative physical binding while the external covalent adducts derive from external bimolecular associations. In contrast to the A.T polymers, the guanine containing polymers exhibit pronounced reduction in covalent modification by (-)-anti-BPDE. The intercalative covalent binding mode becomes relatively more important in the adducts formed by the (-) enantiomer as a consequence of decreased external guanine binding. These findings are consistent with the guanine specificity, stereoselective covalent binding at dG, the absence of stereoselectivity at dA for anti-BPDE, and the enhanced binding heterogeneity for the (-) enantiomer as found in the native DNA studies. The possible sequence and/or conformational dependence of such stereoselective covalent binding is indicated by the opposite pyrenyl CD sign exhibited by (+)-anti-BPDE bound to polynucleotides with pyrimidine on one strand and purine on another vs. that bound to polymers containing alternating purine-pyrimidine sequences.  相似文献   

16.
The reinforced intercalative binding to DNA typical of adriamycin and daunomycin can still occur if there is epimerisation at C4' or if the O-methyl group is lost or if the 9-substituents are deleted or if the 4'-hydroxyl group is lost. In the latter two cases however, there is a reduction in affinity for the DNA, supporting the suggested role of the 9-hydroxyl and 4'-hydroxyl groups in secondary stabilization of the complex. Epimerisation at C-1' or at C-3' alters but does not abolish the intercalative mode of binding to DNA whereas epimerisation at C-7 precludes intercalation of the chromophore into the helix of DNA. In contrast to the interaction with the B-form found in DNA, the parent drugs do not intercalate into nucleic acids possessing the A-conformation and none of the above-mentioned structural changes will allow intercalation into A-form nucleic acids.  相似文献   

17.
1H resonance assignments in the NMR spectra of the self-complementary hexadeoxyribonucleoside pentaphosphate d(5'-GCATGC)2 and its complex with the antibiotic nogalamycin, together with interproton distance constraints obtained from two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) spectra, have enabled us to characterize the three-dimensional structure of these species in solution. In the complex described, two drug molecules are bound per duplex, in each of two equivalent binding sites, with full retention of the dyad symmetry. Twenty-eight NOE distance constraints between antibiotic and nucleotide protons define the position and orientation of the bound drug molecule. Nogalamycin intercalates at the 5'-CA and 5'-TG steps with the major axis of the anthracycline chromophore aligned approximately at right angles to the major axes of the base pairs. The nogalose sugar occupies the minor groove of the helix and makes many contacts with the deoxyribose moieties of three nucleotides along one strand of the duplex in the 5'-TGC segment. The charged dimethylamino group and hydroxyl functions of the bicyclic sugar lie in the major groove juxtaposed to the guanine base, the bridging atoms of the bicyclic sugar making contacts with the methyl group of the thymine. Thus the antibiotic is not symmetrically disposed in the intercalation site but is in close contact in both grooves with atoms comprising the 5'-TGC strand. The intercalation cavity is wedge-shaped, the major axes of the base pairs forming the site being tilted with respect to one another. All base-pair hydrogen-bonding interactions are maintained in the complex, and there is no evidence for Hoogsteen pairing. The free duplex adopts a regular right-handed B-type conformation in which all glycosidic bond angles are anti and all sugar puckers lie in the C2'-endo range. In the complex the glycosidic bond angles and the sugar puckers deviate little from those observed for the duplex alone. The presence of two bound nogalamycin molecules substantially slows the "breathing" motions of the base pairs forming the intercalation cavity, and the observation of two downfield-shifted resonances in the 31P NMR spectrum of the complex suggests a pronounced local helix unwinding at the drug binding site. The footprinting data of Fox and Waring [Fox, K.R., & Waring, M.J. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 4349-4356] imply that the highest affinity binding sites of nogalamycin have the sequence 5'-GCA (or 5'-TGC).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Abstract

DNA covalent binding studies with enantiomers of trans-7,8-dihydroxy- anti-9,10-epoxy- 7,8,9,10-tetrahydro-benzo [a] pyrene (anti-BPDE) have been carried out by means of spectroscopic techniques (UV, CD, and fluorescence). Synthetic polynucleotides are employed to investigate binding differences between the G · C and A · T base pairs and to elucidate the bases for the stereoselective covalent binding of DNA toward anti-BPDE. The results indicate that of all the polynucleotides studied, only poly(dA-dT) · poly(dA-dT) exhibits predominant intercalative covalent binding towards (+)-anti-BPDE and suffers the least covalent modification. Only minor intercalative covalent contributions are found in alternating polymer poly(dA-dC) · poly(dG-dT). These observations parallel the DNA physical binding results of anti-BPDE and its hydrolysis products. They support the hypothesis that intercalative covalent adducts derive from intercalative physical binding while the external covalent adducts derive from external bimolecular associations. In contrast to the A · T polymers, the guanine containing polymers exhibit pronounced reduction in covalent modification by (-)-anti-BPDE. The intercalative covalent binding mode becomes relatively more important in the adducts formed by the (-) enantiomer as a consequence of decreased external guanine binding. These findings are consistent with the guanine specificity, stereoselective covalent binding at dG, the absence of stereoselectivity at dA for anti-BPDE, and the enhanced binding heterogeneity for the (-) enantiomer as found in the native DNA studies. The possible sequence and/or conformational dependence of such stereoselective covalent binding is indicated by the opposite pyrenyl CD sign exhibited by (+)-anti-BPDE bound to polynucleotides with pyrimidine on one strand and purine on another vs. that bound to polymers containing alternating purine-pyrimidine sequences.  相似文献   

19.
X W Hui  N Gresh    B Pullman 《Nucleic acids research》1990,18(5):1109-1114
A theoretical investigation is performed of the complexes of a tetracationic porphyrin, tetra-(4-N-methylpyridyl)-porphyrin, (T4MPyP), with the hexanucleotides d(CGCGCG)2 and d(TATATA)2, considering the possibility of both the intercalative and the groove binding interactions. These computations demonstrate that T4MPyP manifests a significant preference for intercalation in its complex with d(CGCGCG)2 but for non intercalative binding in the minor groove in its complex with d(TATATA)2. Such a dual binding behaviour of T4MPyP as a function of the sequence to which it is attached is fully consistent with available experimental data. It demonstrates that intercalation and groove binding may be viewed as two potential wells on a continuous energy surface. In agreement with experiment, the computations indicate that in the here considered case the deepest well is associated with intercalation.  相似文献   

20.
DNA-nogalamycin interactions   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The anthracycline antibiotic nogalamycin differs from the more common daunomycin-type anthracyclines by substitution on both ends of the intercalating chromophore, giving nogalamycin the approximate shape of a dumbbell. The chromophore of daunomycin is substituted on only one end. In nogalamycin, the positively charged amino sugar substituent of daunomycin is replaced by an uncharged nogalose sugar and a methyl ester group. The other end of nogalamycin, where daunomycin is unsubstituted, is fused to a bicyclo amino sugar with a positively charged dimethylamino group. Much larger DNA fluctuations are required for intercalative entry of nogalamycin than for entry of daunomycin. This report describes the X-ray crystal structure of the complex between nogalamycin and the self-complementary DNA hexamer d(me5CGTsAme5CG). The DNA contains cytosines methylated at the 5-positions and a phosphorothioate linkage at the TpA step. Nogalamycin intercalates at the terminal CpG steps and interacts with both strands in both grooves of the DNA. Large conformational adjustments in both nogalamycin and the DNA are necessary to form a stable, intercalative complex. The interactions of the bases with the nogalamycin substituents lead to sliding of bases relative to each other along the normal to Watson-Crick hydrogen bonds. The planarities of base pairs surrounding the intercalation site are distorted. The backbones of the two strands are distorted asymmetrically by nogalamycin with large deviations from standard B-DNA geometry. The complex between nogalamycin and DNA illustrates the conformational flexibility of DNA. The hydrogen-bonding interactions between nogalamycin and DNA do not suggest a sequence-specific binding of the drug, although additional secondary effects might lead to differences between various intercalation sites.  相似文献   

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