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1.
S M Chen  W Leupin  M Rance  W J Chazin 《Biochemistry》1992,31(18):4406-4413
The dodecadeoxynucleotide duplex d(GGTTAATGCGGT).d(ACCGCATTAACC) and its 1:1 complex with the minor groove binding drug SN-6999 have been prepared and studied by two-dimensional 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Complete sequence-specific assignments have been obtained for the free duplex by standard methods. The line widths of the resonances in the complex are greater than those observed for the free duplex, which complicates the assignment process. Extensive use of two-quantum spectroscopy was required to determine the scalar correlations for identifying all of the base proton and most of the 1'H-2'H-2'H spin subsystems for the complex. This permitted unambiguous sequence-specific resonance assignments for the complex, which provides the necessary background for a detailed comparison of the structure of the duplex, with and without bound drug. A series of intermolecular NOEs between drug and DNA were identified, providing sufficient structural constraints to position the drug in the minor groove of the duplex. However, the combination of NOEs observed can only be rationalized by a model wherein the drug binds in the minor groove of the DNA in both orientations relative to the long helix axis and exchanges rapidly between the two orientations. The drug binds primarily in the segment of five consecutive dA-dT base pairs d(T3T4A5A6T7).d(A18T19T20A21A22), but surprisingly strong interactions are found to extend one residue in the 3' direction along each strand to G8 and C23. The observation of intermolecular contacts to residues neighboring the AT-rich region demonstrates that the stabilization of the bis(quaternary ammonium) heterocycle family of AT-specific, minor groove binding drugs is not based exclusively on interactions with dA-dT base pairs.  相似文献   

2.
The structural and dynamic aspects of the interaction of the thiazole containing lexitropsin (1) with an oligodeoxyribonucleotide were studied by high field 1H-NMR spectroscopy. Complete assignment of the 1H-NMR resonances of lexitropsin 1 was accomplished by 2D-NMR techniques. The complexation-induced chemical shifts and NOE cross peaks in the NOESY map of the 1:1 complex of lexitropsin (1) and d-[CGCAATTGCG]2 reveal that the thiazole ring of the lexitropsin (1) intercalates between dA4.A5 bases and the rest of the ligand resides in the minor groove of the AT rich core of decamer, thus occupying the 5'-AATT sequence on the DNA. Intercalation of the thiazole moiety of the drug has been detected by the presence of intermolecular NOEs both in the major and the minor groove of the decamer helix. The absence of intranucleotide NOEs between base protons and H1'/H2' protons suggested local unwinding of the binding site on the DNA. From COSY and NOESY methods of 2D-NMR, it was established that the N-formyl (amino) terminus of the thiazole lexitropsin (1) is projecting into the major groove towards A5H8 while the amidinium terminus lies in the minor groove towards the T7G8 base pairs of the opposite strand. The expected intranucleotide NOEs confirmed that the decadeoxyribonucleotide in the 1:1 complex exists in a right handed B-conformation. The presence of exchange signals along the binding site 5'-AATT indicated an exchange of the bound drug process wherein the rate of exchange between the two equivalent sites was estimated to be congruent to 130 s-1 at 30 degrees C and with delta G degrees of 62.4 kJ mol-1. Force field and Pi calculations permitted a rationalization of the experimentally observed binding mode in terms of preferred conformation of the ligand and repeat length in lexitropsins compared with the DNA receptor.  相似文献   

3.
The relative importance of paramagnetism-based constraints (i.e. pseudocontact shifts, residual dipolar couplings and nuclear relaxation enhancements) with respect to classical constraints in solution structure determinations of paramagnetic metalloproteins has been addressed. The protein selected for the study is a calcium binding protein, calbindin D9k, in which one of the two calcium ions is substituted with cerium(III). From 1823 NOEs, 191 dihedral angles, 15 hydrogen bonds, 769 pseudocontact shifts, 64 orientational constraints, 26 longitudinal relaxation rates, plus 969 pseudocontact shifts from other lanthanides, a final family with backbone r.m.s.d. from the average of 0.25 A was obtained. Then, several families of structures were generated either by removing subsets of paramagnetism-based constraints or by removing increasing numbers of NOEs. The results show the relative importance of the various paramagnetism-based constraints and their good complementarity with the diamagnetic ones. Although a resolved structure cannot be obtained with paramagnetism-based constraints only, it is shown that a reasonably well resolved backbone fold can be safely obtained by retaining as few as 29 randomly chosen long-range NOEs using the standard version of the program PSEUDYANA.  相似文献   

4.
5.
A Fede  A Labhardt  W Bannwarth  W Leupin 《Biochemistry》1991,30(48):11377-11388
We have investigated the interaction of the bisbenzimidazole derivative Hoechst 33258 with the self-complementary dodecadeoxynucleotide duplex d(GTGGAATTCCAC)2 using one-dimensional (1D) and two-dimensional (2D) proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) spectroscopy. To monitor the extent of complex formation, we used the imino proton region of the 1D 1H NMR spectra acquired in H2O solution. These spectra show that the DNA duplex loses its inherent C2v symmetry upon addition of the drug, indicating that the two molecules form a kinetically stable complex on the NMR time scale (the lifetime of the complex has been measured to be around 450 ms). We obtained sequence-specific assignments for all protons of the ligand and most protons of each separate strand of the oligonucleotide duplex using a variety of homonuclear 2D 1H NMR experiments. The aromatic protons of the DNA strands, which are symmetrically related in the free duplex, exhibit exchange cross peaks in the complex. This indicates that the drug binds in two equivalent sites on the 12-mer, with an exchange rate constant of 2.2 +/- 0.2 s-1. Twenty-five intermolecular NOEs were identified, all involving adenine 2 and sugar 1' protons of the DNA and protons in all four residues of the ligand, indicating that Hoechst 33258 is located in the minor groove at the AATT site. Only protons along the same edge of the two benzimidazole moieties of the drug show NOEs to DNA protons at the bottom of the minor groove. Using molecular mechanics, we have generated a unique model of the complex using distance constraints derived from the intermolecular NOEs. We present, however, evidence that the piperazine group may adopt at least two locally different conformations when the drug is bound to this dodecanucleotide.  相似文献   

6.
The conformation of the chromomycin-d(GGGGCCCC)2 complex in aqueous solution was studied by NMR spectroscopy. The NMR spectrum of the complex indicated that the chromomycin binds as a symmetry-related dimer to the minor groove of the central four residues of d(GGGGCCCC)2. The drastic conformational change in the central four residues of d(GGGGCCCC)2 from the B form family to the A-form was demonstrated by the characteristic NOEs and coupling patterns. The change seems to be indispensable for accommodation of the bulky chromomycin dimer in the minor groove. On the basis of the intermolecular NOEs between chromomycin and d(GGGGCCCC)2, the structure of the complex has been constructed and refined by energy minimization.  相似文献   

7.
The interaction of Hoechst 33258 with the minor groove of the adenine-tract DNA duplex d(CTTTTGCAAAAG)2 has been studied in both D2O and H2O solutions by 1D and 2D 1H NMR spectroscopy. Thirty-one nuclear Overhauser effects between drug and nucleotide protons within the minor groove of the duplex, together with ring-current induced perturbations to the chemical shifts of basepair and deoxyribose protons, define the position and orientation of the bound dye molecules. Two drug molecules bind cooperatively and in symmetry related orientations at the centre of the 5'-TTTT and 5'-AAAA sequences with the binding interactions spanning only the four A-T basepairs. The positively charged N-methylpiperazine moieties point towards the centre of the duplex while the phenol groups are disposed towards the 3'-ends of the sequence. Resonance averaging is apparent for both the D2/D6 and D3/D5 phenol protons and D2"'/D6"' and D3"'/D5"' of the N-methylpiperazine ring and is consistent with these groups being involved in rapid rotation or ring-flipping motions in the bound state. Interstrand NOEs between adenine H2s and deoxyribose H1' are consistent with a high degree of propeller twisting of the A-T basepairs at the binding site of the aromatic benzimidazole and phenol rings of Hoechst. The data imply that the minor groove is particularly narrow with many contacts between the complementary curved surfaces of the drug and DNA indicating that strong van der Waals interactions, involving the floor and the walls of the minor groove, stabilize the complex. In our model the NH groups of the benzimidazole rings are positioned to make a pair of bifurcated hydrogen bonds with the adenine N3 and thymine O2 on the floor of the minor groove.  相似文献   

8.
Mocci F  Saba G 《Biopolymers》2003,68(4):471-485
Molecular dynamics simulations have been employed to probe the sequence-specific binding of sodium ions to the minor groove of B-DNA of three A. T-rich oligomers having identical compositions but different orders of the base pairs: C(AT)(4)G, CA(4)T(4)G, and CT(4)A(4)G. Recent experimental investigations, either in crystals or in solution, have shown that monovalent cations bind to DNA in a sequence-specific mode, preferentially in the narrow minor groove regions of uninterrupted sequences of four or more adenines (A-tracts), replacing a water molecule of the ordered hydration structure, the hydration spine. Following this evidence, it has been hypothesized that in A-tracts these events may be responsible for structural peculiarities such as a narrow minor groove and a curvature of the helix axis. The present simulations confirm a sequence specificity of the binding of sodium ions: Na(+) intrusions in the first layer of hydration of the minor groove, with long residence times, up to approximately 3 ns, are observed only in the minor groove of A-tracts but not in the alternating sequence. The effects of these intrusions on the structure of DNA depend on the ion coordination: when the ion replaces a water molecule of the spine, the minor groove becomes narrower. Ion intrusions may also disrupt the hydration spine modifying the oligomer structure to a large extent. However, in no case intrusions were observed to locally bend the axis toward the minor groove. The simulations also show that ions may reside for long time periods in the second layer of hydration, particularly in the wider regions of the groove, often leading to an opening of the groove.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
D J Patel  L Shapiro 《Biochimie》1985,67(7-8):887-915
We have investigated intermolecular interactions and conformational features of the netropsin complexes with d(G1-G2-A3-A4-T5-T6-C7-C8) duplex (AATT 8-mer) and the d(G1-G2-T3-A4-T5-A6-C7-C8) duplex (TATA 8-mer) by one and two-dimensional NMR studies in solution. We have assigned the amide, pyrrole and methylene protons of netropsin and the base and sugar H1' protons of the nucleic acid from an analysis of the nuclear Overhauser effect (NOESY) and correlated (COSY) spectra of the complex at 25 degrees C. The directionality of the observed distance-dependent NOEs demonstrates that the 8-mer helices remain right-handed and that the arrangement of concave and convex face protons of netropsin are retained in the complexes. The observed changes in NOE patterns and chemical shift changes on complex formation suggest small conformational changes in the nucleic acid at the AATT and TATA antibiotic binding sites and possibly the flanking G.C base pairs. We observe intermolecular NOEs between all three amide and both pyrrole protons on the concave face of the antibiotic and the minor groove adenosine H2 proton of the two central A4.T5 base pairs of the AATT 8-mer and TATA 8-mer duplexes. The concave face pyrrole protons of the antibiotic also exhibit NOEs to the sugar H1' protons of residues 5 and 6 in the AATT and TATA 8-mer complexes. We also detect intermolecular NOEs between the guanidino and propioamidino methylene protons at either end of netropsin and the adenosine H2 proton of the two flanking A3.T6 base pairs in the AATT 8-mer and T3.A6 base pairs in the TATA 8-mer duplexes. These studies establish a set of nine contacts between the concave face of the antibiotic and the minor groove AATT segment and TATA segment of the 8-mer duplexes in solution. The observed magnitude of the NOEs require that there be no intervening water molecules sandwiched between the concave face of the antibiotic and the minor groove of the DNA so that release of the minor groove spine of hydration is a prerequisite for netropsin complex formation. The observed differences in the netropsin amide proton chemical shifts in the AATT 8-mer and TATA 8-mer complexes suggest differences in the strength and/or type of intermolecular hydrogen bonds at the AATT and TATA binding sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The ligation of a decadeoxynucleotide containing the EcoRI recognition site forms a series of multimers which appear to be curved based on observed anomalous gel migration in polyacrylamide gels. The degree of DNA curvature present in the recognition sequence, based upon the observed migration anomaly, can be altered by modifications to the purine functional groups at the 2- and 6-positions. Deletion of the guanine 2-amino group, occurring in the minor groove of the B-DNA helix, is most effective in increasing the observed DNA curvature. Conversely, the displacement of an amino group from the major groove to the minor groove eliminates curvature. DNA curvature is also modulated by the exocyclic group at the purine 6-position with decreasing curvature observed when changing the amino group to a carbonyl or proton substituent. Differences in the kinetic parameters characterizing the cleavage reaction by the endonuclease for many of the modified sequences are the result of modifications of functional groups in the major groove, which are likely to contact the endonuclease during catalysis. However, with two examples, significant decreases in the observed specificity constant (kcat/Km), characterizing the protein-nucleic acid interaction, cannot be easily explained in terms of such functional group contacts. It is more likely in these cases that the functional group modifications affect the efficiency of the endonuclease-DNA interaction by modulation of the structure of the double-stranded DNA helix. With both examples, modifications have been made to minor groove substituents. The extent of DNA curvature is increased significantly for one and decreased for the other, compared with that observed for the native recognition site. The results suggest that curvature of the DNA helix axis is an intrinsic property of the d(GAATTC) sequence which helps to optimize the protein-nucleic acid interactions observed for the EcoRI restriction endonuclease.  相似文献   

12.
Solution structure of the chromomycin-DNA complex   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
X L Gao  D J Patel 《Biochemistry》1989,28(2):751-762
The structure of the chromomycin-DNA complex at the deoxyoctanucleotide duplex level has been determined from one- and two-dimensional proton NMR studies in Mg-containing aqueous solution. The NMR results demonstrate that the antitumor agent binds as a symmetrical dimer to the self-complementary d[T-T-G-G-C-C-A-A] duplex with retention of the 2-fold symmetry in the complex. A set of intermolecular nuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOEs) establishes that two chromomycin molecules in the dimer share the minor groove at the G-G-C-C.G-G-C-C segment in such a way that each hydrophilic edge of the chromophore is located next to the G-G.C-C half-site and each C-D-E trisaccharide chain extends toward the 3'-direction of the octanucleotide duplex. In addition, the A-B disaccharide segment and the hydrophilic side chain of the antitumor agent are directed toward the phosphate backbone. The observed changes in nucleic acid NOEs and coupling patterns on complex formation establish a transition to a wider and shallower minor groove at the central G-G-C-C.G-G-C-C segment required for accommodating the chromomycin dimer. The present demonstration that chromomycin binds as a dimer and switches the conformation of the DNA at its G.C-rich minor groove binding site provides new insights into antitumor agent design and the sequence specificity of antitumor agent-DNA recognition.  相似文献   

13.
We have refined the initial docking model of the Mg(II)-co-ordinated chromomycin-d(A2G2C2T2) complex (2 drug equivalents per duplex) by a complete relaxation matrix analysis simulation of the two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect (NOESY) spectrum of the complex in 2H2O solution. This relaxation matrix refined structure of the complex exhibits the following characteristics. (1) We observe an unwound and elongated duplex that exhibits characteristics distinct from the A and B-DNA family of helices at the central (G-G-C-C).(G-G-C-C) chromomycin dimer binding and flanking sites. On the other hand sugar puckers, glycosidic torsion angles, displacement of the base-pairs from the helix axis and the minor groove width for this central tetranucleotide segment all fall within the A-family of helical parameters. (2) The chromomycin monomers are aligned in a head-to-tail orientation in the Mg(II)-co-ordinated dimer in the complex. The chromophores are aligned with a slight tilt relative to each other and make an angle of 75 degrees between their planes. The C-D-E trisaccharide segments from individual monomers adopt an extended conformation that projects in opposite directions in the dimer. The divalent metal cation is co-ordinated to the O(1) carbonyl and O(9) enolate atoms of the chromophores and aligns them such that the O(9)-Mg-O(9) angle is 170 degrees while all other O-Mg-O angles are in the 95(+/- 15)degrees range. (3) The sequence specificity of the chromomycin dimer for the widened and shallower (G3-G4-C5-C6).(G3-G4-C5-C6) minor groove binding site is associated with intermolecular hydrogen bonds formed between the OH group at C(8) of the chromophore and the minor groove NH2 group at position 2 and N(3) groups of G4 and between the O(1) oxygen of the E-sugar and the minor groove NH2 group at position 2 of G3 in the complex. (4) Additional intermolecular interactions are primarily van der Waals contacts between anomeric and adjacent CH2 protons on each sugar in the C-D-E trisaccharide segments of the chromomycin dimer and the minor groove surface of the DNA. These results provide insights into the induced conformational transitions required to generate a complementary match between the drug dimer and its DNA binding site on complex formation.  相似文献   

14.
The conformation of drug-free d(GGGGCCCC)2 and the chromomycin-d(GGGGCCCC)2 complex in aqueous solution were studied by NMR spectroscopy. The present study has indicated that free d(GGGGCCCC)2 takes the B form in solution, although it takes the A form in the crystalline state. The NMR spectrum of the complex indicated that chromomycin binds as a symmetry-related dimer to the minor groove of the central four residues of d(GGGGCCCC)2. The drastic conformational change in the central four residues of d(GGGGCCCC)2 on going from the B form family to the A form was demonstrated by the characteristic NOEs and coupling patterns. The change seems to be indispensable for accommodation of the bulky chromomycin dimer in the minor groove. On the basis of the intermolecular NOEs between chromomycin and d(GGGGCCCC)2, the structure of the complex has been constructed and refined by energy minimization.  相似文献   

15.
Cytochrome b5 in solution has two isomers (A and B) differing by a 180 degrees rotation of the protoporphyrin IX plane around the axis defined by the alpha and gamma meso protons. Homonuclear and heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy has been employed in order to solve the solution structure of the minor (B) form of the oxidized state of the protein and to probe its backbone dynamics in the microsecond--ms timescale in both oxidation states. A family of 40 conformers has been obtained using 1302 meaningful NOEs and 220 pseudocontact shifts and is characterized by high quality and good resolution (rmsd to the mean structure of 0.055 +/- 0.009 nm and 0.103 +/- 0.011 nm for backbone and heavy atoms, respectively). Extensive comparisons of the structural and dynamics changes associated with the A-to-B form interconversion for both oxidation states were subsequently performed. Propionate 6 experiences a redox-state-dependent reorientation as does propionate 7 in the A form. Significant insights are obtained into the role of the protein frame for efficient biological function and backbone mobility is proposed to be one of the factors that could control the reduction potential of the heme.  相似文献   

16.
R E Klevit  D E Wemmer  B R Reid 《Biochemistry》1986,25(11):3296-3303
High-resolution NMR techniques have been used to examine the structural and dynamical features of the interaction between distamycin A and the self-complementary DNA dodecamer duplex d-(CGCGAATTCGCG)2. The proton resonances of d(CGCGAATTCGCG)2 have been completely assigned by previous two-dimensional NMR studies [Hare, D. R., Wemmer, D. E., Chou, S. H., Drobny, G., & Reid, B. R. (1983) J. Mol. Biol. 171, 319-336]. Addition of the asymmetric drug molecule to the symmetric dodecamer leads to the formation of an asymmetric complex as evidenced by a doubling of DNA resonances over much of the spectrum. In two-dimensional exchange experiments, strong cross-peaks were observed between uncomplexed DNA and drug-bound DNA resonances, permitting direct assignment of many drug-bound DNA resonances from previously assigned free DNA resonances. Weaker exchange cross-peaks between formerly symmetry related DNA resonances indicate that the drug molecule flips head-to-tail on one duplex with half the frequency at which it leaves the DNA molecule completely. In experiments performed in H2O, nuclear Overhauser effects (NOEs) were observed from each drug amide proton to an adenine C2H and a pyrrole H3 ring proton. In two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser experiments performed on D2O solutions, strong intermolecular NOEs were observed between each of the three pyrrole H3 resonances of the drug and an adenine C2H resonance, with weaker NOEs observed between the drug H3 resonances and C1'H resonances. The combined NOE data allow us to position the distamycin A unambiguously on the DNA dodecamer, with the drug spanning the central AATT segment in the minor groove.  相似文献   

17.
Solution structure of the nogalamycin-DNA complex   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
X L Zhang  D J Patel 《Biochemistry》1990,29(40):9451-9466
The nogalamycin-d(A-G-C-A-T-G-C-T) complex (two drugs per duplex) has been generated in aqueous solution and its structure characterized by a combined application of two-dimensional NMR experiments and molecular dynamics calculations. Two equivalents of nogalamycin binds to the self-complementary octanucleotide duplex with retention of 2-fold symmetry in solution. We have assigned the proton resonances of nogalamycin and the d(A1-G2-C3-A4-T5-G6-C7-T8) duplex in the complex and identified the intermolecular proton-proton NOEs that define the alignment of the antitumor agent at its binding site on duplex DNA. The analysis was greatly aided by a large number of intermolecular NOEs involving exchangeable protons on both the nogalamycin and the DNA in the complex. The molecular dynamics calculations were guided by 274 intramolecular nucleic acid distance constraints, 90 intramolecular nogalamycin distance constraints, and 104 intermolecular distance constraints between nogalamycin and the nucleic acid protons in the complex. The aglycon chromophore intercalates at (C-A).(T-G) steps with the long axis of the aglycon approximately perpendicular to the long axis of the flanking C3.G6 and A4.T5 base pairs. The aglycon selectively stacks over T5 and G6 on the T5-G6-containing strand with the aglycon edge containing OH-4 and OH-6 substituents directed toward the C3-A4-containing strand. The C3.G6 and A4.T5 base pairs are intact but buckled at the intercalation site with a wedge-shaped alignment of C3 and A4 on the C3-A4 strand compared to the parallel alignment of T5 and G6 on the T5-G6 strand in the complex. The nogalose sugar in a chair conformation, the aglycon ring A in a half-chair conformation, and the COOCH3-10 side chain form a continuous domain that is sandwiched within the walls of the minor groove and spans the three base pair (G2-C3-A4).(T5-G6-C7) segment. The nogalose ring is positioned in the minor groove such that its nonpolar face is directed toward the G6-C7 sugar-phosphate backbone while its polar face containing OCH3 groups is directed toward the G2-C3 sugar-phosphate backbone in the complex. The intermolecular contacts include a nonpolar patch of aglycon (CH3-9) and nogalose (CH3-3') methyl groups forming van der Waals contacts with the base-sugar residues in the minor groove and intermolecular hydrogen bonds involving the amino groups of G2 and G6 with the ether oxygens OCH3-3' and O7, respectively, on the nogalose sugar.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Two-dimensional homonuclear and heteronuclear NMR and minimized potential energy calculations have been combined to define the structure of the antitumor agent mitomycin C (MC) cross-linked to deoxyguanosines on adjacent base pairs in the d(T1-A2-C3-G4-T5-A6).d(T7-A8-C9-G10-T11-A12) duplex. The majority of the mitomycin and nucleic acid protons in the MC-X 6-mer complex have been assigned from through-bond and through-space two-dimensional proton NMR studies in aqueous solution at 5 and 20 degrees C. The C3.G10 and G4.C9 base pairs are intact at the cross-link site and stack on each other in the complex. The amino protons of G4 and G10 resonate at 9.36 and 8.87 ppm and exhibit slow exchange with solvent H2O. The NMR experimental data establish that the mitomycin is cross-linked to the DNA through the amino groups of G4 and G10 and is positioned in the minor groove. The conformation of the cross-link site is defined by a set of NOEs between the mitomycin H1" and H2" protons and the nucleic acid imino and amino protons of G4 and the H2 proton of A8 and another set of NOEs between the mitomycin geminal H10" protons and the nucleic acid imino and amino protons of G10 and the H2 proton of A2. Several phosphorus resonances of the d(T-A-C-G-T-A) duplex shift dramatically on mitomycin cross-link formation and have been assigned from proton-detected phosphorus-proton two-dimensional correlation experiments. The proton chemical shifts and NOEs establish fraying at the ends of the d(T-A-C-G-T-A) duplex, and this feature is retained on mitomycin cross-link formation. The base-base and base-sugar NOEs exhibit similar patterns for symmetry-related steps on the two nucleic acid strands in the MC-X 6-mer complex, while the proton and phosphorus chemical shifts are dramatically perturbed at the G10-T11 step on cross-link formation. The NMR distance constraints have been included in minimized potential energy computations on the MC-X 6-mer complex. These computations were undertaken with the nonplanar five-membered ring of mitomycin in each of two pucker orientations. The resulting low-energy structures MX1 and MX2 have the mitomycin cross-linked in a widened minor groove with the chromophore ring system in the vicinity of the G10-T11 step on one of the two strands in the duplex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Polyamides composed of N-methylpyrrole (Py), N-methylimidazole (Im) and N-methylhydroxypyrrole (Hp) amino acids linked by beta-alanine (beta) bind the minor groove of DNA in 1:1 and 2:1 ligand to DNA stoichiometries. Although the energetics and structure of the 2:1 complex has been explored extensively, there is remarkably less understood about 1:1 recognition beyond the initial studies on netropsin and distamycin. We present here the 1:1 solution structure of ImPy-beta-Im-beta-ImPy-beta-Dp bound in a single orientation to its match site within the DNA duplex 5'-CCAAAGAGAAGCG-3'.5'-CGCTTCTCTTTGG-3' (match site in bold), as determined by 2D (1)H NMR methods. The representative ensemble of 12 conformers has no distance constraint violations greater than 0.13 A and a pairwise RMSD over the binding site of 0.80 A. Intermolecular NOEs place the polyamide deep inside the minor groove, and oriented N-C with the 3'-5' direction of the purine-rich strand. Analysis of the high-resolution structure reveals the ligand bound 1:1 completely within the minor groove for a full turn of the DNA helix. The DNA is B-form (average rise=3.3 A, twist=38 degrees ) with a narrow minor groove closing down to 3.0-4.5 A in the binding site. The ligand and DNA are aligned in register, with each polyamide NH group forming bifurcated hydrogen bonds of similar length to purine N3 and pyrimidine O2 atoms on the floor of the minor groove. Each imidazole group is hydrogen bonded via its N3 atom to its proximal guanine's exocyclic amino group. The important roles of beta-alanine and imidazole for 1:1 binding are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Hwang GS  Jones GB  Goldberg IH 《Biochemistry》2003,42(28):8472-8483
The solution structure of the complex formed between an oligonucleotide containing a two-base bulge (5'-CACGCAGTTCGGAC.5'-GTCCGATGCGTG) and DDI, a designed synthetic agent, has been elucidated using high-resolution NMR spectroscopy and restrained molecular dynamic simulation. DDI, which has been found to modulate DNA strand slippage synthesis by DNA polymerase I [Kappen, L. S., Xi, Z., Jones, G. B., and Goldberg, I. H. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 2166-2173], is a wedge-shaped spirocyclic molecule whose aglycone structure closely resembles that of the natural product, NCSi-gb, which strongly binds to an oligonucleotide containing a two-base bulge. Changes in chemical shifts of the DNA upon complex formation and intermolecular NOEs between DDI and the bulged DNA duplex indicate that agent specifically binds to the bulge site of DNA. The benzindanone moiety of DDI intercalates via the minor groove into the G7-T8-T9.A20 pocket, which consists of a helical base pair and two unpaired bulge bases, stacking with the G7 and A20 bases. On the other hand, the dihydronaphthalenone and aminoglycoside moieties are positioned in the minor groove. The aminoglycoside, which is attached to spirocyclic ring, aligns along the A20T21G22 sequence of the nonbulged strand, while the dihydronaphthalenone, which is restrained by the spirocyclic structure, is positioned near the G7-T8-T9 bulge site. The aminoglycoside is closely aligned with the dihydronaphthalenone, preventing its intercalation into the bulge site. In the complex, the unpaired purine (G7) is intrahelical and stacks with the intercalating moiety of DDI, whereas the unpaired pyrimidine (T8) is extrahelical. The structure of the complex formed by binding of the synthetic agent to the two-base bulged DNA reveals a binding mode that differs in important details from that of the natural product, explaining the different binding specificity for the bulge sites of DNA. The structure of the DDI-bulged DNA complex provides insight into the structure-binding affinity relationship, providing a rational basis for the design of specific, high-affinity probes of the role of bulged nucleic acid structures in various biological processes.  相似文献   

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