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1.
We review the extra-helical guanine interactions present in many oligonucleotide crystals. Very often terminal guanines interact with other guanines in the minor groove of neighboring oligonucleotides through N2 x N3 hydrogen bonds. In other cases the interaction occurs with the help of Ni2+ ions. Guanine/netropsin stacking in the minor groove has also been found. From these studies we conclude that guanine may have multiple extra-helical interactions. In particular it may be considered a very effective minor groove binder, which could be used in the design of sequence selective binding drugs. Interactions through the major groove are seldom encountered, but might be present when DNA is stretched. Such interactions are also analyzed, since they might be important for homologous chromosome pairing during meiosis.  相似文献   

2.
G B Panigrahi  I G Walker 《Biochemistry》1991,30(40):9761-9767
Monoacetyl-4-hydroxyaminoquinoline 1-oxide (Ac-HAQO) reacts with DNA to form adducts at the C8- and N2-positions of guanine and with the N6-position of adenine. Only the N2-guanine adduct blocks the 3'-5' exonuclease action of phage T4 DNA polymerase. Piperidine treatment cleaves the DNA at sites bearing C8-guanine adducts. The N2-position of guanine lies in the minor groove of DNA, whereas the C8-position of guanine occupies the major groove. We have taken advantage of these characteristics to employ Ac-HAQO in conjunction with either T4 DNA polymerase or piperidine in a footprinting technique to probe the interaction of the Escherichia coli integration host factor (IHF) with its binding site. We show that when IHF binds to its recognition site both the N2- and C8-positions of guanines are protected from modification by AcHAQO. In addition, the binding of IHF to DNA was prevented when either an N2- or a C8-AQO adduct was present in the binding site. When dimethylsulfate was used as the footprinting reagent, IHF protected against methylation of the N3 position of adenine in the minor groove but not the N7 position of guanine in the major groove. The difference in results obtained with the two reagents is ascribed to their relative sizes. Both DMS and AcHAQO are excluded by IHF from the minor groove, but only the larger AcHAQO molecule is excluded from the major groove.  相似文献   

3.
Anti benzo[a]pyrene diol epoxide (BPDE) alkylates guanines of DNA at N7 in the major groove and at the exocyclic amino group in the minor groove. In this report we investigated the rates of BPDE hydrolysis, DNA alkylation and subsequent depurination of BPDE-adducted pBR322 DNA fragment using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Preincubation studies showed that it hydrolyzed completely in triethanolamine buffer in <2 min. The depurination kinetics showed that a fraction of the N7 alkylated guanine depurinated rapidly; however a significant amount of N7 guanine alkylation remained stable to spontaneous depurination over a 4-h period. Similar results were obtained for the hydrolysis and alkylation rates of syn isomer but it required nearly 500 times more concentration to induce similar levels of N7 guanine alkylation. Cadmium ion strongly inhibited the N7 guanine alkylation of both isomers. But the minor groove alkylation was not affected as demonstrated by postlabeling assay which confirmed the presence of heat-and cadmium-stable minor groove adducts in BPDE-treated calf thymus DNA. Based on these and our earlier findings, we propose a mechanism for the synergistic effect of cadmium in chemically induced carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
Thorpe JH  Hobbs JR  Todd AK  Denny WA  Charlton P  Cardin CJ 《Biochemistry》2000,39(49):15055-15061
The structure of the duplex d[CG(5-BrU)ACG](2) bound to 9-bromophenazine-4-carboxamide has been solved through MAD phasing at 2.0 A resolution. It shows an unexpected and previously unreported intercalation cavity stabilized by the drug and novel binding modes of Co(2+) ions at certain guanine N7 sites. For the intercalation cavity the terminal cytosine is rotated to pair with the guanine of a symmetry-related duplex to create a pseudo-Holliday junction geometry, with two such cavities linked through the minor groove interactions of the N2/N3 guanine sites at an angle of 40 degrees, creating a quadruplex-like structure. The mode of binding of the drug is shown to be disordered, with the major conformations showing the side chain bound to the N7 position of adjacent guanines. The other end of the duplex exhibits a terminal base fraying in the presence of Co(2+) ions linking symmetry-related guanines, causing the helices to intertwine through the minor groove. The stabilization of the structure by the intercalating drug shows that this class of compound may bind to DNA junctions as well as duplex DNA or to strand-nicked DNA ('hemi-intercalated'), as in the cleavable complex. This suggests a structural basis for the dual poisoning of topoisomerase I and II enzymes by this family of drugs.  相似文献   

5.
Purine-rich regions in DNA and RNA may contain both guanines and adenines, which have various biological functions. Here we report the crystal structure of an RNA purine-rich fragment containing both guanine and adenine at 1.4 A resolution. Adenines form an adenine tetrad in the N6-H em leader N7 conformation. Substitution of an adenine tetrad in the guanine tetraplex does not change the global conformation but introduces irregularity in both the hydrogen bonding interaction pattern in the groove and the metal ion binding pattern in the central cavity of the tetraplex. The irregularity in groove binding may be critical for specific binding in tetraplexes. The formation of G-U octads provides a mechanism for interaction in the groove. Ba(2+) ions prefer to bind guanine tetrads, and adenine tetrads can only be bound by Na(+) ions, illustrating the binding selectivity of metal ions for the tetraplex.  相似文献   

6.
The antitumor drug ditercalinium is a rare example of a noncovalent DNA-binding ligand that forms bisintercalation complexes via the major groove of the double helix. Previous structural studies have revealed that the two connected pyridocarbazolium chromophores intercalate into DNA with the positively charged bis(ethylpiperidinium) linking chain oriented to the wide groove side of the helix. Although the interaction of ditercalinium with short oligonucleotides containing 4-6 contiguous GC base pairs has been examined in detail by biophysical and theoretical approaches, the sequence preference for ditercalinium binding to long DNA fragments that offer a wide variety of binding sites has been investigated only superficially. Here we have investigated both sequence preferences and possible molecular determinants of selectivity in the binding of ditercalinium to DNA, primarily using methods based upon DNase I footprinting. A range of multisite DNA substrates, including several natural restriction fragments and different PCR-generated fragments containing unconventional bases (2,6-diaminopurine, inosine, uridine, 5-fluoro- and 5-methylcytosine, 7-deazaguanine, 7-deazaadenine, and N(7)-cyanoboranoguanine), have been employed to show that ditercalinium selectively recognizes certain GC-rich sequences in DNA and to identify some of the factors which affect its DNA-binding sequence selectivity. Specifically, the footprinting data have revealed that the 2-amino group on the purines or the 5-methyl group on the pyrimidines is not essential for the formation of ditercalinium-DNA complexes whereas the major groove-oriented N(7) of guanine does appear as a key element in the molecular recognition process. The loss of N(7) at guanines but not adenines is sufficient to practically abolish sequence-selective binding of ditercalinium to DNA. Thus, as expected for a major groove binding drug, the N(7) of guanine is normally required for effective complex formation with GC base pairs, but interestingly the substitution of the N(7) with a relatively bulky cyanoborane group does not markedly affect the sequence recognition process. Therefore, the hydrogen bond accepting capability at N(7) of guanines is not sufficient to explain the GC-selective drug-DNA association, and the implications of these findings are considered.  相似文献   

7.
Many agents successfully used in cancer chemotherapy either directly or indirectly covalently modify DNA. Examples include cisplatin, which forms a covalent adduct with guanines, and doxorubicin, which traps a cleavage intermediate between topoisomerase II and torsionally strained DNA. In most cases, the efficacy of these drugs depends on the efficiency and specificity of their DNA binding, as well as the discrimination between normal and neoplastic cells in their handling of the drug-DNA adducts. While much is known about the chemistry of drug-DNA adducts, little is known regarding the overall specificity of their formation, especially in the context of a whole human genome, where potentially billions of binding sites are possible. We used the combinatorial selection method restriction endonuclease protection, selection, and amplification (REPSA) to determine the DNA-binding specificity of the semisynthetic covalent DNA-binding polyamide tallimustine, which contains a benzoic acid nitrogen mustard appended to the minor groove DNA-binding natural product distamycin A. After investigating over 134 million possible sequences, we found that the highest affinity tallimustine binding sites contained one of two consensus sequences, either the expected distamycin hexamer binding sites followed by a CG base pair (e.g., 5'-TTTTTTC-3' and 5'-AAATTTC-3') or the unexpected sequence 5'-TAGAAC-3'. Curiously, we found that tallimustine preferentially alkylated the N7 position of guanines located on the periphery of these consensus sequences. These findings suggested a cooperative binding model for tallimustine in which one molecule noncovalently resides in the DNA minor groove and locally perturbs the DNA structure, thereby facilitating alkylation by a second tallimustine of an exposed guanine on another side of the DNA.  相似文献   

8.
Guanine rich sequences adopt a variety of four stranded structures, which differ in strand orientation and conformation about the glycosidic bond even though they are all stabilised by Hoogsteen hydrogen bonded guanine tetrads. Detailed model building and molecular mechanics calculations have been carried out to investigate various possible conformations of guanines along a strand and different possible orientations of guanine strands in a G-tetraplex structure. It is found that for an oligo G stretch per se, a parallel four stranded structure with all guanines in anti conformation is favoured over other possible tetraplex structures. Hence an alternating syn-anti arrangement of guanines along a strand is likely to occur only in folded back tetraplex structures with antiparallel G strands. Our study provides a theoretical rationale for the observed alternation of glycosidic conformation and the inverted stacking arrangement arising from base flipover, in antiparallel G-tetraplex structures and also highlights the various structural features arising due to different types of strand orientations. The molecular mechanics calculations help in elucidating the various interactions which stabilize different G-tetraplex structures and indicate that screening of phosphate charge by counterions could have a dramatic effect on groove width in these four stranded structures.  相似文献   

9.
cis-Diamminedichloroplatinum (II) (cisplatin) and derivatives are very successful anticancer chemotherapeutic agents. They crosslink cellular DNA, forming bifunctional adducts with the N7 of guanine bases. In this review, recent structures of cisplatin adducts are summarised, and the significance for the recognition of DNA structure by proteins is discussed. Two new structures of intrastrand GpG adducts have been presented, showing a significant kinking of the helix axis and a novel hybrid A-B helical geometry. The relevance of this structure to the recognition of HMG-box and related proteins is discussed. A new structure of a cross-strand cisplatin adduct reveals a major disruption of the local DNA structure. The basepairs containing the modified guanine bases are broken, with extrusion of the cytosine bases into the solvent. The backbone reverses direction locally, with the result that the platinum adduct is located in what is the minor groove of the DNA overall. The extrusion of single bases out of the helix is strongly reminiscent of the effect of certain methylases on their DNA targets. Received: 30 January 1996 / Accepted: 21 February 1996  相似文献   

10.
Interaction of acridine- and 9-aminoacridinecarboxamide platinum complexes with DNA was investigated with respect to their DNA sequence specificity and kinetics of binding. The DNA sequence specificity of the compounds was quantitatively analyzed using a polymerase stop assay with the plasmid pUC19. The 9-aminoacridinecarboxamide platinum complexes exhibited a different sequence specificity to that of cisplatin, shifted away from runs of consecutive guanines (the main binding site for cisplatin). This alteration was dependent on chain length. Shorter chain length compounds (n = 2, 3) showed a greater difference in sequence specificity, while longer chain length compounds (n = 4, 5) more closely resembled cisplatin. An acridinecarboxamide platinum complex showed a similar sequence specificity to cisplatin, revealing that the major change of sequence specificity was due to the presence of the 9-amino substituent. A linear amplification system was used to investigate the time course of the reaction. The presence of an intercalating group (acridinecarboxamide or 9-aminoacridinecarboxamide) greatly increased the rate of reaction with DNA; this is proposed to be due to a different reaction mechanism with DNA (direct displacement by the N-7 of guanine).  相似文献   

11.
12.
H C Shih  H Kassahun  C J Burrows  S E Rokita 《Biochemistry》1999,38(45):15034-15042
Nickel-dependent recognition and oxidation of guanine have been linked in part through the paramagnetic effects of nickel on the NMR of model oligonucleotide duplexes. Direct interaction between nickel and guanine N7 had originally been postulated from correlations between the efficiency of guanine oxidation and the environment surrounding its N7 position. (1)H and (31)P NMR spectra of DNA containing a single, isolated extrahelical guanine are consistent with selective binding of nickel to the N7 of this unique base over a background of nonspecific association to the phosphate backbone. The presence of a macrocyclic complex or simple salt of nickel did not detectably alter the structure of the duplex or extrahelical residue. Accordingly, nickel appeared to bind the extrahelical guanine N7 within the major groove as indicated by paramagnetic effects on the proton signals of nucleotides on the 5' but not 3' side of the nickel binding site. Similar (1)H NMR analysis of DNA containing a dynamic equilibrium of extrahelical guanine residues also suggested that the nickel complex did not affect the native distribution of structures. Oxidation of these sites by a nickel-mediated pathway consequently reflected their solvent accessibility in a general and metal-independent manner. The close proximity of the extrahelical guanines produced a composite of paramagnetic effects on each adjacent nucleotide resulting from both direct and proximal coordination of nickel.  相似文献   

13.
Nitrous acid is a mutagenic agent. It can induce interstrand cross-links in duplex DNA, preferentially at d(CpG) steps: two guanines on opposite strands are linked via a single shared exocyclic imino group. Recent synthetic advances have led to the production of large quantities of such structurally homogenous cross-linked duplex DNA. Here we present the high resolution solution structure of the cross-linked dodecamer [d(GCATCCGGATGC)]2 (the cross-linked guanines are underlined), determined by 2D NMR spectroscopy, distance geometry, restrained molecular dynamics and iterative NOE refinement. The cross-linked guanines form a nearly planar covalently linked 'G:G base pair' with only minor propeller twisting, while the cytidine bases of their normal base pairing partners have been flipped out of the helix and adopt well defined extrahelical positions in the minor groove. On the 5'-side of the cross-link, the minor groove is widened to accommodate these extrahelical bases, and the major groove becomes quite narrow at the cross-link. The cross-linked 'G:G base pair' is well stacked on the spatially adjacent C:G base pairs, particularly on the 3'-side guanines. In addition to providing the first structure of a nitrous acid cross-link in DNA, these studies could be of major importance to the understanding of the mechanisms of nitrous acid cross-linking and mutagenicity, as well as the mechanisms responsible for its repair in intracellular environments. It is also the shortest DNA cross-link structure to be described.  相似文献   

14.
The crystal and molecular structure of the ammonium salt of deoxycytidylyl-(3'-5')-deoxyguanosine has been determined from 0.85 A resolution single crystal X-ray diffraction data. The crystals obtained by acetone diffusion technique at -20 degrees C, are orthorhombic, P212121, a = 12.880(2), b = 17444(2) and c = 27.642(2) A. The structure was solved by high resolution Patterson and Fourier methods and refined to R = 0.136. There are two d(CpG) molecules in the asymmetric unit forming a mini left handed Z-DNA helix. This is in contrast to the earlier reported forms of d(CpG) where the molecules form self base paired duplexes. There are two ammonium ions in the asymmetric unit. The major groove NH+4 ion interacts with N7 of guanines through water bridges besides making H-bonded interactions directly with the phosphate oxygen atoms. A second NH+4 ion is found in the minor groove interacting directly with the phosphate oxygen atoms. Symmetry related molecules pack in such a way that the cytosine base stacks on cytosine and guanine base on guanine. Our structure demonstrates that alternating d(CpG) sequences have the ability to adopt the left handed Z-DNA structure even at the dimer level i.e., in a sequence which is only two base pairs long.  相似文献   

15.
The packaging signal of HIV-1 RNA contains a stem-loop structure, SL1, which serves as the dimerization initiation site for two identical copies of the genome and is important for packaging of the RNA genome into the budding virion and for overall infectivity. SL1 spontaneously dimerizes via a palindromic hexanucleotide sequence in its apical loop, forming a metastable kissing dimer form. Incubation with nucleocapsid protein causes this form to refold to a thermodynamically stable mature linear dimer. Here, we present an NMR structure of the latter form of the full-length SL1 sequence of the Lai HIV-1 isolate. The structure was refined using nuclear Overhauser effect and residual dipolar coupling data. The structure presents a symmetric homodimer of two RNA strands of 35 nucleotides each; it includes five stems separated by four internal loops. The central palindromic stem is surrounded by two symmetric adenine-rich 1-2 internal loops, A-bulges. All three adenines in each A-bulge are stacked inside the helix, consistent with the solution structures of shorter SL1 constructs determined previously. The outer 4-base pair stems and, proximal to them, purine-rich 1-3 internal loops, or G-bulges, are the least stable parts of the molecule. The G-bulges display high conformational variability in the refined ensemble of structures, despite the availability of many structural restraints for this region. Nevertheless, most conformations share a similar structural motif: a guanine and an adenine from opposite strands form a GA mismatch stacked on the top of the neighboring stem. The two remaining guanines are exposed, one in the minor groove and another in the major groove side of the helix, consistent with secondary structure probing data for SL1. These guanines may be recognized by the nucleocapsid protein, which binds tightly to the G-bulge in vitro.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of G.T mispair incorporation into a double-helical environment was examined by molecular dynamics simulation. The 60-ps simulations performed on the two hexanucleotide duplexes d (G3C3)2 and d(G3TC2)2 included 10 Na+ counterions and first hydration shell waters. The resulting backbone torsional angle trajectories were analyzed to select time spans representative of conformational domains. The average backbone angles and helical parameters of the last time span for both duplexes are reported. During the simulation the hexamers retained B-type DNA structures that differed from typical A- or B-DNA forms. The overall helical structures for the two duplexes are vary similar. The presence of G.T mispairs did not alter the overall helical structure of the oligonucleotide duplex. Large propeller twist and buckle angles were obtained for both duplexes. The purine/pyrimidine crossover step showed a large decrease in propeller twist in the normal duplex but not in the mismatch duplex. Upon the formation of wobble mispairs in the mismatched duplex, the guanines moved into the minor groove and the thymines moved into the major groove. This helped prevent purine/purine clash and created a deformation in the relative orientation of the glycosidic bonds. It also exposed the free O4 of the thymines in the major groove and N2 of the guanines in the minor groove to interactions with solvent and counterions. These factors seemed to contribute to the apparently higher rigidity of the mismatched duplex during the simulation.  相似文献   

17.
The EcoKI methyltransferase methylates two adenines on opposite strands of its bipartite DNA recognition sequence AAC(N6)GTGC. The enzyme has a strong preference for hemimethylated DNA substrates, but the methylation state of the DNA does not influence its binding affinity. Methylation interference was used to compare the contacts made by the EcoKI methyltransferase with unmodified, hemimethylated or fully modified DNAs. Contacts were seen at or near the N7 position of guanine, in the major groove, for all of the guanines in the EcoKI recognition sequence, and at two guanines on the edge of the intervening spacer sequence. The presence of the cofactor and methyl donor S-adenosyl methionine had a striking effect on the interference pattern for unmodified DNA which could not be mimicked by the presence of the cofactor analogue S-adenosyl homocysteine. In contrast, S-adenosyl methionine had no effect on the interference patterns for either kind of hemimethylated DNA, or for fully modified DNA. Differences between the interference patterns for the unmodified DNA and any of the three forms of methylated DNA provide evidence that methylation of the target sequence influences the conformation of the protein-DNA interface, and illustrate the importance of S-adenosyl methionine in the distinction between unmodified and methylated DNA by the methyltransferase.  相似文献   

18.
Z Gu  A Gorin  B E Hingerty  S Broyde  D J Patel 《Biochemistry》1999,38(33):10855-10870
A solution structural study has been undertaken on the aminofluorene-C8-dG ([AF]dG) adduct located at a single-strand-double-strand d(A1-A2-C3-[AF]G4-C5-T6-A7-C8-C9-A10-T11-C12-C13). d(G14-G15-A16-T17-G18-G19-T20- A21-G22-N23) 13/10-mer junction (N = C or A) using proton-proton distance restraints derived from NMR data in combination with intensity-based relaxation matrix refinement computations. This single-strand-double-strand junction models one arm of a replication fork composed of a 13-mer template strand which contains the [AF]dG modification site and a 10-mer primer strand which has been elongated up to the modified guanine with either its complementary dC partner or a dA mismatch. The solution structures establish that the duplex segment retains a minimally perturbed B-DNA conformation with Watson-Crick hydrogen-bonding retained up to the dC5.dG22 base pair. The guanine ring of the [AF]dG4 adduct adopts a syn glycosidic torsion angle and is displaced into the major groove when positioned opposite dC or dA residues. This base displacement of the modified guanine is accompanied by stacking of one face of the aminofluorene ring of [AF]dG4 with the dC5.dG22 base pair, while the other face of the aminofluorene ring is stacked with the purine ring of the nonadjacent dA2 residue. By contrast, the dC and dA residues opposite the junctional [AF]dG4 adduct site adopt distinctly different alignments. The dC23 residue positioned opposite the adduct site is looped out into the minor groove by the aminofluorene ring. The syn displaced orientation of the modified dG with stacking of the aminofluorene and the looped out position of the partner dC could be envisioned to cause polymerase stalling associated with subsequent misalignment leading to frameshift mutations in appropriate sequences. The dA23 residue positioned opposite the adduct site is positioned in the major groove with its purine ring aligned face down over the van der Waals surface of the major groove and its amino group directed toward the T6.A21 base pair. The Hoogsteen edge of the modified guanine of [AF]dG4 and the Watson-Crick edge of dA23 positioned opposite it are approximately coplanar and directed toward each other but are separated by twice the hydrogen-bonding distance required for pairing. This structure of [AF]dG opposite dA at a model template-primer junctional site can be compared with a previous structure of [AF]dG opposite dA within a fully paired duplex [Norman, D., Abuaf, P., Hingerty, B. E., Live, D. , Grunberger, D., Broyde, S., and Patel, D. J. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 7462-7476]. The alignment of the Hoogsteen edge of [AF]dG (syn) positioned opposite the Watson-Crick edge of dA (anti) has been observed for both systems with the separation greater in the case of the junctional alignment in the model template-primer system. However, the aminofluorene ring is positioned in the minor groove in the fully paired duplex while it stacks over the junctional base pair in the template-primer system. This suggests that the syn [AF]dG opposite dA junctional alignment can be readily incorporated within a duplex by a translation of this entity toward the minor groove.  相似文献   

19.
Experimentally observed sequence-selective binding of metal ion to DNA oligonucleotides have been compared with variations of electrostatic potential (EP) along the helix. Calculations of EP have been performed for three atomic models of the oligonucleotide duplex [d(CGCGAATTCGCG)2] using several variants of EP calculations, including a solution of non-linear Poisson-Boltzmann equation (NPBE). N7 atom of guanine adjacent to adenine base was identified as a region with the most negative electrostatic potential in the major groove. The EP value for the Me ion binding site surpasses the value for N7 of other guanines by 10-26% depending on particular duplex conformation. Qualitatively, the sequence dependent variations of EP near guanine N7 atoms are in agreement with the sequence-selective behavior of Mn(II) and Zn(II) ions as revealed by NMR experiments. But the difference in EP between the two most negative regions near guanine N7 atoms does not exceed 1.25 kT/e. Simple model suggests that metal ions are capable to form ion-hydrate complexes with G-Pu steps of DNA duplex. These complexes are formed via one Me...G and five Me...water coordination bonds with water molecules hydrogen bonded to two adjacent purine bases in the same chain. We suppose that such a stereospecific structural possibility is the main factor which control the sequence-selectivity in the metal ion binding. A combination of both mechanisms allows to explain sequence specific Mn(II) and Zn(II) binding to a set of oligonucleotides.  相似文献   

20.
Large variations in alkylation intensities exist among guanines in a DNA sequence following treatment with chemotherapeutic alkylating agents such as nitrogen mustards, and the substituent attached to the reactive group can impose a distinct sequence preference for reaction. In order to understand further the structural and electrostatic factors which determine the sequence selectivity of alkylation reactions, the effect of increased ionic strength, the intercalator ethidium bromide, AT-specific minor groove binders distamycin A and netropsin, and the polyamine spermine on guanine N7-alkylation by L-phenylalanine mustard (L-Pam), uracil mustard (UM), and quinacrine mustard (QM) was investigated with a modification of the guanine-specific chemical cleavage technique for DNA sequencing. For L-Pam and UM, increased ionic strength and the cationic DNA affinity binders dose dependently inhibited the alkylation. QM alkylation was less inhibited by salt (100 mM NaCl), ethidium (10 microM), and spermine (10 microM). Distamycin A and netropsin (100 microM) gave an enhancement of overall QM alkylation. More interestingly, the pattern of guanine N7-alkylation was qualitatively altered by ethidium bromide, distamycin A, and netropsin. The result differed with both the nitrogen mustard (L-Pam less than UM less than QM) and the cationic agent used. The effect, which resulted in both enhancement and suppression of alkylation sites, was most striking in the case of netropsin and distamycin A, which differed from each other. DNA footprinting indicated that selective binding to AT sequences in the minor groove of DNA can have long-range effects on the alkylation pattern of DNA in the major groove.  相似文献   

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