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1.
The conformations of the adducts derived from the covalent binding of the two enantiomeric forms of 9,10-epoxy-9,10,11,12-tetrahydrobenzo(e)pyrene (BePE) with native DNA were investigated by the electric linear dichroism technique. Both enantiomers give rise to two major adducts, one of which appears to be a quasi-intercalative site (I) while the other one is an external binding site (II). While the overall linear dichroism spectra are similar, in the case of the (-) enantiomer there is a greater contribution of site II adducts. These results are markedly different from the ones obtained with the two enantiomers of anti-benzo(a)pyrene-7,8-diol-9,10-epoxide (BaPDE), where the (+) enantiomer gives rise almost exclusively to site II binding, while the (-) enantiomer gives rise to both site I and site II covalent binding. The differences in the heterogeneity of binding between BePE and anti-BaPDE enantiomers may be due to the absence of hydroxyl groups in BePE which, in the case of BaPDE, are an important factor in determining the stereoselective properties of the covalent binding to double-stranded DNA.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract

The conformation of adducts derived from the reactions and covalent binding of the (+) and (-) enantiomers of 7β, 8α-dihydroxy-9α, 10α-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo(a)pyrene (anti-BaPDE) with double-stranded calf thymus DNA in vitro were investigated utilizing the electric linear dichroism technique. The linear dichroism and absorption spectra of the covalent DNA complexes are interpreted in terms of a superposition of two types of binding sites. One of these conformations (site I) is a complex in which the plane of the pyrene residue is close to parallel (within 30°) to the planes of the DNA bases (quasi-intercalation), while the other (site II) is an external binding site; this latter type of adduct is attributed to the covalent binding of anti-BaPDE to the exocyclic amino group of deoxyguanine (N2-dG), while site I adducts are attributed to the 06-deoxyguanine and N6-deoxyadenine adducts identified in the product analysis of P. Brookes and M.R. Osborne (Carcinogenesis (1982) 3, 1223–1226). Site II adducts are dominant (~90% in the covalent complexes derived from the (+) enantiomer), but account for only 50±5% of the adducts in the case of the (—)-enantiomer. The orientation of site II complexes is different by 20±10° in the adducts derived from the binding of the (+) and the (—) enantiomers to DNA, the long axis of the pyrene chromophore being oriented more parallel to the axis of the DNA helix in the case of the (+) enantiomer. These findings support the proposals by Brookes and Osborne that the difference in spatial orientation of the N2-dG adducts of (-)-anti-BaPDE together with their lower abundance may account for the lower biological activity of the (—) enantiomer. The external site II adducts, rather than site I adducts, appear to be correlated with the biological activity of these comoounds.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract

The reaction mechanisms of two isomeric bay-region diol epoxides of 5-methylchrysene (trans-1,2-dihydroxy-anti/-3,4-epoxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-5-methylchrysene (DE-I) and trans-7,8-dihydroxy-anti-9,10-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydro-5-methylchrysene (DE-II) with double-stranded DNA in aqueous solutions were studied utilizing kinetic flow dichroism and fluorescence techniques. As in the case of the previously studied benzo(a)pyrene-7,8-diol-9,10-oxide isomers (BaPDE), both DE-I and DE-II rapidly form intercalation-type complexes (association constants K = 2700 and 1500 M?1 respectively in a neutral 5mM phosphate solution). The physically bound diol epoxide molecules react on time scales of minutes to form predominantly tetraols; a greater fraction (6±1%) of DE-I than of DE-II (2–3%) molecules react with the DNA to form covalent products. The DE-II isomer is characterized by a greater reactivity than DE-I, and the rates of reaction are markedly accelerated in the presence of DNA in both cases. The linear dichroism spectra of the covalent adducts reveal that the conformations of both types of adducts are similar, with the long axes of the phenanthrenyl chromophores tilted, on the average, at angles of 38-52° with respect to the average orientations of the transition moments (at 260 nm) of the DNA bases. The conformations of the covalently bound DE-I and DE-II molecules resemble those observed in the case of the highly tumorigenic (+) enantiomer of anti-BaPDE. The differences in the biological properties of these and other polycyclic aromatic diol epoxides are discussed in terms of their reactivities with DNA and the conformations of the adducts formed.  相似文献   

4.
The covalent binding of the tumorigenic (+) enantiomer and the nontumorigenic (-) enantiomer of trans-7,8-dihydroxy-anti-9,10-epoxy-7,8,9,19-tetrahydrobenzo(a)pyrene (BPDE) to double-stranded native DNA gives rise to heterogeneous adducts, especially in the case of (-)-BPDE. The covalent (+)-BPDE-DNA adducts are predominantly of the external site II type, while the (-)-BPDE-DNA adducts are predominantly of the quasi-intercalative, site I type (65%), with 35% of site II adducts. The site I adducts can be selectively photodissociated with near-ultraviolet light (quantum yields in the range 0.0003-0.005); the external site II adducts (photodissociation quantum yield 3 X 10(-5) are 10-100-times more stable. The photolability of covalent (-)-BPDE-DNA adducts accounts for the discrepancies in the linear dichroism properties of these complexes reported previously. Fluorescence quenching data, previously utilized to assess the degree of solvent exposure of the pyrenyl residues in covalent adducts, were in some cases significantly influenced by the presence of highly fluorescent tetraol dissociation products. After correcting for this effect, it is shown that the fluorescence of the external site II (+)-BPDE-DNA adducts is sensitive to acrylamide, while the fluorescence of the dominant site I (-)-BPDE-DNA adducts is not affected by this fluorescence quencher, as expected for adducts with considerable carcinogen-base stacking interactions.  相似文献   

5.
The conformation of adducts derived from the reactions and covalent binding of the (+) and (-) enantiomers of 7 beta, 8 alpha-dihydroxy-9 alpha, 10 alpha-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo(a)pyrene (anti-BaPDE) with double-stranded calf thymus DNA in vitro were investigated utilizing the electric linear dichroism technique. The linear dichroism and absorption spectra of the covalent DNA complexes are interpreted in terms of a superposition of two types of binding sites. One of these conformations (site I) is a complex in which the plane of the pyrene residue is close to parallel (within 30 degrees) to the planes of the DNA bases (quasi-intercalation), while the other (site II) is an external binding site; this latter type of adduct is attributed to the covalent binding of anti-BaPDE to the exocyclic amino group of deoxyguanine (N2-dG), while site I adducts are attributed to the O6-deoxyguanine and N6-deoxyadenine adducts identified in the product analysis of P. Brookes and M.R. Osborne (Carcinogenesis (1982) 3, 1223-1226). Site II adducts are dominant (approximately 90% in the covalent complexes derived from the (+) enantiomer), but account for only 50 +/- 5% of the adducts in the case of the (-)-enantiomer. The orientation of site II complexes is different by 20 +/- 10 degrees in the adducts derived from the binding of the (+) and the (-) enantiomers to DNA, the long axis of the pyrene chromophore being oriented more parallel to the axis of the DNA helix in the case of the (+) enantiomer. These findings support the proposals by Brookes and Osborne that the difference in spatial orientation of the N2-dG adducts of (-)-anti-BaPDE together with their lower abundance may account for the lower biological activity of the (-) enantiomer. The external site II adducts, rather than site I adducts, appear to be correlated with the biological activity of these compounds.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The reaction mechanisms of two isomeric bay-region diol epoxides of 5-methylchrysene (trans-1,2-dihydroxy-anti-3,4-epoxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-5-methylchrysene (DE-I) and trans-7,8-dihydroxy-anti-9,10-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydro-5-methylchrysene (DE-II) with double-stranded DNA in aqueous solutions were studied utilizing kinetic flow dichroism and fluorescence techniques. As in the case of the previously studied benzo(a)pyrene-7,8-diol-9,10-oxide isomers (BaPDE), both DE-I and DE-II rapidly form intercalation-type complexes (association constants K = 2700 and 1500 M-1 respectively in a neutral 5mM phosphate solution). The physically bound diol epoxide molecules react on time scales of minutes to form predominantly tetraols; a greater fraction (6 +/- 1%) of DE-I than of DE-II (2-3%) molecules react with the DNA to form covalent products. The DE-II isomer is characterized by a greater reactivity than DE-I, and the rates of reaction are markedly accelerated in the presence of DNA in both cases. The linear dichroism spectra of the covalent adducts reveal that the conformations of both types of adducts are similar, with the long axes of the phenanthrenyl chromophores tilted, on the average, at angles of 38-52 degrees with respect to the average orientations of the transition moments (at 260 nm) of the DNA bases. The conformations of the covalently bound DE-I and DE-II molecules resemble those observed in the case of the highly tumorigenic (+) enantiomer of anti-BaPDE.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The physical and covalent binding of the carcinogen benzo(a)pyrene-7,8-diol-9,10-oxide (BaPDE) to poly(dG-dC).(dG-dC) and poly(dG-m5dC).(dG-m5dC) in the B and Z forms were studied utilizing absorbance, fluorescence and linear dichroism techniques. In the case of poly(dG-dC).(dG-dC) the decrease in the covalent binding of BaPDE with increasing NaCl concentration (0.1-4 M) as the B form is transformed to the Z form is attributed to the effects of high ionic strengths on the reactivity and physical binding of BaPDE to the polynucleotides; these effects tend to obscure differences in reactivities with the B and Z forms of the nucleic acids. In the case of poly(dG-m5dC).(dG-m5dC) the B-to-Z transition is induced at low ionic strength (2 mM NaCl + 10 microM Co(NH3)6Cl3) and the covalent binding is found to be 2-3-times lower to the Z form than to the B form. Physical binding of BaPDE by intercalation, which precedes the covalent binding reaction, is significantly lower in the Z form than in the B form, thus accounting, in part, for the lower covalent binding. The linear dichroism characteristics of BaPDE covalently bound to the Z and B forms of poly(dG-m5dC).(dG-m5dC) are consistent with nonintercalative, probably external conformations of the aromatic pyrenyl residues.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Abstract

Flow linear dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy show that the covalent (+)-anti-BPDE-DNA complex adopts two rapidly interchanging conformations. The binding introduces local flexibility in DNA facilitating further covalent attacks.  相似文献   

11.
When the major reactive metabolite of benzo(a)pyrene, trans -7,8-dihydroxy - anti-9,10-epoxy -7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo(a)pyrene (anti-BPDE) is incubated with DNA in aqueous solution at 25°C, both covalent binding and hydrolysis of anti-BPDE to its tetraols occur. Using fluorescence and absorption spectroscopy it is shown that hydrolysis of anti-BPDE is markedly accelerated by DNA. In the presence of 5A260 units of DNA per ml in cacodylate buffer solution, at an initial concentration of DNA phosphate/anti-BPDE ratio of 100, both the extent of covalent binding to DNA ( < 7% of the total anti-BPDE initially present) and hydrolysis of anti-BPDE reach their maximum levels within less than five minutes after mixing. Absorption and electric linear dichroism spectra indicate that the tetraols bind non-covalently to DNA by an intercalation mechanism, whereas the covalent product displays the characteristics of an externally bound complex.  相似文献   

12.
Dimerization of a hydroxycarbazole produces an axially chiral biaryl, BICOL ( 2 ). One enantiomer (R)‐ 2 , is capable of enantioselective binding to different polymorphs of DNA. The biaryl (R)‐ 2 was shown by fluorescence and circular dichroism to induce a shift of Z‐DNA to B‐DNA. The opposite enantiomer (S)‐ 2 shows no specific binding. The significant difference in behaviour between the two enantiomers (S)‐ 2 and (R)‐ 2 is in line with molecular modelling studies which show two very different binding geometries between the enantiomers with each polymorph of DNA. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

13.
Kinetic flow dichroism studies indicate that the (+) enantiomer of 7 beta, 8 alpha-dihydroxy-9 alpha, 10 alpha-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo(a)pyrene physically bound at intercalative-type sites in double-stranded DNA undergoes covalent binding reactions to form adducts at external binding sites. The conformation of the non-covalent complex derived from the (-) stereoisomer is also intercalative in nature, but the conformations of the covalent adducts are heterogeneous and are characterized by both intercalative-type and external conformations. It is suggested that the distinctly higher biological activity of the (+) enantiomer relative to the activity of the (-) enantiomer may be related to the preponderance of 7,8,9-triol benzo(a)pyrene residues covalently linked to deoxyguanine and located at external binding sites in the DNA adducts.  相似文献   

14.
The unwinding of supercoiled phi X174 RFI DNA induced by the tumorigenic (+) and non-tumorigenic (-) enantiomers of trans-7,8-dihydroxy-anti-9,10-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene (BPDE) has been investigated by agarose slab-gel and ethidium titration tube gel electrophoresis. The differences in adduct conformations were verified by flow linear dichroism techniques. Both enantiomers cause a reversible unwinding by the formation of noncovalent intercalative complexes. The effects of covalently bound BPDE residues on the electrophoretic mobilities of the RF I DNA form in agarose gels were investigated in detail in the range of binding ratios rb approximately 0.0-0.06 (covalently bound BPDE residues/nucleotide). In this range of rb values, there is a striking difference in the mobilities of (+)-BPDE- and (-)-BPDE-adducted phi X174 DNA in agarose slab-gels, the covalently bound (+)-BPDE residues causing a significantly greater retardation than (-)-BPDE residues. Increasing the level of covalent adducts beyond rb approximately 0.06 in the case of the (+)-BPDE enantiomer, leads to further unwinding and a minimum in the mobilities (corresponding to comigration of the nicked form and the covalently closed relaxed modified form) at rb 0.10 +/- 0.01; at still higher rb values, rewinding of the modified DNA in the opposite sense is observed. From the minimum in the mobility, a mean unwinding angle (per BPDE residue) of theta = 12 +/- 1.5 degrees is determined, which is in good agreement the value of theta = 11 +/- 1.8 degrees obtained by the tube gel titration method. Using this latter method, values of theta = 6.8 +/- 1.7 degrees for (-)-BPDE-phi X174 adducts are observed. It is concluded that agarose slab gel techniques are not suitable for determining unwinding angles for (-)-BPDE-modified phi X174 DNA because the alterations in the tertiary structures for rb < 0.06 are too small to cause sufficiently large changes in the electrophoretic mobilities. The major trans (+)-BPDE-N2-guanosine covalent adduct is situated at external binding sites and the mechanisms of unwinding are therefore different from those relevant to noncovalent intercalative BPDE-DNA complexes or to classical intercalating drug molecules; a flexible hinge joint and a widening of the minor groove at the site of the lesion may account for the observed unwinding effects. The more heterogeneous (-)-BPDE-nucleoside adducts (involving cis and trans N2-guanosine, and adenosine adducts) are less effective in causing unwinding of supercoiled DNA for reasons which remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

15.
Linear dichroism and absorption methods are used to study the orientations of transition moments of absorption bands of polycyclic aromatic epoxide derivatives which overlap with those of the DNA band in the 240-300 nm region. Both the short and long axes of the pyrene residues of 1-oxiranylpyrene (1-OP) and the (+) and (-) enantiomers of trans-7,8-dihydroxy-anti-9,10-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene (BPDE) noncovalently bound to double-stranded native DNA are oriented approximately perpendicular to the axis of the DNA helix, consistent with intercalative modes of binding. The covalent binding of these three epoxide derivatives to DNA is accompanied by reorientations of both the short and long axes of the pyrene residues. Covalent adducts derived from the highly mutagenic (+)-anti-BPDE are characterized by tilts of the short axis within 35 degrees or less, and of the long axis by more than 60-80 degrees, with respect to the planes of the DNA bases. In the adducts derived from the binding of the less mutagenic (-)-anti-BPDE and 1-OP epoxide derivatives to DNA, the long axes of the pyrenyl rings are predominantly oriented within 25 degrees of the planes of the DNA bases; however, in the case of the (-) enantiomer of BPDE, there is significant heterogeneity of conformations. In the case of the 1-OP covalent DNA adducts, the short axis of the pyrene ring system is tilted away from the planes of the DNA bases, and the pyrene ring system is not intercalated between DNA base-pairs as in the noncovalent complexes. The stereochemical properties of the saturated 7,8,9,10-ring in BPDE, or the lack of the 7 and 8 carbon atoms in 1-OP, do not seem to affect noncovalent intercalative complex formation which, most likely, is influenced mainly by the flat pyrenyl residues. These structural features, however, strongly influence the conformations of the covalent adducts, which in turn may be responsible for the differences in the mutagenic activities of these molecules.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract

The molecular structures of adducts between the + and—enantiomers of 7,8-diol 9,10-epoxy benzo[aJpyrene and a double-stranded model for DNA, have been examined by empirical energy calculations. Low-energy structures were only obtained for A form, and not B form DNA. Both + and—adducts are of approximately equal energy. Some structural differences in the orientation of the BP chromophore in the two adducts were found.  相似文献   

17.
Detailed studies were carried out on the binding of the enantiomers of [PtCl2(mepyrr)] (mepyrr = N-methyl-2-aminomethylpyrrolidine) to dG, d(GpG) and a 52-mer oligonucleotide. The pyrrolidine ligand structure was found to be neither sufficiently rigid nor bulky to enforce a single chirality at the exocyclic amine site in this complex, resulting in the presence of diastereomers that complicated the binding studies. Reaction of the (GpG) dinucleotide with R- and S-[PtCl2(mepyrr)] resulted in formation of four [Pt{d(GpG)}(mepyrr)] isomers for each enantiomer as a consequence of the existence of two orientational isomers and two diastereomers. These isomers formed in different amounts most likely as a consequence of the unequal formation of the diastereomers together with stereoselectivity induced by interactions between the dinucleotide and the mepyrr ligand. The [PtCl2(mepyrr)] complexes displayed stereoselectivity and enantioselectivity in their reactions with a 52-mer duplex designed to allow formation of only GpG intrastrand adducts. All four bifunctional adducts formed for each enantiomer, providing further evidence of the lack of directing ability of the ligand in formation of the 1,2-intrastrand adduct. Significant amounts of monofunctional species remained in these assays suggesting that the introduction of the methyl substituent to the exocyclic amine inhibited ring-closure to the bifunctional adduct. This was not sufficient to achieve enantiospecificity, but in the case of the R-enantiomer, one of the bifunctional adducts formed in only small amounts.  相似文献   

18.
R Xu  B Mao  J Xu  B Li  S Birke  C E Swenberg    N E Geacintov 《Nucleic acids research》1995,23(12):2314-2319
The apparent persistence length of enzymatically linearized pIBI30 plasmid DNA molecules approximately 2300 bp long, as measured by a hydrodynamic linear flow dichroism method, is markedly decreased after covalent binding of the highly tumorigenic benzo[a]pyrene metabolite 7R,8S-dihydroxy-9S,10R-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene [(+)-anti-BPDE]. In striking contrast, the binding of the non-tumorigenic, mirror-image 7S,8R,9R,10S enantiomer [(-)-anti-BPDE] to DNA has no measurable effect on its alignment in hydrodynamic flow gradients (< or = 2.2% of the DNA bases modified). In order to relate this effect to BPDE-nucleotide lesions of defined stereochemistry, the bending induced by site-specifically placed and stereochemically defined (+)- and (-)-anti-BPDE-N2-dG lesions in an 11mer deoxyoligonucleotide duplex was studied by ligation and gel electrophoresis methods. Out of the four stereochemically isomeric anti-BPDE-N2-deoxyguanosyl (dG) adducts with either (+)-trans, (-)-trans, (+)-cis, and (-)-cis adduct stereochemistry, only the (+)-trans adduct gives rise to prominent bends or flexible hinge joints in the modified oligonucleotide duplexes. Since both anti-BPDE enantiomers are known to bind preferentially to dG (> or = 85%), these observations can account for the differences in persistence lengths of DNA modified with either (+)-anti-BPDE or the chiral (-)-anti-BPDE isomer.  相似文献   

19.
The modes of reaction of the tumorigenic bay region diol epoxide anti-BADE [+/-)-trans-3,4-diol-anti-1,2-epoxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydrobenz[a]anthr acene) and the less potent tumor initiating diastereomer syn-BADE [+/-)-trans-3,4-diol-syn-1,2-epoxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydrobenz[a]anthra cene) with native, double-stranded DNA were compared. The bay-region diol epoxide derived from 3-methylcholanthrene (3-MCDE, racemic trans-9,10-diol-anti-7,8-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydromethylcholanthrene+ ++) was included in this study in order to assess the effects of the methyl and methylene substituents on the reactivity with DNA. Utilizing linear dichroism and other spectroscopic methods, it is shown that all three diol epoxides forn non-covalent complexes with DNA. The diastereomers anti-BADE and syn-BADE form intercalative physical complexes, but the association constant K of the syn-diastereomer is about 6-7 times smaller than for anti-BADE; this effect is ascribed to the bulky quasi-diaxial conformation of the diol epoxide ring in the syn diastereomer. The value of K (4000 M-1) is similar for anti-BADE and 3-MCDE, although the latter is not intercalated in the classical sense since the short axis of the molecule is tilted closer to the axis of the DNA double helix. The conformations of the covalent DNA adducts are interpreted in terms of a quasi-intercalative conformation (site I), and a conformation in which the long axes of the polycyclic molecules are tilted closer to the axis of the helix (site II). Both tumorigens, anti-BADE and 3-MCDE, undergo a marked re-orientation from a non-covalent site I to a covalent site II conformation upon binding chemically with the DNA bases, although a small fraction of the covalent anti-BADE adducts remains quasi-intercalated; in contrast, the alkyl substituents in 3-MCDE not only prevent the formation of intercalative physical complexes, but also the formation of site I covalent adducts. In the case of the less tumorigenic syn-BADE, both the non-covalent complexes and the covalent adducts are of the site I-type. The bay-region diol epoxide of benz[a]anthracene and of 3-methylcholanthrene display a similar pattern of reactivities and covalent adduct conformations as the bay region diol epoxide derivatives of benz[a]pyrene, suggesting that adduct conformation might be an important factor in determining the levels of mutagenic and tumorigenic activities of this class of compounds.  相似文献   

20.
Binding of ibuprofen (IB) enantiomers to human serum albumin (HSA) was studied using a chiral fluorescent derivatizing reagent, which enabled the measurement of IB enantiomers at a concentration as low as 5 × 10−8 M. Scatchard analyses revealed that there were two classes of binding sites for both enantiomers. For the high affinity site, the number of the binding sites was one for both enantiomers, and the binding constant of R-IB was 2.3-fold greater than that of S-IB. The difference in the affinity at the high affinity site may result in the stereoselective binding of IB enantiomers at therapeutic concentrations. It was confirmed that the high affinity site of IB enantiomers is Site II (diazepam binding site) by using site marker ligands. Also, significant enantiomer-enantiomer interactions were observed in the binding. The binding data were quantitatively analyzed and a binding model with an assumption of competitive interactions only at the high affinity site simulated the binding characteristics of IB enantiomers fairly well. Chirality 9:643–649, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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