Abstract: | Coulombic interactions between the side chains of charged amino acids (Arg+, Lys+, and His+) and negatively charged phosphate groups of nucleic acid fragments have been studied theoretically. Diribose monophosphate and dideoxyribose monophosphate are chosen as model systems for single-stranded RNA and DNA, respectively. The interaction energies have been calculated by second-order perturbation theory using simplified formulas for individual terms. The interaction energy in this formalism is a sum of electrostatic, polarization, dispersion, and repulsive energies. Our results show that about 90% of the total interaction energy is contributed by the electrostatic term alone. Contribution from the repulsive term exceeds that from the dispersion term. Calculated interaction energies suggest that Lys+ and His+ form more stable complexes with RNA than with single-stranded DNA. On the other hand, Arg+ has a higher affinity for DNA than for RNA. The affinity of nucleic acids for the three amino acids is in the order Lys+ > His+ > Arg+. Further, the basic amino acid residues form more stable complexes with A-DNA than with B-DNA. The role of the Coulombic interactions in the specific recognition of nucleic acids by proteins is discussed. |