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1.
Two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy has been applied to study the solution binding of 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) to synthetic DNA duplex [d(GCGATCGC)]2. The structure of the complex at a molar ratio of 1:1 drug:duplex has been investigated. NMR results indicate that DAPI binds selectively in the minor groove of the DNA region containing only two A:T base pairs. The results disagree with conclusions drawn from footprinting experiments and show that the presence of the G3NH2 group in the minor groove does not prevent the binding. A molecular model is proposed that closely resembles the crystal structure previously published for the interaction of DAPI with the dodecamer [d(CGCGAATTCGCG)]2, containing four A:T base pairs in the binding site. In this model, DAPI lies in the minor groove, nearly isohelical, with its aromatic rings adjacent to H4' protons of T5 and C6 deoxyribose and the NH indole group oriented toward the DNA axis. The binding does not perturb the B-type conformation of the duplex, and the DNA oligomer conserves its 2-fold symmetry, indicating that fast exchange dynamics exist between the two stereochemically equivalent binding sites of the palindromic sequence. The binding constant and the exchange rate between free and bound species were also measured by NMR spectroscopy.  相似文献   

2.
The complexes of Hoechst 33258 with poly[d(A-T)2], poly[d(I-C)2], and poly[d(G-C)2], and poly[d(G-m5C)2] were studied using linear dichroism, CD, and fluorescence spectroscopies. The Hoechst-poly[d(I-C)2] complex, in which there is no guanine amino group protruding in the minor groove, exhibits spectroscopic properties that are very similar to those of the Hoechst-poly[d(A-T)2] complex. When bound to both of these polynucleotides, Hoechst exhibits an average orientation angle of near 45 degrees relative to the DNA helix axis for the long-axis polarized low-energy transition, a relatively strong positive induced CD, and a strong increase in fluorescence intensity--leading us to conclude that this molecule also binds in the minor groove of poly[d(I-C)2]. By contrast, when bound to poly[d(G-C)2] and poly[d(G-m5C)2], Hoechst shows a distinctively different behavior. The strongly negative reduced linear dichroism in the ligand absorption region is consistent with a model in which part of the Hoechst chromophore is intercalculated between DNA bases. From the low drug:base ratio onset of excitonic effects in the CD and fluorescence emission spectra, it is inferred that another part of the Hoechst molecule may sit in the major groove of poly[d(G-C)2] and poly[d(G-m5C)2] and preferentially stacks into dimers, though this tendency is strongly reduced for the latter polynucleotide. Based on these results, the importance of the interactions of Hoechst with the exocyclic amino group of guanine and the methyl group of cytosine in determining the binding modes are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
An analogue of netropsin has been synthesized consisting of two N-propylpyrrolcarboxamide units linked covalently to a copper-chelating tripeptide Gly-Gly-L-His by means of two and three glycine residues. Binding to DNA and synthetic polynucleotides of netropsin analogue containing three glycine residues between Gly-Gly-L-His tripeptide and the N-end of netropsin analogue (His-Nt) has been studied. It is shown that this netropsin analogue chelates a copper ion with 1:1 stoichiometry, similar to a free Gly-Gly-L-His peptide. It is found that this netropsin analogue occupies 3 to 4 base pairs upon binding to poly(dA).poly(dT) and poly[d(AT)].poly[d(AT)] polymers, irrespective of whether it binds in Cu(2+)-ligated or unligated forms. Binding constants and binding site sizes have been calculated for netropsin analogue complexes with DNA, poly(dA).poly(dT) and poly[d(AT)].poly[d(AT)] polymers at the [Cu2+]/[His-Nt] ratio equal to 0 and 1.0. In the three-component system including His-Nt and Cu(2+)-His-Nt, cooperative effects are recognized which can be explained by heterodimer generation on interaction of His-Nt and Cu(2+)-His-Nt at adjacent binding sites.  相似文献   

4.
The intercalation of the planar chromophoric moiety of nogalamycin between two base pairs of duplex DNA has been evidenced by means of low-dichroism measurements. The possible presence of specific binding sites for mogalamycin on DNA has been suggested by studies on the denaturation and renaturation of DNA complexed with nogalamycin. A clear evidence was obtained by investigating the interaction of nogalamycin with polydeoxyribonucleotides containing known, regularly repeating sequences, used as model compounds. The results obtained with these polymers and the DNA suggest that the segment containing both purine (A,G) anf pyrimidine (T,C) bases in alternate sequences is the preferential receptor site on the DNA. A decreasing affinity is exhibited by poly d(A--T)-poly d(A--T), poly d(G--C)-poly d(G--C) and poly dG-poly dC segments, in the order. The poly dA-poly dT sequence appears to be closed to the interaction of nogalamycin.  相似文献   

5.
An N-acetyl-2-aminofluorene (AAF) modified deoxyoligonucleotide duplex, d(C1-C2-A3-C4-[AAF-G5]-C6-A7-C8-C9).d(G10-G11-T12-G13-C14-++ +G15-T16-G17-G18), was studied by one- and two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy. Eight of the nine complementary nucleotides form Watson-Crick base pairs, as shown by NOEs between the guanine imino proton and cytosine amino protons for G.C base pairs or by an NOE between the thymine imino proton and adenine H2 proton for A.T base pairs. The AAF-G5 and C14 bases show no evidence of complementary hydrogen bond formation to each other. The AAF-G5 base adopts a syn conformation, as indicated by NOEs between the G5 imino proton and the A3-H3' and A3-H2'/H2" protons and by NOEs between the fluorene-H1 proton of AAF and the G5-H1' or C6-H1' proton. The NOEs from the C4-H6 proton to C4 sugar protons are weak, and thus the glycosidic torsion angle in this nucleotide is not well defined by these NMR data. The remaining bases are in the anti conformation, as depicted by the relative magnitude of the H8/H6 to H2' NOEs when compared to the H8/H6 to H1' NOEs. The three base pairs on each end of the duplex exhibit NOEs characteristic of right-handed B-form DNA. Distance restraints obtained from NOESY data recorded at 32 degrees C using a 100-ms mixing time were used in conformational searches by molecular mechanics energy minimization studies. The final, unrestrained, minimum-energy conformation was then used as input for an unrestrained molecular dynamics simulation. Chemical exchange cross peaks are observed, and thus the AAF-9-mer exists in more than a single conformation on the NMR time scale. The NMR data, however, indicate the presence of a predominant conformation (> or = 70%). The structure of the predominant conformation of the AAF-9-mer shows stacking of the fluorene moiety on an adjacent base pair, exhibiting features of the base-displacement [Grunberger, D., Nelson, J. H., et al. (1970) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 66, 488-494] and insertion-denaturation models [Fuchs, R.P.P., & Daune, M. (1971) FEBS Lett. 14, 206-208], while the distal ring of the fluorene moiety protrudes into the minor groove.  相似文献   

6.
The X-ray crystal structure of the complex between the synthetic antitumour and antiviral DNA binding ligand SN 7167 and the DNA oligonucleotide d(CGCGAATTCGCG)2 has been determined to an R factor of 18.3% at 2.6 A resolution. The ligand is located within the minor groove and covers almost 6 bp with the 1-methylpyridinium ring extending as far as the C9-G16 base pair and the 1-methylquinolinium ring lying between the G4-C21 and A5-T20 base pairs. The ligand interacts only weakly with the DNA, as evidenced by long range contacts and shallow penetration into the groove. This structure is compared with that of the complex between the parent compound SN 6999 and the alkylated DNA sequence d(CGC[e6G]AATTCGCG)2. There are significant differences between the two structures in the extent of DNA bending, ligand conformation and groove binding.  相似文献   

7.
The C terminal of cardiac troponin C (TnC) has two Ca2+-Mg2+ sites which exhibit approximately 20-fold higher Ca2+ affinity than the two C-terminal Ca2+ specific sites in calmodulin (CaM). Substitution of the third EF-hand of TnC for the corresponding EF-hand of CaM produced a mutant (CaM[3TnC]) with a 10-fold higher C-terminal Ca2+ and Mg2+ affinity. Substitution of loop 3 of TnC for loop 3 of CaM produced a mutant (CaM[loop3TnC]) with a 10-fold faster Ca2+ on rate and a 5-fold faster Ca2+ off rate than CaM. A mutant CaM (CaM[loop3X, Z]) which contained the identical coordinating amino acids and X and Z acid pairs of TnC loop 3 had a 3-fold higher C-terminal Ca2+ affinity without the increased Ca2+ exchange rates exhibited by CaM[loop3TnC]. Thus, loop factors other than the acid pairs must be responsible for the rapid Ca2+ exchange rates of CaM[loop3TnC]. Helix 6 and helix 5 in the third EF-hand of TnC support the rapid Ca2+ on rate of TnC's loop 3 and produce an approximately 4-fold reduction in its Ca2+ off rate, explaining the high Ca2+ affinity of the third EF-hand of TnC. Exchanging loop 3 or helix 5 of TnC into CaM increased the Mg2+ affinity by decreasing the Mg2+ off rate. Our results are consistent with the high Ca2+ and Mg2+ affinity of the third EF-hand of TnC resulting from the two (X and Z) acid pairs in loop 3, coupled with the greater hydrophobicity of helix 6 and helix 5 compared to that of the third EF-hand of CaM.  相似文献   

8.
The questions of whether different tautomeric forms of nucleic acid bases exist to any significant extent in DNA, or what their possible roles in mutation may be, are under intense scrutiny. 2'-Deoxyisoguanosine (iG) has been suggested to have a propensity to adopt the enol form. Isoguanine (also called 2-hydroxyadenine) can be found in oxidatively damaged DNA generated from treating DNA with a Fenton-type reactive oxygen-generating system and is known to cause mutation. We have analyzed the three-dimensional structure of the DNA dodecamer d(CGC[iG]AATTTGCG) (denoted iG-DODE) by X-ray crystallography and NMR. The crystal structure of the iG-DODE complexed with the minor groove binder Hoechst 33342, refined to 1.4 A resolution, showed that the two independent iG.T base pairs in the dodecamer duplex adopt different (one in Watson-Crick and the other in wobble) conformations. The high-resolution nature of the structure also affords unprecedented clear information about the conformation and interactions of the Hoechst drug. The Hoechst 33342 binds in the narrow minor groove at the iGAATT site, with the N-methylpiperazine ring near the iG4.T21 base pair. Three hydrogen bonds are found between the NH of the Hoechst ligand and T-O2 DNA atoms. In solution, the two iG.T base pairs in iG-DODE predominantly are in the wobble form at 2 degreesC. At higher temperatures, another duplex form (likely involving the enol form of iG) is in slow exchange with the keto form and becomes significantly populated, reaching approximately 40% at 40 degreesC. Our data support the conclusion that iG pairs with T in a Watson-Crick configuration to a significant extent at physiological temperature (37 degreesC), which may explain the facile incorporation rate of T across from an iG during in vitro DNA replication.  相似文献   

9.
Coralyne binds tightly to both T.A.T- and C.G.C(+)-containing DNA triplexes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Coralyne is a DNA-binding antitumor antibiotic whose structure contains four fused aromatic rings. The interaction of coralyne with the DNA triplexes poly(dT).poly(dA).poly(dT) and poly[d(TC)].poly[d(GA)].poly[d(C+T)] was investigated by using three techniques. First, Tm values were measured by thermal denaturation analysis. Upon binding coralyne, both triplexes showed Tm values that were increased more than those of the corresponding duplexes. A related drug, berberinium, in which one of the aromatic rings is partially saturated, gave much smaller changes in Tm. Second, the fluorescence of coralyne is quenched in the presence of DNA, allowing the measurement of binding parameters by Scatchard analysis. The binding isotherms were biphasic, which was interpreted in terms of strong intercalative binding and much weaker stacking interactions. In the presence of 2 mM Mg2+, the binding constants to poly(dT).poly-(dA).poly(dT) and poly[d(TC)].poly[d(GA)].poly[(C+T)] were 3.5 x 10(6) M-1 and 1.5 x 10(6) M-1, respectively, while the affinity to the parent duplexes was at least 2 orders of magnitude lower. In the absence of 2 mM Mg2+, the binding constants to poly[d(TC)].poly[d(GA)].poly[d(C+T)] and poly-[d(TC)].poly[d(GA)] were 40 x 10(6) M-1 and 15 x 10(6) M-1, respectively. Thus coralyne shows considerable preference for the triplex structure but little sequence specificity, unlike ethidium, which will only bind to poly(dT).poly(dA).poly(dT). Further evidence for intercalation of coralyne was provided by an increase in the relative fluorescence quantum yield at 260 nm upon binding of coralyne to triplexes as well as an absence of quenching of fluorescence in the presence of Fe[(CN)6]4-.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Experimental studies involving the carcinogenic aromatic amine 2-(acetylamino)fluorene (AAF) have afforded two acetylated DNA adducts, the major one bound to C8 of guanine and a minor adduct bound to N2 of guanine. The minor adduct may be important in carcinogenesis because it persists, while the major adduct is rapidly repaired. Primer extension studies of the minor adduct have indicated that it blocks DNA synthesis, with some bypass and misincorporation of adenine opposite the lesion [Shibutani, S., and Grollman, A.P. (1993) Chem. Res. Toxicol. 6, 819-824]. No experimental structural information is available for this adduct. Extensive minimized potential energy searches involving thousands of trials and molecular dynamics simulations were used to study the conformation of this adduct in three sequences: I, d(C1-G2-C3-[AAF]G4-C5-G6-C7).d(G8-C9-G10-C11-G12-C13-G14+ ++); II, the sequence of Shibutani and Grollman, d(C1-T2-A3-[AAF]G4-T5-C6-A7).d(T8-G9-A10-C11-T12-A13-G14); and III, which is the same as II but with a mismatched adenine in position 11, opposite the lesion. AAF was located in the minor groove in the low-energy structures of all sequences. In the lowest energy form of the C3-[AAF]G4-C5 sequence I, the fluorenyl rings point in the 3' direction along the modified strand and the acetyl in the 5' direction. These orientations are reversed in the second lowest energy structure of this sequence, and the energy of this structure is 1.4 kcal/mol higher. Watson Crick hydrogen bonding is intact in both structures. In the two lowest energy structures of the A3-[AAF]G4-T5 sequence II, the AAF is also located in the minor groove with Watson-Crick hydrogen bonding intact. However, in the lowest energy form, the fluorenyl rings point in the 5' direction and the acetyl in the 3' direction. The energy of the structure with opposite orientation is 5.1 kcal/mol higher. In sequence III with adenine mismatched to the modified guanine, the lowest energy form also had the fluorenyl rings oriented 5' in the minor groove with intact Watson-Crick base pairing. However, the mispaired adenine adopts a syn orientation with Hoogsteen pairing to the modified guanine. These results suggest that the orientation of the AAF in the minor groove may be DNA sequence dependent. Mobile aspects of favored structures derived from molecular dynamics simulations with explicit solvent and salt support the essentially undistorting nature of this lesion, which is in harmony with its persistence in mammalian systems.  相似文献   

11.
The potent tumorigen and mutagen (+)-7(R),8(S)-dihydroxy-9(S), 10(R)-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene ((+)-anti-BPDE) is a metabolite of benzo[a]pyrene that binds predominantly to the exocyclic amino group of guanine residues in DNA in vivo and in vitro. While the (-)-7S,8R,9R,10Senantiomer, (-)-anti-BPDE, also reacts with DNA to form similar covalent N2-deoxyguanosyl adducts, this diol epoxide is nontumorigenic and its mutagenic activities are different from those of (+)-anti-BPDE. In this work, T4 ligase-induced cyclization methods have been employed to demonstrate that the (+)-anti-[BP]-N2-dG lesions (G*) cause significantly greater amounts of bending and circularization of the one-base overhang undecamer duplex 5'-d(CACAT[G*]TACAC).d(TGTACATGTGG) than the stereoisomeric oligonucleotide duplex with G* = (-)-anti-[BP]-N2-dG. In the case of the (+)-anti-BPDE-modified oligonucleotides, the ratio of circular to linear DNA multimers reaches values of 8-9 for circle contour sizes of 99-121 base pairs, while for the (-)-anti-[BP]-N2-dG-modified DNA this ratio reaches a maximum value of only approximately 1 at 154-176 base pairs. Assuming a planar circle DNA model, the inferred bending angles for 90-92% of the observed circular ligation products range from 30 to 51 degrees per (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N2-dG lesion and from 20 to 40 degrees per (-)-trans-anti-[BP]-N2-dG lesion. In the case of unmodified DNA, the probability of circular product formation is at least 1 order of magnitude less efficient than in the BPDE-modified sequences and about 90% of the circular products exhibit bending angles in the range of 14 -19 degrees . In the most abundant circular products observed experimentally, the bending angles are 40 degrees and 26 +/- 2 degrees per (+)-anti-[BP]- or (-)-anti-[BP]-modified 11-mer; these values correspond to a net contribution of 21-26 degrees and 5-19 degrees , respectively, to the observed overall bending per lesion. The coexistence of circular DNA molecules of different sizes and, therefore, different average bending angles per lesion, suggest that the lesions induce both torsional flexibility and flexible bends, which permit efficient cyclization, especially in the case of (+)-trans-[BP]-N2-dG adducts. The NMR characteristics of (+)-trans-[BP]-N2-dG lesion in the 11-mer duplex 5'-d(CACAT[G*]TACAC).d(GTGTACATGTG) indicate that all base pairs are intact, except at the underlined base pairs. This suggests a distortion in the normal conformation of the duplex on the 5'-side of the modified guanosine residue, which may be due to bending enhanced base pair opening and bending induced by the bulky carcinogen residue. The implications of base sequence-dependent flexibilities and conformational mobilities of anti-[BP]-N2-dG lesions on DNA replication and mutation are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The solution structure of d(CCATCAFBGATCC).d(GGATCAGATGG), containing the 8,9-dihydro-8-(N7-guanyl)-9-hydroxyaflatoxin B1 adduct, was refined using molecular dynamics restrained by NOE data obtained from 1H NMR. The modified guanosine was positioned opposite cytosine, while the aflatoxin moiety was positioned opposite adenosine in the complementary strand. Sequential 1H NOEs were interrupted between C5 and AFBG6, but intrastrand NOEs were traced through the aflatoxin moiety, via H6a of aflatoxin and H8 of the modified guanine. Opposite the lesion, the NOE between A16 H1' and G17 H8 was weak. A total of 43 NOEs were observed between DNA protons and aflatoxin protons. Molecular dynamics calculations restrained with 259 experimental and empirical distances, and using sp2 hybridization at AFBG6 N7, refined structures with pairwise rms differences < 0.85 A, excluding terminal base pairs. Relaxation matrix calculations yielded a sixth root rms difference between refined structures and NOE intensity data of 7.3 x 10(-2). The aflatoxin moiety intercalated on the 5'-face of the modified guanine. The extra adenine A16 was inserted between base pair AFBG6.C15 and the aflatoxin moiety. A 36 degree bending between the plane of base pair AFBG6.C15 and the plane of the aflatoxin moiety was predicted. The aflatoxin moiety stacked below the top domain of the oligodeoxynucleotide, which consisted of base pairs C1.G21, C2.G20, A3.T19, T4.A18, and C5.G17. The bottom domain consisted of base pairs AFBG6.C15, A7.T14, T8.A13, C9.G12, and C10.G11. The average winding angle between base pair C5.G17, the intercalated aflatoxin moiety, A16, and base pair AFBG6.C15 was reduced to 10 degrees. The preponderance of base pair substitutions in the aflatoxin B1 mutational spectrum, particularly G-->T transversions, suggests that the stability of this modified oligodeoxynucleotide, which models a templated +1 addition mutation, does not reliably predict the frequency of frame shifts.  相似文献   

13.
The exo isomer of aflatoxin B1 (AFB1) 8,9-epoxide appears to be the only product of AFB1 involved in reaction with DNA and reacts with the N7 atom of guanine via an SN2 reaction from an intercalated state. Although the epoxide hydrolyzes rapidly in H2O (0.6 s-1 at 25 degrees C), very high yields of DNA adduct result. Experimental binding data were fit to a model in which the epoxide forms a reversible complex with calf thymus DNA (Kd = 0.43 mg ml-1, or 1.4 mM monomer equivalents) and reacts with guanine with a rate of 35 s-1. Stopped-flow kinetic analysis revealed attenuation of fluorescence in the presence of DNA that was dependent on DNA concentration. Kinetic spectral analysis revealed that this process represents conjugation of epoxide with DNA, with an extrapolated rate maximum of 42 s-1 and half-maximal velocity at a DNA concentration of 1.8 mg ml-1 (5.8 mM monomer equivalents). The rate of hydrolysis of the epoxide was accelerated by calf thymus DNA in the range of pH 6-8, with a larger enhancement at the lower pH (increase of 0.23 s-1 at pH 6.2 with 0.17 mg DNA ml-1). The same rate enhancement effect was observed with poly[dA-dT].poly[dA-dT], in which the epoxide can intercalate but not form significant levels of N7 purine adducts, and with single-stranded DNA. The increased rate of hydrolysis by DNA resembles that reported earlier for epoxides of polycyclic hydrocarbons and is postulated to involve a previously suggested localized proton field on the periphery of DNA. The epoxide preferentially intercalates between base pairs, and the proton field is postulated to provide acid catalysis to the conjugation reaction.  相似文献   

14.
The thiazole orange dye 1,1'-(4,4,8,8-tetramethyl-4,8-diazaundecamethylene)-bis[4-[3-methy l-2, 3-dihydro(benzo-1,3-thiazole)-2-methylidene]]quinolinium tetraiodide (TOTO) binds to double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) in a sequence selective bisintercalation. Each chromophore is sandwiched between two base pairs in a (5'-CpT-3'):(5'-ApG-3') site, and the linker spans over two base pairs in the minor groove. The binding of analogs of TOTO in which the linker has been modified is examined. The aim of the study is to utilize the sequence selectivity of the TOTO chromophores to enhance and/or alter the overall selectivity of the binding. One- and two-dimensional 1H-NMR investigations of complexes between TOTO analogs and various dsDNA oligonucleotides are reported. The following analogs were synthesized and used: 1,1'-(4,4,8,8-tetramethyl-4,8-diazadodecamethylene) -bis[4-[3-methyl-2,3-dihydro- (benzo-1,3-thiazole)-2-methylidene]]quinolinium tetraiodide (TOTO10), 1,1'-(5,5,9,9-tetramethyl-5,9-diazatridecamethylene)-bis[4-[3-meth yl-2, 3-dihydro(benzo-1,3-thiazole)-2-methylidene]]quinolinium tetraiodide (TOTO11), and 1,1'-(6,6,10,10-tetramethyl-6,10-diazapentadecamethylene)-bis[4-[3 -methyl-2, 3-dihydro(benzo-1,3-thiazole)-2-methylidene]]quinolinium tetraiodide (TOTO13). The results show that with a longer linker the dyes can bisintercalate into two (5'-CpT-3'):(5'-ApG-3') sites separated by one or two base pairs. Bisintercalation in two such "isolated" binding sites yields non-nearest-neighbor bisintercalation in which the linker spans over more than two base pairs. The investigations also showed that an exact length of the linker is not crucial for the site selectivity since TOTO, TOTO10, and TOTO11 are almost equally suitable in binding selectively to the (5'CTAG-3')2 sequence. Fluorescence measurements show that TOTO10, TOTO11, and TOTO13 have higher fluorescence quantum yields than TOTO when bound to d(CGCTAGCG)2. This indicates that the length of the linker in TOTO may not be the optimum one in terms of using the dye as a fluorescence marker.  相似文献   

15.
We have employed a broad range of spectroscopic, calorimetric, DNA cleavage, and DNA winding/unwinding measurements to characterize the DNA binding and topoisomerase I (TOP1) poisoning properties of three terbenzimidazole analogues, 5-phenylterbenzimidazole (5PTB), terbenzimidazole (TB), and 5-(naphthyl[2,3-d]imidazo-2-yl)bibenzimidazole (5NIBB), which differ with respect to the substitutions at their C5 and/or C6 positions. Our results reveal the following significant features. (i) The overall extent to which the three terbenzimidazole analogues poison human TOP1 follows the hierarchy 5PTB > TB > 5NIBB. (ii) The impact of the three terbenzimidazole analogues on the superhelical state of plasmid DNA depends on the [total ligand] to [base pair] ratio (rbp), having no effect on DNA superhelicity at rbp ratios < or = 0.1, while weakly unwinding DNA at rbp ratios > 0.1. This weak DNA unwinding activity exhibited by the three terbenzimidazoles does not appear to be correlated with the abilities of these compounds to poison TOP1. (iii) Upon complexation with both poly(dA).poly(dT) and salmon testes DNA, the three terbenzimidazole analogues exhibit flow linear dichroism properties characteristic of a minor groove-directed mode of binding to these host DNA duplexes. (iv) The apparent minor groove binding affinities of the three terbenzimidazole analogues for the d(GA4T4C)2 duplex follow a qualitatively similar hierarchy to that noted above for ligand-induced poisoning of human TOP1-namely, 5PTB > TB > 5NIBB. In the aggregate, our results suggest that DNA minor groove binding, but not DNA unwinding, is important in the poisoning of TOP1 by terbenzimidazoles.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Spectroscopic, calorimetric, DNA cleavage, electrophoretic, and computer modeling techniques have been employed to characterize the DNA binding and topoisomerase poisoning properties of three protoberberine analogs, 8-desmethylcoralyne (DMC), 5,6-dihydro-8-desmethylcoralyne (DHDMC), and palmatine, which differ in the chemical structures of their B- and/or D-rings. DNA topoisomerase-mediated cleavage assays revealed that these compounds were unable to poison mammalian type II topoisomerase. By contrast, the three protoberberine analogs poisoned human topoisomerase I according to the following hierarchy: DHDMC > DMC > palmatine. DNA binding by all three protoberberine analogs induced negative flow linear dichroism signals as well as unwinding of the host duplex. These two observations are consistent with an intercalative mode of protoberberine binding to duplex DNA. However, a comparison of the DNA binding properties for DMC and DHDMC, which differ only by the state of saturation at the 5,6 positions of the B-ring, revealed that the protoberberine analogs do not "behave" like classic DNA intercalators. Specifically, saturation of the 5-6 double bond in the B-ring of DMC, thereby converting it to the DHDMC molecule, was associated with enhanced DNA unwinding as well as a reversal of DNA binding preference from a DNA duplex with an inaccessible or occluded minor groove {poly[d(G-C)]2} to DNA duplexes with accessible or unobstructed minor grooves {poly[d(A-T)]2 and poly[d(I-C)]2}. In addition, a comparison of the DNA binding properties for DHDMC and palmatine revealed that transferring the 11-methoxy moiety on the D-ring of DHDMC to the 9 position, thereby converting it to palmatine, was associated with a reduction in binding affinity for both duplexes with unobstructed minor grooves as well as for duplexes with occluded minor grooves. These DNA binding properties are consistent with a "mixed-mode" DNA binding model for protoberberines in which a portion of the ligand molecule intercalates into the double helix, while the nonintercalated portion of the ligand molecule protrudes into the minor groove of the host duplex, where it is thereby available for interactions with atoms lining the floor and/or walls of the minor groove. Furthermore, saturation at the 5,6 positions of the B-ring, which causes the A-ring to be tilted relative to the plane formed by rings C and D, appears to stabilize the interaction between the host duplex and the minor groove-directed portion of the protoberberine ligand. Computer modeling studies on the DHDMC-poly[d(A-T)]2 complex suggest that this interaction may involve van der Waals contacts between the ligand A-ring and backbone sugar atoms lining the minor groove of the host duplex. The hierarchy of topoisomerase I poisoning noted above suggests that this minor groove-directed interaction may play an important role in topoisomerase I poisoning by protoberberine analogs. In the aggregate, our results presented here, coupled with the recent demonstration of topoisomerase I poisoning by minor groove-binding terbenzimidazoles [Sun, Q., Gatto, B., Yu, C., Liu, A. , Liu, L. F., & LaVoie, E. J. (1995) J. Med. Chem. 38, 3638-3644], suggest that minor groove-directed ligand-DNA interactions may be of general importance in the poisoning of topoisomerase I.  相似文献   

18.
The crystal structure of the dodecamer, d(CGCIAATTCGCG), has been determined at 2.4 A resolution by molecular replacement, and refined to an R-factor of 0.174. The structure is isomorphous with that of the B-DNA dodecamer, d(CGCGAATTCGCG), in space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) with cell dimensions of a = 24.9, b = 40.4, and c = 66.4 A. The initial difference Fourier maps clearly indicated the presence of inosine instead of guanine. The structure was refined with 44 water molecules, and compared to the parent dodecamer. Overall the two structures are very similar, and the I:C forms Watson-Crick base pairs with similar hydrogen bond geometry to the G:C base pairs. The propeller twist angle is low for I4:C21 and relatively high for the I16:C9 base pair (-3.2 degrees compared to -23.0 degrees), and the buckle angles alter, probably due to differences in the contacts with symmetry related molecules in the crystal lattice. The central base pairs of d(CGCIAATTCGCG) show the large propeller twist angles, and the narrow minor groove that characterize A-tract DNA, although I:C base pairs cannot form the major groove bifurcated hydrogen bonds that are possible for A:T base pairs.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The structure of a formamidopyrimidine (FAPY) adduct arising from imidazole ring opening of the initially formed trans-8, 9-dihydro-8-(N7-guanyl)-9-hydroxyaflatoxin B1 adduct under basic conditions and positioned in the 5'-d(CTATFAPYGATTCA)-3'*5'-d(TGAATCATAG)-3' oligodeoxynucleotide was determined. The FAPY adduct may be a major progenitor of aflatoxin B1-induced mutations in DNA. The freshly prepared sample showed biphasic melting, with transitions at 28 and 56 degreesC. NMR initially showed multiple subspectra. Over a period of several days at 4 degreesC, the sample converted to a single species with a Tm of 56 degreesC, 15 degrees C greater than the unmodified duplex. The deoxyribose was in the beta configuration about the anomeric carbon, evidenced by NOEs between FAPYG5 H3', H2', H2", and H1'. FAPY formation resulted in the loss of the guanine H8 proton, and the introduction of the formyl proton, which showed NOEs to FAPYG5 H1' and A6 N6Ha. A total of 31 NOEs from AFB1 to DNA protons were observed, mostly to the 5'-neighboring base, T4 in the modified strand. Sequential NOEs were interrupted between T4 and FAPYG5 in the modified strand, between C16 and A17 in the complementary strand, and between T4 N3H and FAPYG5 N1H. An NOE between FAPYG5 N1H and C16 N4H showed intact hydrogen bonding at FAPYG5*C16. Upfield chemical shifts were observed for T4 H6 and A17 H8. Molecular dynamics calculations converged with pairwise rmsd differences of <0.9 A. The sixth root residual was 8.7 x 10(-2). The AFB1 moiety intercalated from the major groove between FAPYG5 and T4*A17, and stacked with T4 and FAPYG5 and partially stacked with A17. The base step between T4*A17 and FAPYG5*C16 was increased from 3.4 to 7 A. The duplex unwound by about 15 degrees. The FAPY formyl group was positioned to form a hydrogen bond with A6 N6Ha. Strong stacking involving the AFB1 moiety, and this hydrogen bond explains the thermal stabilization of four base pairs by this adduct, and may be a significant factor in its processing.  相似文献   

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