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Published August 1989 | public
Journal Article

Interactions between a symmetrical minor groove binding compound and DNA oligonucleotides: ^1H and ^(19)F NMR studies

Abstract

High-resolution NMR techniques (proton and ^(19)F) have been used to study the interactions between several DNA oligonucleotides with varying length of AT base pairs and the synthetic pyrrole-containing compound (P1-F_4S-P1), which has properties similar to the DNA minor groove binding drug distamycin A. When this two-fold symmetrical DNA binding molecule is added to the self-complementary DNA oligomers, the resulting complex exhibits an NMR spectrum without any doubling of individual resonances, consistent with a two-fold symmetry of the complex. This is in contrast to all other complexes studied so far. The minimum length of an AT stretch for specific ligand binding is judged to be greater than 4 base pairs. Inter-molecular proton nuclear Overhauser effects between the ligand molecule and a DNA dodecamer d(CGCAAATTTGCG) provide evidence that P1-F_4S-P1 binds DNA in the minor groove and interacts with the middle AT base pairs. The presence of a specific interaction between P1-F_4S-P1 and DNA is conclusively demonstrated by ^(19)F NMR studies, in which four previously chemically equivalent fluorine nuclei in the free molecule become two non-equivalent pairs (yielding an AB quartet pattern) upon the binding of P1-F_4S-P1 to DNA duplex. A sequence-dependent binding behavior of P1-F_4S-P1 is evident by comparing the ^(19)F NMR spectra of the complexes between P1-F_4S-P1 and two different but related DNA dodecamers, d(CGCAAATTTGCG) and d(CGCTTTAAAGCG). P1-F_4S-P1 binds more strongly to the former dodecamer with an association constant of approximately 1 X 10^3 M^-1.

Additional Information

© 1989 Taylor & Francis. Date received: May 18, 1989. Communicated by the Editor R.H. Sarma. This work was supported by a grant from the NSF (DMB 8612268) to AHJW. The Southern California Regional NMR Facility was supported by Grant No. CHE 8440137 from NSF.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023