Abstract

Mn(II) ions have been used as a paramagnetic probe to investigate the geometry of drug-oligonucleotide complexes. Nuclear magnetic resonance and electron spin resonance experiments show that Mn(II) ions bind approximately two orders of magnitude stronger to the 5'-terminal phosphate group than to the 3'-5' phosphodiester linkage of deoxydinucleotides. By using mixtures of nucleotides in which only one nucleotide contains a terminal phosphate group, the location of the Mn(II) ion in the drug-nucleotide-Mn(II) complexes may be preselected. The paramagnetic induced relaxation of the nuclear spin systems in these complexes has been used to investigate the geometry of these complexes. These data confirm that actinomycin D is able to recognize and preferentially bind guanine (as opposed to adenine) nucleotides in the quinoid portion of the phenoxazone ring, while both adenine and guanine will bind to the benzenoid portion of the phenoxazone ring. These results suggest that stacking forces are primarily responsible for the general requirement of a guanine base when actinomycin D binds to DNA.

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