Abstract

Direct addition of aryl radical species to the C(8)-site of 2'-deoxyguanosine (dG) affords C(8)-aryl-dG adducts that are produced by carcinogenic arylhydrazines, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and certain phenolic toxins. A common property of C(8)-arylpurine adduction is the accompaniment of abasic site formation. To determine how the C(8)-aryl moiety contributes to sugar loss, UV-vis spectroscopy has been employed to determine N(7) pK(a1) values and hydrolysis kinetics, while density functional theory (DFT) calculations have been utilized to probe the structural features and stability of the C(8)-aryl-dG adducts bearing different para and ortho substituents. In all cases, the C(8)-aryl-dG adducts adopt a syn conformation containing a strong O(5)'-H...N(3) hydrogen bond with the aryl ring twisted with respect to the nucleobase. The adducts undergo N(7)-protonation with ionization constants and calculated N(7) proton affinity (PA) values similar to those measured for dG. The hydrolysis kinetics shows that C(8)-aryl-dG nucleoside adducts are more prone than dG to acid-catalyzed hydrolysis, with those bearing para substituents having k(1) values that are ca. 90- to 200-fold larger than k(1) for dG, while the effects for the ortho adducts are only ca. 9- to 60-fold larger. Changes in the rate of hydrolysis are further explained by calculations showing that glycosidic bond cleavage in the syn orientation of both neutral and N(7)-protonated dG has a lower barrier than the anti orientation, and the bulky (phenyl) group further decreases the barrier. Despite adduct reactivity in acidic media, all adducts are relatively stable at physiological pH with t(1/2) approximately 25 days, suggesting that they are unlikely intermediates leading to abasic site formation at physiological pH. This information has allowed development of a new rationale for the tendency of abasic site formation to accompany C(8)-arylpurine adduction within duplex DNA at neutral pH.

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