Abstract
Study of the relaxation kinetics of the interaction of ethidium and DNA reveals a novel and potentially important general binding mechanism, namely direct transfer of the ligand between DNA binding sites without requiring dissociation to free ligand. The measurable relaxation spectrum shows three relaxation times, indicating that three bound dye species are present at equilibrium; about 80% of the dye is in the major intercalated form. For each relaxation the reciprocal relaxation time varies linearly with concentration up to very high DNA concentrations. The failure of the longer relaxation times to plateau at high concentration can be accounted for by including a bimolecular pathway for conversion from one complex form to another. This we envisage as direct transfer of an ethidium molecule, bound to one DNA molecule, to an empty binding site on another DNA molecule. Additional evidence for this direct transfer mechanism was obtained from an experiment showing that DNA (which binds ethidium relatively rapidly) accelerates the binding of ethidium to poly(rA) · poly(rU), presumably by first forming a DNA-ethidium complex and then transferring the ethidium to RNA. The bimolecular rate constant for transfer is found to be about four times larger than the constant for intercalating the free dye. The transfer pathway thus provides a highly efficient means for the ligand to equilibrate over its DNA binding sites, especially at high polymer concentration. The potential importance of direct transfer for DNA-binding regulatory proteins is emphasized.
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