Abstract

The hydrogen-deuterium (H-D) exchange kinetics of free and DNA-bound ethidium dimer and acridine-ethidium heterodimer were measured by stopped flow using fluorescence detection. This technique allowed a very accurate measurement of the exchange process. The H-D exchange kinetics were measured in various environments. In some cases, it was observed that the H-D exchange was much faster than the dissociation rate of dimer-DNA complexes. This showed that the exchange was taking place directly from the bound state. Furthermore, the action of a catalyst (imidazolium ion) on the rate of H-D exchange showed that a dynamic structural fluctuation of the ligand in its DNA complex was a necessary step on the exchange process.

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