Abstract

A combination of ultrasound velocimetry, density, and UV spectroscopy has been employed to study the hydration effects of binding of Mn(2+) and alkaline-earth cations to poly(rA) and poly(rU) single strands. The hydration effects, obtained from volume and compressibility measurements, are positive due to overlapping the hydration shells of interacting molecules and consequently releasing the water molecules to bulk state. The volume effects of the binding to poly(rA), calculated per mole of cations, range from 30.6 to 40.6 cm(3) mol(-1) and the compressibility effects range from 59.2 x 10(-4) to 73.6 x 10(-4) cm(3) mol(-1) bar(-1). The volume and compressibility effects for poly(rU) are approximately 17 cm(3) mol(-1) and approximately 50 x 10(-4) cm(3) mol(-1) bar(-1), respectively. The comparative analysis of the dehydration effects suggests that the divalent cations bind to the polynucleotides in inner-sphere manner. In the case of poly(rU) the dehydration effects correspond to two direct coordination, probably between adjacent phosphate groups. The optical study did not reveal any effects of cation on the secondary structure or aggregation of poly(rU). In the case of single-helical poly(rA) binding is more specific: dehydration effects correspond to three to five direct contacts and must involve atomic groups of adenines, and the divalent cations stabilize and aggregate the polynucleotide.

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