Abstract

The kinetics of the interaction of daunomycin with calf thymus DNA are described. Stopped-flow and temperature-jump relaxation methods, using absorption detection, were used to study the binding reaction. Three relaxation times were observed, all of which are concentration dependent, although the two slower relaxations approach constant values at high reactant concentrations. Relaxation times over a wide range of concentrations were gathered, and the data were fit by a minimal mechanism in which a rapid bimolecular association step is followed by two sequential isomerization steps. The six rate constants for this mechanism were extracted from our data by relaxation analysis. The values determined for the six rate constants may be combined to calculate an overall equilibrium constant that is in excellent agreement with that obtained by independent equilibrium measurements. Additional stopped-flow experiments, using first sodium dodecyl sulfate to dissociate bound drug and second pseudo-first-order conditions to study the fast bimolecular step, provide independent verification of three of the six rate constants. The temperature dependence of four of the six rate constants was measured, allowing estimates of the activation energy of some of the steps to be made. We speculate that the three steps in the proposed mechanism may correspond to a rapid "outside" binding of daunomycin to DNA, followed by intercalation of the drug, followed by either conformational adjustment of the drug or DNA binding site or redistribution of bound drug to preferred sites.

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