Abstract
Ethidium forms a crystalline complex with the dinucleoside monophosphate 5-iodouridylyl(3′–5′)adenosine (iodoUpA). These crystals are monoclinic, space group C2, with unit cell dimensions, a = 28.45 A ̊ , b = 13.54 A ̊ , c = 34.13 A ̊ , β = 98.6 ° . The structure has been solved to atomic resolution by Patterson and Fourier methods, and refined by full matrix least-squares to a residual of 0.20 on 2017 observed reflections. The asymmetric unit contains two ethidium molecules, two iodoUpA molecules and 27 water molecules, a total of 155 atoms excluding hydrogens. The two iodoUpA molecules are held together by adenine · uracil Watson-Crick-type base-pairing. Adjacent base-pairs within this paired iodoUpA structure and between neighboring iodoUpA molecules in adjoining unit cells are separated by about 6.7 Å; this separation results from intercalative binding by one ethidium molecule and stacking by the other ethidium molecule above and below the base-pairs. Non-crystallographic 2-fold symmetry is utilized in this model drug-nucleic acid interaction, the intercalated ethidium molecule being oriented such that its phenyl and ethyl groups lie in the narrow groove of the miniature nucleic acid double-helix. Base-pairs within the paired nucleotide units are related by a twist of 8 °. The magnitude of this angular twist is related to conformational changes in the sugar-phosphate chains that accompany drug intercalation. These changes partly reflect the differences in ribose sugar ring puckering that are observed (both iodouridine residues have C3′ endo sugar conformations, whereas both adenosine residues have C2′ endo sugar conformations), and alterations in the glycosidic torsional angles describing the base-sugar orientations. Additional small but systematic changes occur in torsional angles that involve the phosphodiester linkages and the C4′C5′ bond. Solution studies have indicated a marked sequence-specific binding preference in ethidium-dinucleotide interactions, and a probable structural explanation for this is provided by this study. This structure and the accompanying one described in the second paper [ethidium:5-idocytidylyl(3′–5′)guanosine] are examples of model drug-nucleic acid intercalative complexes, and the information provided by their structure analyses has led to a general understanding of intercalative drug binding to DNA. This is described in the third paper of this series.
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