Nucleic acid double helices are stabilized by hydrogen bonding and stacking forces (a combination of hydrophobic, dispersive and electrostatic forces) of the base pairs in the helix. One would predict the hydrogen bonding contributions to increase and the stacking contributions to decrease as the water activity in the medium decreases. Study of nucleobase paired duplexes in the absence of water and ultimately in pure aprotic, non-polar organic solvents is not possible with natural phosphodiester nucleic acids due to the ionic phosphate groups and the associated cations, but could be possible with non-ionic nucleic acid analogues or mimics such as peptide nucleic acids. We now report that peptide nucleic acid (PNA) (in contrast to DNA) duplexes show almost unaffected stability in up to 70% dimethylformamide (DMF) or dioxane, and extrapolation of the data to conditions of 100% organic solvents indicates only minor (or no) destabilization of the PNA duplexes. Our data indicate that stacking forces contribute little if at all to the duplex stability under these conditions. The differences in behaviour between the PNA and the DNA duplexes are attributed to the differences in hydration and counter ion release rather than to the differences in nucleobase interaction. These results support the possibility of having stable nucleobase paired double helices in organic solvents.
PNA.DNA duplexes are significantly stabilized by purine nucleobases in the PNA strand. To elucidate and understand the effect of switching the backbone in a nucleic acid duplex, we now report a thermodynamics study along with a solution conformations study of two purine/pyrimidine strand asymmetric duplexes and a strand symmetrical control by comparing the behavior of all four possible PNA/DNA combinations. In essence, we are comparing an identical basepair stack connected by either an aminoethyl glycine PNA or a deoxyribose DNA backbone. We show that the PNA.DNA duplexes containing purine-rich PNA strands are stabilized with regard to the thermal melting temperature and free energy as well as enthalpy (and concomitantly relatively less entropically disfavored). Based on our data, we find it unlikely that differences in counterion binding (identical ionic-strength dependence was observed), hydration (identical and insignificant water release was observed), or single-strand conformation can be responsible for the difference in duplex stability. The only consistent difference observed between the purine-rich PNA versus the pyrimidine-rich PNA in isosequential PNA.DNA duplexes is the significant increase in both binding enthalpy and entropy for the PNA.DNA duplexes containing pyrimidine-rich PNA in organic solvent, which would indicate that these duplexes are relatively enthalpically disfavored in water. Although our results so far do not allow us to identify the origin of the different stabilities of homopurine/homopyrimidine PNA.DNA duplexes, the evidence does point to a significant structural component, which involves enthalpic contributions both within the duplex structure and also from bound water molecules.
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