'H-NMR spectroscopy. In 0.1 M NaCl solution only the B form was evidenced for these DNA fragments whereas in 4 M NaCl both B and Z forms, in slow exchange on the NMR time scale, were observed. Under these conditions the Z form accounted for less than 60% of the decamer conformation; conversely d(C-G)3 hexamers containing methylated cytidines were predominantly in the Z form (> 90%)
The interaction of daunomycin with B-DNA double helices of several methylated deoxynucleotides, d(C-G-m5C-G), d(m5C-G-C-G), d(C-G-m5C-G-C-G) and d(m5C-G-C-G-m5C-G) in solution was investigated by 1H-NMR spectroscopy at 500 MHz. At low temperature (t less than 20 degrees C for the tetramer and t less than 40 degrees C for the hexamers), several daunomycin-DNA complexes were observed in slow exchange with the drug-free DNA duplexes. The presence of daunomycin in a self-complementary double helix cancels the conformational symmetry of the two strands; the proton signals can split into several others owing to the difference between free and intercalated duplexes and to the many possible intercalation sites in a duplex (three for a tetramer, five for an hexamer). A model relating the chemical shifts of splitted proton signals to the various intercalated duplex conformations was given. The results show that one daunomycin molecule is associated with one duplex and that it can enter any intercalation site with equal probability; no side-effects were observed even for very short helices (of a tetramer). In the case of d(C-G-m5C-G) the association constant and the dissociation and association rates of the intercalated complex were evaluated.
The interaction of daunomycin with B and Z helices of a self-complementary DNA fragment d(CGmSCGCG) in solution was studied by 'H-NMR spectroscopy at 500 MHz. The results show that the B-Z transition kinetics is not affected by addition of daunomycin. Daunomycin binds exclusively to the B form of d(CGmSCGCG). Z exchanges with B while the latter also exchanges with the B duplex-daunomycin complexes.'H-NMR Daunomycin B-DNA
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.