Issue April 2007

category image Volume 24
No. 5 (p 429-514)
April 2007
ISSN 0739-110

Structural Basis for the Binding Affinity of a Homologous Series of Synthetic Phenoxazone Drugs with DNA: NMR and Molecular Mechanics Analysis (p. 443-454)

The molecular basis of the marked structure-activity relationship for a homologous series of DNA-binding phenoxazone drugs (ActII-ActIV) has been investigated by NMR spectroscopy and molecular mechanics. The spatial structures of the complexes between the drugs and a model deoxytetranucleotide, 5'-d(TpGpCpA), have been determined by molecular mechanics methods using homonuclear 1H-1H 2D-NOESY and heteronuclear 1H-31P (HMBC) NMR spectroscopic data. Observed intermolecular NOE contacts and equilibrium binding studies confirm that the binding affinity of the synthetic phenoxazone derivatives with d(TGCA) decreases with an increase in the number of CH2 groups in the dimethylaminoalkyl side chains, i.e., ActII > ActIII > ActIV, in agreement with the observed biological activity of these compounds. Molecular mechanics calculations of the spatial structures of the intercalated complexes of ActII-ActIV with d(TGCA) indicate that the different binding constants of the phenoxazone derivatives with the DNA oligomer are due to the different degrees of intercalation of the chromophore and the different steric arrangements of aminoalkyl side chains in the minor groove of the tetramer duplex; this results in different distances between the negatively-charged phosphates of the DNA duplex and the terminal positively-charged N(CH3)2 groups of the side chains.

D. V. Ovchinnikov1
S. F. Baranovsky2
A. O. Rozvadovska2
O. V. Rogova2
K. A. Veselkov2
D. V. Ermolaev2
H. Parkes3
D. B. Davies4
M. P. Evstigneev2,*

1Department of Organic Chemistry
St. Petersburg State Institute of Technology
St. Petersburg, 190013, Russia
2Department of Physics
Sevastopol National Technical University
Sevastopol, 99053, Crimea, Ukraine
3NMR Research Unit
Institute of Neurology
University College London
Queen Square, London WC1N 3BD, UK
4School of Biological and Chemical Sciences, Birkbeck College
University of London, Malet Street
London WC1E 7HX, UK

*max_evstigneev@mail.ru

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