<% strDevServer = "/medicine/biochemistry/" strProdServer = "/biochemistry/" %> DNA minor groove binding crosslinker
      Courses Seminars Dept. Links Alumni
Biochemistry Home


Ph.D. Program
 

Graduate Application
 

Faculty
 

Center for Structural Biology
 

Proteomics Core Facility
 

Contact Us
 

Departmental Personnel
 

MCB People in the News
 

Department Publications
 

Positions Available

xxx DNA minor groove binding crosslinker

Abstract: Minor groove binding compounds related to distamycin A bind DNA with high sequence selectivity, recognizing sites which contain various combinations of A.T and G.C base pairs. These molecules have the potential to deliver cross-linking agents to the minor groove of a target DNA sequence. We have studied the covalent DNA-DNA cross-linked complex of 2,3- bis(hydroxymethyl)pyrrole-distamycin and [d(CGCGAATTCGCG)]2. The alkylating pyrrole design is based on the pharmacophore of mitomycin C and is similar in substructure to another important class of natural products, the oxidatively activated pyrrolizidine alkaloids. Ligand-DNA NOEs confirm that the tri(pyrrole-carboxamide) unit of the ligand is bound in the minor groove of the central A+T tract. Unexpectedly, it is shifted by 1 bp with respect to the distamycin A binding site on this DNA sequence. The cross-link bridges the 2-amino position of two guanine residues, G4 and G22. The C3.G22 and G4.C21 base pairs exhibit Watson-Crick base pairing, with some local distortion, as evidenced by unusual intensities observed for DNA-DNA NOE cross-peaks. The model is compared with a related structure of a cross-linked mitomycin C:DNA complex.

Back To Ligand-Macromolecule Complexes

Back to Dr. Spielmann's Homepage

Back to the Biochemistry Homepage
<% strDevServer = "/medicine/biochemistry/" strProdServer = "/biochemistry/" %>