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Molecular details of quinolone–DNA interactions: solution structure of an unusually stable DNA duplex with covalently linked nalidixic acid residues and non-covalent complexes derived from it

Quinolones are antibacterial drugs that are thought to bind preferentially to disturbed regions of DNA. They do not fall into the classical categories of intercalators, groove binders or electrostatic binders to the backbone. We solved the 3D structure of the DNA duplex (ACGCGU-NA)(2), where NA deno...

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Autores principales: Siegmund, Karsten, Maheshwary, Shruti, Narayanan, Sukunath, Connors, William, Riedrich, Matthias, Printz, Michael, Richert, Clemens
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1192833/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16126848
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gki795
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author Siegmund, Karsten
Maheshwary, Shruti
Narayanan, Sukunath
Connors, William
Riedrich, Matthias
Printz, Michael
Richert, Clemens
author_facet Siegmund, Karsten
Maheshwary, Shruti
Narayanan, Sukunath
Connors, William
Riedrich, Matthias
Printz, Michael
Richert, Clemens
author_sort Siegmund, Karsten
collection PubMed
description Quinolones are antibacterial drugs that are thought to bind preferentially to disturbed regions of DNA. They do not fall into the classical categories of intercalators, groove binders or electrostatic binders to the backbone. We solved the 3D structure of the DNA duplex (ACGCGU-NA)(2), where NA denotes a nalidixic acid residue covalently linked to the 2′-position of 2′-amino-2′-deoxyuridine, by NMR and restrained torsion angle molecular dynamics (MD). In the complex, the quinolones stack on G:C base pairs of the core tetramer and disrupt the terminal A:U base pair. The displaced dA residues can stack on the quinolones, while the uracil rings bind in the minor groove. The duplex-bridging interactions of the drugs and the contacts of the displaced nucleotides explain the high UV-melting temperature for d(ACGCGU-NA)(2) of up to 53°C. Further, non-covalently linked complexes between quinolones and DNA of the sequence ACGCGT can be generated via MD using constraints obtained for d(ACGCGU-NA)(2). This is demonstrated for unconjugated nalidixic acid and its 6-fluoro derivative. The well-ordered and tightly packed structures thus obtained are compatible with a published model for the quinolone–DNA complex in the active site of gyrases.
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spelling pubmed-11928332005-08-29 Molecular details of quinolone–DNA interactions: solution structure of an unusually stable DNA duplex with covalently linked nalidixic acid residues and non-covalent complexes derived from it Siegmund, Karsten Maheshwary, Shruti Narayanan, Sukunath Connors, William Riedrich, Matthias Printz, Michael Richert, Clemens Nucleic Acids Res Article Quinolones are antibacterial drugs that are thought to bind preferentially to disturbed regions of DNA. They do not fall into the classical categories of intercalators, groove binders or electrostatic binders to the backbone. We solved the 3D structure of the DNA duplex (ACGCGU-NA)(2), where NA denotes a nalidixic acid residue covalently linked to the 2′-position of 2′-amino-2′-deoxyuridine, by NMR and restrained torsion angle molecular dynamics (MD). In the complex, the quinolones stack on G:C base pairs of the core tetramer and disrupt the terminal A:U base pair. The displaced dA residues can stack on the quinolones, while the uracil rings bind in the minor groove. The duplex-bridging interactions of the drugs and the contacts of the displaced nucleotides explain the high UV-melting temperature for d(ACGCGU-NA)(2) of up to 53°C. Further, non-covalently linked complexes between quinolones and DNA of the sequence ACGCGT can be generated via MD using constraints obtained for d(ACGCGU-NA)(2). This is demonstrated for unconjugated nalidixic acid and its 6-fluoro derivative. The well-ordered and tightly packed structures thus obtained are compatible with a published model for the quinolone–DNA complex in the active site of gyrases. Oxford University Press 2005 2005-08-26 /pmc/articles/PMC1192833/ /pubmed/16126848 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gki795 Text en © The Author 2005. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved
spellingShingle Article
Siegmund, Karsten
Maheshwary, Shruti
Narayanan, Sukunath
Connors, William
Riedrich, Matthias
Printz, Michael
Richert, Clemens
Molecular details of quinolone–DNA interactions: solution structure of an unusually stable DNA duplex with covalently linked nalidixic acid residues and non-covalent complexes derived from it
title Molecular details of quinolone–DNA interactions: solution structure of an unusually stable DNA duplex with covalently linked nalidixic acid residues and non-covalent complexes derived from it
title_full Molecular details of quinolone–DNA interactions: solution structure of an unusually stable DNA duplex with covalently linked nalidixic acid residues and non-covalent complexes derived from it
title_fullStr Molecular details of quinolone–DNA interactions: solution structure of an unusually stable DNA duplex with covalently linked nalidixic acid residues and non-covalent complexes derived from it
title_full_unstemmed Molecular details of quinolone–DNA interactions: solution structure of an unusually stable DNA duplex with covalently linked nalidixic acid residues and non-covalent complexes derived from it
title_short Molecular details of quinolone–DNA interactions: solution structure of an unusually stable DNA duplex with covalently linked nalidixic acid residues and non-covalent complexes derived from it
title_sort molecular details of quinolone–dna interactions: solution structure of an unusually stable dna duplex with covalently linked nalidixic acid residues and non-covalent complexes derived from it
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1192833/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16126848
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gki795
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