The origin of the anomalous H8 chemical shifts observed in 'H-NMR spectra of oligonucleotides cross-linked at a GpG sequence with c i .~-[ P t ( N H~)~1~ ' has been investigated and clarified. The main contributions that distinguish the H8 resonances of the two platinum-ligating guanines from other GH8 signals and from each other are: (a) the inductive effect of platinum binding which we have recently quantified as a downfield shift of 0.48 f 0.07 ppm (M. H. Fouchet, D. Lemaire, J. Kozelka and J.-C. Chottard, unpublished results); (b) the ring-current effect of one GpG guanine on the H8 resonance of the other guanine, which is negative (shielding) for the 5'-H8 and positive (deshielding) for the 3'-H8 in single-stranded adducts, but has the opposite sign in double-stranded adducts; (c) a deshielding polarization effect of the phosphate 5' to the GpG unit. The different signs of the ringcurrent effects in single-stranded and double-stranded oligonucleotides originate from the orientation of the guanines in the cis-[Pt(NH3),(Gua),]~ ' moiety (Gua, guanine), which is left-handed helicoidal in single strands and right-handed helicoidal in double strands. In the platinated dinucleotides (cis-[Pt(NH,),(GpG)]+, cis-[Pt(NH3),{d(GpG)}]+ and cis-[Pt(NH,),{d(pCpG))I), the guanines assume either the left-handed or the right-handed arrangement, depending on the sugar moiety (ribose or deoxyribose), protonation state at N1 and, in the solid state, on crystal forces. This work shows that chemical shifts contain valuable structural information which is complementary to that extracted from correlated spectroscopy and nuclear Overhauser spectroscopy data.The antitumor drug cis-diamminedichloroplatinum(I1) binds to DNA, the preferential binding sites being GpG and ApG sequences [l]. These dinucleotides form, with the platinum residue, a macrochelate in which the two N7 atoms are covalently bound to platinum. NMR studies on oligonucleotides (as models for DNA) have been used in order to elucidate the structural changes imposed on DNA by platinum binding [l]. In these studies, spectral changes were interpreted in terms of structural deformation of the helicoidal oligonucleotide geometry. Unfortunately, the most spectacular and easily detectable spectral changes observed upon platination, large shifts of some proton and phosphorus resonances, could only be interpreted to a limited extent [2-41, because the origin of these shifts is not easy to discern.The most striking change in the 'H-NMR spectra of oligonucleotides upon platinum binding to GpG or ApG sequences is a downfield shift of the GpG and ApG H8 protons. These downfield shifts are different in single-stranded and double-stranded adducts, and for single \Wands the\ are dependent on whether or not the GpG or ApG dinuclcotide is preceeded by a free phosphate group or by another nucleotide (Table 1). There is no obvious relationship between thechemical shift (6) values for HX and the adduct types listed in Table 1, yet they must contain valuable structural information. In this w...
An alternative to classical? In square‐planar d8 complexes the metal ion can interact with axial H2O molecules either as a Lewis acid or as a Lewis base. Ab initio calculations predicted that uncharged PtII complexes form a hydrogen‐bond‐like interaction with H2O, in which PtII acts as a Lewis base. Such a nonclassical OH⋅⋅⋅Pt hydrogen bond has now been identified in crystals of trans‐[PtCl2(NH3)(N‐glycine)]⋅H2O by neutron diffraction.
Lone-pair-π (lp-π) interactions have been suggested to stabilize DNA and protein structures, and to participate in the formation of DNA-protein complexes. To elucidate their physical origin, we have carried out a theoretical multi-approach analysis of two biologically relevant model systems, water-indole and water-uracil complexes, which we compared with the structurally similar chloride-tetracyanobenzene (TCB) complex previously shown to contain a strong charge-transfer (CT) binding component. We demonstrate that the CT component in lp-π interactions between water and indole/uracil is significantly smaller than that stabilizing the Cl(-)-TCB reference system. The strong lp(Cl(-))-π(TCB) orbital interaction is characterized by a small energy gap and an efficient lp-π* overlap. In contrast, in lp-π interactions between water and indole or uracil, the corresponding energy gap is larger and the overlap less efficient. As a result, water-uracil and water-indole interactions are weak forces composed by smaller contributions from all energy components: electrostatics, polarization, dispersion, and charge transfer. In addition, indole exhibits a negative electrostatic potential at its π-face, making lp-π interactions less favorable than O-Hπ hydrogen bonding. Consequently, some of the water-tryptophan contacts observed in X-ray structures of proteins and previously interpreted as lp-π interactions [Luisi, et al., Proteins, 2004, 57, 1-8], might in fact arise from O-Hπ hydrogen bonding.
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The hairpin-stabilized double-stranded oligonucleotides d(TATGGTATT4ATACCATA) (I) and d(TATAGTATT4ATACTATA) (II) were allowed to react with the three aquated forms of the antitumor drug cisplatin (cis-[PtCl2(NH3)2], 1) which are likely candidates for DNA binding, that is, cis-[PtC1(NH3)2(H2O)]+ (2), cis-[Pt(NH3)2(H2O)2]2+ (3), and its conjugate base cis-[Pt(OH)(NH3)2(H2O)]+ (4). The reaction between I and [Pt(NH3)3(H2O)]2+ (5) was also studied for comparison. All reactions were monitored by HPLC. The platination reactions of I and II were carried out in NaClO4 (0.1M) at 293 K and at a constant pH of 4.5 +/- 0.1 for 2, 3, and 5. The data relative to the platination by 4 were obtained from measurements in unbuffered NaClO4 solutions (0.1M) at a starting pH close to neutrality, where 3 and 4 are present in equilibrium. In this case, a fit function describing the pH-time curve allowed the determination of the actual concentrations of 3, 4, and the dihydroxo complex. The platination rate constants characterizing the bimolecular reactions between either I or II and 2, 3, and 4 were individually determined along with the rate constants for hydrolysis of the chloro-monoadducts and for the chelation reactions of the aqua-monoadducts. The reactivity of compounds 2-5, which have the general formula cis-[Pt(NH3)2(H2O)(Y)]2+/-, decreases in the order 3>4>5>>2, that is, Y= H2O > OH- >NH3 >> Cl-, which is the order of decreasing hydrogen-bond donating ability of Y. Deprotonation of 3 to 4 reduces the reactivity of the platinum complex only by a factor of approximately equals 2, and both complexes discriminate between the different purines of I and II in the same manner. Whereas 3 and 4 react approximately three times faster with the GG sequence of I than with the AG sequence of II, 2 shows a similar reactivity towards both sequences. In view of the well-established preferential binding of cisplatin to GG sequences of DNA in vivo and in vitro, this result suggests that the actual DNA platination species are derived from double hydrolysis of cisplatin.
In the present work the nature of lone-pair-π interactions between water molecules and a number of π-rings with different substituents/hetero-atoms in the light of quantum chemical topology approaches is studied. The Quantum Theory of Atoms in Molecules (QTAIM) and Interacting Quantum Atoms (IQA) were employed for distinguishing the role of heteroatoms and electron withdrawing substituents in the complex formation between water and π-rings. Our IQA study identified three classes of water-π complexes on the basis of the relative role of electrostatics (classical) and exchange-correlation (non-classical) factors in the interaction energy between the oxygen of water (the lone-pair donor) and the sp(2) atoms of the π-ring, i.e. the primary lp-π interaction. Considering both the primary and secondary (the rest of interatomic interactions except Owater-π-ring atoms) interactions demonstrates that the exchange-correlation is the dominant contributor to the binding energy. This proves a non-negligible contribution of non-classical factors in the stabilization of the lone-pair-π complexes. However, in spite of a relatively large contribution of the exchange-correlation, this part of the interaction energy is virtually counterbalanced by the deformation energy, i.e. the increase in atomic kinetic energy upon complexation. This finding clarifies why water-π interactions can be modelled by simple electrostatics without the need to invoke quantum effects.
The sequence selectivity of the antitumor drug cisplatin (cis-[PtCl(2)(NH(3))(2)] (1)) between the 5'-AG-3' and 5'-GA-3' sites of DNA has been a matter of discussion for more than twenty years. In this work, we compared the reactivity of GA and AG sequences of DNA towards the aquated forms of cisplatin (cis-[PtCl(NH(3))(2)(H(2)O)](+) (2), cis-[Pt(NH(3))(2)(H(2)O)(2)](2+) (3), and cis-[Pt(OH)(NH(3))(2)(H(2)O)](+) (4)) using two sets of experiments. In the first, we investigated a DNA hairpin, whose duplex stem contained a TGAT sequence as the single reactive site, and determined the individual rate constants of platination with 2 and 3 for G and A in acidic solution. The rate constants at 20 degrees C in 0.1M NaClO(4) at pH 4.5+/-0.1 were 0.09(4) M(-1)s(-1) (G) and 0.11(3) M(-1)s(-1) (A) for 2, and 9.6(1) M(-1)s(-1) (G) and 1.7(1) M(-1)s(-1) (A) for 3. These values are similar to those obtained previously for an analogous hairpin that contained a TAGT sequence. The monoadducts formed with 2 by both GA purines are extremely long-lived, partly as a result of the slow hydrolysis of the chloro monoadduct at A, and partly because of the very low chelation rate (1.4 x 10(-5)s(-1) at 20 degrees C) of the aqua monoadduct on the guanine. In the second set of experiments, we incubated pure or enriched samples of 1, 2, 3, or 4 for 18-64 h at 25 degrees C with a 19 base pair (bp) DNA duplex, whose radiolabeled top strand contained one GA and one AG sequence as the only reactive sites. Quantification of the number of GA and AG cross-links afforded a ratio of about two in favor of AG, irrespective of the nature of the leaving ligands. These results disagree with a previous NMR spectroscopy study, and indicate that GA sequences of DNA are substantially more susceptible to attack by cisplatin than previously thought.
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