Allosteric, chiral-selective drug binding to DNA

Xiaogang Qu, John O. Trent, Izabela Fokt, Waldemar Priebe, Jonathan B. Chaires

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

163 Scopus citations

Abstract

The binding interactions of (-)-daunorubicin (WP900), a newly synthesized enantiomer of the anticancer drug (+)-daunorubicin, with right- and left-handed DNA, have been studied quantitatively by equilibrium dialysis, fluorescence spectroscopy, and circular dichroism. (+)-Daunorubicin binds selectively to right-handed DNA, whereas the enantiomeric WP900 ligand binds selectively to left-handed DNA. Further, binding of the enantiomeric pair to DNA is clearly chirally selective, and each of the enantiomers was found to act as an allosteric effector of DNA conformation. Under solution conditions that initially favored the left-handed conformation of [poly(dGdC)]2, (+)-daunorubicin allosterically converted the polynucleotide to a right-handed intercalated form. In contrast, under solution conditions that initially favored the right-handed conformation of [poly(dGdC)]2, WP900 converted the polynucleotide to a left-handed form. Molecular dynamics studies by using the AMBER force field resulted in a stereochemically feasible model for the intercalation of WP900 into left-handed DNA. The chiral selectivity observed for the DNA binding of the daunorubicin/WP900 enantiomeric pair is far greater than the selectivity previously reported for a variety of chiral metal complexes. These results open a new avenue for the rational design of potential anticancer agents that target left-handed DNA.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)12032-12037
Number of pages6
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume97
Issue number22
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 24 2000

Keywords

  • Allostery
  • Drug design
  • Molecular dynamics
  • Molecular recognition

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General

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