화학공학소재연구정보센터
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.290, No.5, 1602-1608, 2002
Structural investigation of the hedamycin : d(ACCGGT)(2) complex by NMR and restrained molecular dynamics
Hedamycin, a member of the pluramycin family of drugs, displays a range of biological responses including antitumor and antimicrobial activity. The mechanism of action is via direct interaction with DNA through intercalation between the bases of the oligonucleotide and alkylation of a guanine residue at 5'-PyG-3' sites. There appears to be some minor structural differences between two earlier studies on the interaction of hedamycin with 5'-PyG-3' sites. In this study, a high-resolution NMR analysis of the hedamycin:d(ACCGGT)(2) complex was undertaken in order to investigate the effect of replacing the thymine with a guanine at the preferred 5'-CGT-3' site. The resultant structure was compared with earlier work, with particular emphasis placed on the drug conformation. The structure of the hedamycin:d(ACCGGT) complex has many features in common with the two previous NMR structures of hedamycin:DNA complexes but differed in the conformation and orientation of the N,N-dimethylvancosamine saccharide of hedamycin in one of these structures. The preferential binding of hedamycin to 5'-CG-3' over 5'-TG-3' binding sites is explained in terms of the orientation and location of the N,N-dimethylvancosamine saccharide in the minor groove. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science (USA).