Molecular Dynamics Insights into Polyamine-DNA Binding Modes: Implications for Cross-Link Selectivity.
Emmanuelle BignonChen-Hui ChanChristophe MorellAntonio MonariJean-Luc RavanatElise DumontPublished in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2017)
Biogenic polyamines, which play a role in DNA condensation and stabilization, are ubiquitous and are found at millimolar concentration in the nucleus of eukaryotic cells. The interaction modes of three polyamines-putrescine (Put), spermine (Spm), and spermidine (Spd)-with a self-complementary 16 base pair (bp) duplex, are investigated by all-atom explicit-solvent molecular dynamics. The length of the amine aliphatic chain leads to a change of the interaction mode from minor groove binding to major groove binding. Through all-atom dynamics, noncovalent interactions that stabilize the polyamine-DNA complex and prefigure the reactivity, leading to the low-barrier formation of deleterious DNA-polyamine cross-links, after one-electron oxidation of a guanine nucleobase, are unraveled. The binding strength is quantified from the obtained trajectories by molecular mechanics generalized Born surface area post-processing (MM-GBSA). The values of binding free energies provide the same affinity order, Put<Spm<Spd, as that determined by recent isothermal calorimetry measurements, with a satisfactory correlation, to validate the structural predictions. The binding modes and carbon-nitrogen distances along the series of polyamines illustrate the selectivity towards deleterious DNA-polyamine cross-link formation through the extraction of average approaching distances between the C8 atom of guanines and the ammonium group. These results imply that the formation of DNA-polyamine cross-links involves deprotonation of the guanine radical cation to attack the polyamines, which must be positively charged to lie in the vicinity of the B-helix.
Keyphrases
- molecular dynamics
- dna binding
- circulating tumor
- density functional theory
- single molecule
- cell free
- nucleic acid
- transcription factor
- ionic liquid
- induced apoptosis
- binding protein
- depressive symptoms
- electron transfer
- mass spectrometry
- nitric oxide
- signaling pathway
- atomic force microscopy
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell death
- oxidative stress
- capillary electrophoresis
- solar cells