1p20

From Proteopedia

Revision as of 11:18, 20 March 2008 by OCA (Talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search


PDB ID 1p20

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate
, resolution 1.34Å
Ligands: and
Coordinates: save as pdb, mmCIF, xml



Surprising Roles of Electrostatic Interactions in DNA-Ligand Complexes


Overview

The positions of cations in x-ray structures are modulated by sequence, conformation, and ligand interactions. The goal here is to use x-ray diffraction to help resolve structural and thermodynamic roles of specifically localized cations in DNA-anthracycline complexes. We describe a 1.34 A resolution structure of a CGATCG(2)-adriamycin(2) complex obtained from crystals grown in the presence of thallium (I) ions. Tl(+) can substitute for biological monovalent cations, but is readily detected by distinctive x-ray scattering, obviating analysis of subtle differences in coordination geometry and x-ray scattering of water, sodium, potassium, and ammonium. Six localized Tl(+) sites are observable adjacent to each CGATCG(2)-adriamycin(2) complex. Each of these localized monovalent cations are found within the G-tract major groove of the intercalated DNA-drug complex. Adriamycin appears to be designed by nature to interact favorably with the electrostatic landscape of DNA, and to conserve the distribution of localized cationic charge. Localized inorganic cations in the major groove are conserved upon binding of adriamycin. In the minor groove, inorganic cations are substituted by a cationic functional group of adriamycin. This partitioning of cationic charge by adriamycin into the major groove of CG base pairs and the minor groove of AT base pairs may be a general feature of sequence-specific DNA-small molecule interactions and a potentially useful important factor in ligand design.

About this Structure

1P20 is a Protein complex structure of sequences from [1]. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.

Reference

Surprising roles of electrostatic interactions in DNA-ligand complexes., Howerton SB, Nagpal A, Williams LD, Biopolymers. 2003 May;69(1):87-99. PMID:12717724

Page seeded by OCA on Thu Mar 20 13:18:43 2008

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

OCA

Personal tools