guanylyl-(3--5-)-guanosine has been researched along with deoxyguanylyl-(3--5-)-guanosine* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for guanylyl-(3--5-)-guanosine and deoxyguanylyl-(3--5-)-guanosine
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Acid-base and metal ion binding properties of guanylyl(3'-->5')guanosine (GpG-) and 2'-deoxyguanylyl(3'-->5')-2'-deoxyguanosine [d(GpG)-] in aqueous solution.
The acidity constants of guanylyl(3'-->5')guanosine (GpG(-)) and 2'-deoxyguanylyl(3'-->5')-2'-deoxyguanosine [d(GpG)(-)] for the deprotonation of their (N1)H sites were measured by potentiometric pH titrations in aqueous solution (25 degrees C; I = 0.1 M, NaNO(3)). The same method was used for the determination of the stability constants of the 1:1 complexes formed between Mg(2+), Ni(2+), or Cd(2+) (= M(2+)) and (GG-H)(2-), and in the case of Mg(2+) also of (GG-2H)(3-), where GG(-) = GpG(-) or d(GpG)(-). The stability constants of the M(GG)(+) complexes were estimated. The acidity constants of the H(dGuo)(+) and dGuo species (dGuo = 2'-deoxyguanosine) and the stability constants of the corresponding M(dGuo)(2+) and M(dGuo-H)(+) complexes were also measured. Comparison of these and related data allows the conclusion that N7 of the 5'G unit in GG(-) is somewhat more basic than the one in the 3'G moiety; the same holds for the (N1)(-) sites. On the basis of comparisons with the stability constants measured for the dGuo complexes, it is concluded that M(2+) binding of the GG dinucleoside monophosphates occurs predominantly in a mono-site fashion, meaning that macrochelate formation is not very pronounced. Indeed, it was a surprise to find that the stabilities of the complexes of dGuo or (dGuo-H)(-) and the corresponding ones derived from GG(-) are so similar. Consequently, it is suggested that in the M(GG)(+) and M(GG-H) complexes the metal ion is mainly located at N7 of the 5'G unit since this is the more basic site allowing also an outer-sphere interaction with the C6 carbonyl oxygen and because this coordination mode is also favorable for an electrostatic interaction with the negatively charged phosphodiester bridge. It is further suggested that Mg(2+) binding (which is rather weak compared to that of Ni(2+) and Cd(2+)) occurs mainly in an outer-sphere mode, and on the basis of the so-called Stability Ruler it is concluded that the binding properties of Zn(2+) to the GG species are similar to those of Ni(2+) and Cd(2+). Topics: Algorithms; Binding Sites; Cadmium; Chelating Agents; Chemical Phenomena; Chemistry, Physical; Dinucleoside Phosphates; Guanosine; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Magnesium; Molecular Structure; Nickel; Water; Zinc | 2003 |
Interaction of cis-[Pt(NH3)2(H2O)2](NO3)2 with ribose deoxyribose diguanosine phosphates.
The three diguanosine phosphates GpG (4 X 10(-4) M), d(GpG) (10(-5) M), and d(pGpG) (10(-5) M) have been reacted with cis-[Pt(NH3)2(H2O)2](NO3)2 (1 Pt/dinucleotide) in water at pH 5.5 and 37 degrees C. In each case a single product is formed. The three complexes have been characterized by proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) and circular dichroism (CD) analyses. They are N(7)-N(7) chelates of the metal with an anti-anti configuration of the bases. They present a conformational change upon deprotonation of guanine N(1)H whose pKa is ca. 8.7 (D2O). Their CD spectra, compared to those of the free dinucleotides, exhibit an increase of ellipticity in the 275-nm region, which can be qualitatively related to the characteristic increase reported for platinated DNA and poly(dG) . poly(dC). These results are in favor of the hypothesis of intrastrand cross-linking of adjacent guanines, by the cis-PtII(NH3)2 moiety, after a local denaturation of DNA. Topics: Chemical Phenomena; Chemistry; Circular Dichroism; Cisplatin; Deoxyguanine Nucleotides; Dinucleoside Phosphates; DNA; Guanine Nucleotides; Guanosine; Guanosine Monophosphate; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Nucleic Acid Denaturation; Water | 1982 |