Issue 0, 1984

The synthesis and metal binding characteristics of novel, isopolar phosphonate analogues of nucleotides

Abstract

Dichloromethylene-, difluoromethylene-, and fluoromethylene-bisphosphonic acids condense with the 5′-phosphoromorpholidates of adenosine and guanosine to give nucleotide analogues of ATP and GTP which are isopolar and isosteric. An isopolar but non-isosteric analogue of ATP results from the condensation of acetylene-1,2-bisphosphonic acid with AMP-morpholidate.

31 P N.m.r. and pKa, data show that the physical analogy improves in the series CH2 < CCl2⩽ CFH < CF2 < C[triple bond, length half m-dash]C < O with respect to the β,γ-bridging function. N.m.r. and ion-selective electrode measurements on the binding of the divalent metals Mg, Ca, Zn, and Ba suggest that the pattern of metal cation binding to the nucleotide tetra-anion responds both to steric and to electronic features of the phosphonates, with the β,γ-difluoromethylene analogue most closely resembling ATP.

Article information

Article type
Paper

J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1984, 1119-1125

The synthesis and metal binding characteristics of novel, isopolar phosphonate analogues of nucleotides

G. M. Blackburn, D. E. Kent and F. Kolkmann, J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1984, 1119 DOI: 10.1039/P19840001119

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