Issue 15, 2000

Chiral peptide nucleic acids having thymine and adenine in their side chain as specific ligands for NiII and CuII

Abstract

Potentiometric and spectroscopic data, including NMR, CD and EPR results, as well as theoretical calculations showed that the insertion of a nucleic base into a peptide chain results in formation of very effective ligands (chiral peptide nucleic acids, C-PNAs) for CuII and NiII. The most effective ligand was that containing thymine base. The thymine moiety interacts with metal ion in the apical position via the O6 oxygen and forms a set of effective hydrogen bonds with the N-terminal amino group. In the case of adenine C-PNA, two nucleic bases may form stacking interactions, which also increases the complex stability. These interactions of nucleic bases mean that metal ion binding to peptide backbone nitrogens of PNAs leads to formation of complexes which are several orders of magnitude stronger than those obtained with oligoglycine. Metal ion binding to C-PNAs, on the other hand, induces specific conformations of the side chain groups, which would affect critically the self-recognition interactions between the C-PNA strands.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Mar 2000
Accepted
16 Jun 2000
First published
11 Jul 2000

J. Chem. Soc., Dalton Trans., 2000, 2639-2644

Chiral peptide nucleic acids having thymine and adenine in their side chain as specific ligands for NiII and CuII

J. Brasuń, P. Ciapetti, H. Kozłowski, S. Ołdziej, M. Taddei, D. Valensin, G. Valensin and N. Gaggelli, J. Chem. Soc., Dalton Trans., 2000, 2639 DOI: 10.1039/B001763I

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