The
study of the interactions of drug molecules with genetic materials
plays a key role underlying the development of new drugs for many
life-threatening diseases in pharmaceutical industries. Understanding
their fundamental base-specific and/or groove-binding interaction
is crucial to target the genetic material with an external drug, which
can pave the way to curing diseases related to the genetic material.
Here, we studied the interaction of cryptolepine hydrate (CRYP) with
RNA under physiological conditions knowing the antimalarial and anticancer
activities of the drug. Our experiments explicitly demonstrate that
CRYP interacts with the guanine- and adenine-rich region within the
RNA duplex. The pivotal role of the hydrophobic interaction governing
the interaction is substantiated by temperature-dependent isothermal
titration calorimetry experiments and spectroscopic studies. Circular
dichroism study underpins a principally intercalative mode of binding
of CRYP with RNA. This interaction is found to be drastically affected
in the presence of magnesium salt, which has a strong propensity to
coordinate with RNA nucleobases, which can in turn modulate the interaction
of the drug with RNA. The temperature-dependent calorimetric results
substantiate the occurrence of entropy–enthalpy compensation,
which enabled us to rule out the possibility of groove binding of
the drug with RNA. Furthermore, our results also show the application
of host–guest chemistry in sequestering the RNA-bound drug,
which is crucial to the development of safer therapeutic applications