Threading Polyintercalators with Extremely Slow Dissociation
Rates and Extended DNA Binding Sites
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Abstract
The
development of small molecules that bind DNA sequence specifically
has the potential to modulate gene expression in a general way. One
mode of DNA binding is intercalation, or the insertion of molecules
between DNA base pairs. We have developed a modular polyintercalation
system in which intercalating naphthalene diimide (NDI) units are
connected by flexible linkers that alternate between the minor and
major grooves of DNA when bound. We recently reported a threading
tetraintercalator with a dissociation half-life of 16 days, the longest
reported to date, from its preferred 14 bp binding site. Herein, three
new tetraintercalator derivatives were synthesized with one, two,
and three additional methylene units in the central major groove-binding
linker. These molecules displayed dissociation half-lives of 57, 27,
and 18 days, respectively, from the 14 bp site. The optimal major
groove-binding linker was used in the design of an NDI hexaintercalator
that was analyzed by gel-shift assays, DNase I footprinting, and UV–vis
spectroscopy. The hexaintercalator bound its entire 22 bp binding
site, the longest reported specific binding site for a synthetic,
non-nucleic acid-based DNA binding molecule, but with a significantly
faster dissociation rate compared to the tetraintercalators