Multistep Drug Intercalation:
Molecular Dynamics and
Free Energy Studies of the Binding of Daunomycin to DNA
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Abstract
Atomic-scale molecular dynamics and free energy calculations
in
explicit aqueous solvent are used to study the complex mechanism by
which a molecule can intercalate between successive base pairs of
the DNA double helix. We have analyzed the intercalation pathway for
the anticancer drug daunomycin using two different methods: metadynamics
and umbrella sampling. The resulting free energy pathways are found
to be consistent with one another and point, within an equilibrium
free energy context, to a three-step process. Daunomycin initially
binds in the minor groove of DNA. An activated step then leads to
rotation of the drug, coupled with DNA deformation that opens a wedge
between the base pairs, bends DNA toward the major groove, and forms
a metastable intermediate that resembles structures seen within the
interfaces between DNA and minor-groove-binding proteins. Finally,
crossing a small free energy barrier leads to further rotation of
daunomycin and full intercalation of the drug, reestablishing stacking
with the flanking base pairs and straightening the double helix