Recognition of the Minor Groove of DNA by Hairpin Polyamides Containing α-Substituted-β-Amino Acids

Abstract

Incorporation of the flexible amino acid β-alanine (β) into hairpin polyamides composed of N-methylpyrrole (Py) and N-methylimidazole (Im) amino acids is required for binding to DNA sequences longer than seven base pairs with high affinity and sequence selectivity. Pairing the α-substituted-β-amino acids (S)-isoserine (^SIs), (R)-isoserine (^RIs), β-aminoalanine (Aa), and α-fluoro-β-alanine (Fb) side-by-side with β in hairpin polyamides alters DNA binding affinity and selectivity relative to the parent polyamide containing a β/β pairing. Quantitative DNase I footprinting titration studies on a restriction fragment containing the sequences 5‘-TGCNGTA-3‘ (N = A, T, G, and C) show that the polyamide ImPy^SIsImPy-γ-PyPyβImPy-β-Dp (^SIs/β pairing) binds to N = T (K_a = 4.5 × 10^9 M^(-1)) in preference to N = A (K_a = 6.2 × 10^8 M^(-1)). This result stands in contrast to the essentially degenerate binding of the parent ImPyβImPy-γ-PyPyβImPy-β-Dp (β/β pairing) to N = T and N = A, and to the slight preference of ImPyβImPy-γ-PyPy^SIsImPy-β-Dp (β/^SIs pairing) to N = A over N = T. Additionally, this study reveals that incorporation of ^RIs, Aa, and Fb into polyamides significantly reduces binding affinity. Therefore, DNA binding in the minor groove is sensitive to the stereochemistry, steric bulk, and electronics of the substituent at the α-position of β-amino acids in hairpin polyamides containing β/β pairs

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