Large electrostatic differences in the binding thermodynamics of a cationic peptide to oligomeric and polymeric DNA

  1. W Zhang,
  2. J P Bond,
  3. C F Anderson,
  4. T M Lohman, and
  5. M T Record, Jr
  1. Department of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53706, USA.

Abstract

Results presented here demonstrate that the thermodynamics of oligocation binding to polymeric and oligomeric DNA are not equivalent because of long-range electrostatic effects. At physiological cation concentrations (0.1-0.3 M) the binding of an oligolysine octacation KWK6-NH2 (+8 charge) to single-stranded poly(dT) is much stronger per site and significantly more salt concentration dependent than the binding of the same ligand to an oligonucleotide, dT(pdT)10 (-10 charge). These large differences are consistent with Poisson-Boltzmann calculations for a model that characterizes the charge distributions with key preaveraged structural parameters. Therefore, both the experimental and the theoretical results presented here show that the polyelectrolyte character of a polymeric nucleic acid makes a large contribution to both the magnitude and the salt concentration dependence of its binding interactions with simple oligocationic ligands.

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