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1.
Electrophoresis ; 2023 Dec 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38087830

RESUMO

Capillary electrophoresis has been used to measure the free solution mobilities of a series of 26-base pair (bp) DNA oligomers containing two phased A4T1in-tracts embedded in flanking sequences containing 0 to 11 additional AT bps. A random-sequence 26-bp oligomer with 12 isolated AT bps was used as the reference. Mobility ratios (A-tract/reference) were measured in background electrolytes (BGEs) containing mixtures of small monovalent cations and tetrabutylammonium (TBA+ ) or tetrapropylammonium (TPA+ ) ions. The mobility ratios observed in 0.3 M TBA+ were >1.00, suggesting that the TBA+ ions had formed electrostatic contact pairs with the AT bp in the reference and in the A-tract flanking sequences, decreasing the mobilities of both oligomers. The TBA-AT pairing interactions could be eliminated by increasing the concentration of small monovalent cations in the BGE. In 0.3 M TPA+ , electrostatic contact pairs were formed with the AT bps in the flanking sequences and in the A-tracts. Interestingly, the shapes of the mobility ratio profiles observed for the A4T1in-tract oligomers depended on the total number of A + T residues in the oligomer.

2.
Electrophoresis ; 44(17-18): 1414-1422, 2023 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37354056

RESUMO

The free solution mobilities of 26-base pair (bp) DNA oligomers containing A-tracts with and without internal ApT steps have been measured by capillary electrophoresis, using the mobility of a 26-bp random-sequence oligomer as a reference. The background electrolytes (BGEs) contained mixtures of Li+ and tetrapropylammonium (TPA+ ) ions, keeping the total cation concentration constant at 0.3 M. The mobility ratios equaled 1.00 in 0.3 M TPA+ , indicating that the A-tract and reference oligomers had the same B-form conformation in this BGE. With increasing [Li+ ], the mobility ratio decreased as Li+ ions became localized in the A-tract minor groove, suggesting that the A-tract was now in the B* conformation. If the A-tract contained an internal ApT step and the oligomer contained less than ∼50% A + T, the mobility ratio reached a reduced plateau value that remained constant as the [Li+ ] increased to 0.3 M. However, for A-tracts without an internal ApT step and for A-tracts embedded in oligomers containing more than 50% A + T, the mobility ratios increased again at high [Li+ ], eventually reaching a plateau value of 1.00. Hence, DNA A-tracts in solution appear to exist as mixtures of the B and B* conformations, with the fractional concentration of each conformer depending on the [Li+ ], the A-tract sequence, and the total A + T content of the oligomer.


Assuntos
DNA , Lítio , Cátions Monovalentes , Sequência de Bases , Íons , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico
3.
Biophys J ; 118(11): 2783-2789, 2020 06 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32445623

RESUMO

The free-solution mobilities of small single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) and double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) have been measured by capillary electrophoresis in solutions containing 0.01-1.0 M sodium acetate. The mobility of dsDNA is greater than that of ssDNA at all ionic strengths because of the greater charge density of dsDNA. The mobilities of both ssDNA and dsDNA decrease with increasing ionic strength until approaching plateau values at ionic strengths greater than ∼0.6 M. Hence, ssDNA and dsDNA appear to interact in a similar manner with the ions in the background electrolyte. For dsDNA, the mobilities predicted by the Manning electrophoresis equation are reasonably close to the observed mobilities, using no adjustable parameters, if the average distance between phosphate residues (the b parameter) is taken to be 1.7 Å. For ssDNA, the predicted mobilities are close to the observed mobilities at ionic strengths ≤0.01 M if the b-value is taken to be 4.1 Å. The predicted and observed mobilities diverge strongly at higher ionic strengths unless the b-value is reduced significantly. The results suggest that ssDNA strands exist as an ensemble of relatively compact conformations at high ionic strengths, with b-values corresponding to the relatively short phosphate-phosphate distances through space.


Assuntos
DNA , Eletroforese Capilar , DNA de Cadeia Simples , Concentração Osmolar , Soluções
4.
J Phys Chem B ; 123(17): 3649-3657, 2019 05 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30933495

RESUMO

Capillary electrophoresis has been used to measure the thermal stability of small DNA hairpins in solutions containing 0.3 M cation, comparing the results observed in Na+ and NH4+ with those observed in solutions containing various tetraalkylammonium ions. The midpoint melting temperatures of the hairpins decreased nonlinearly with cation radius but linearly with solvent viscosity, suggesting that the reversible melting transition involves DNA migration through the solvent to find stable base-pairing partners. The normalized melting temperatures increased linearly with the inverse viscosity of the solvent and agreed with values calculated from literature data for another small DNA hairpin, a small RNA duplex, and sonicated calf thymus DNA in tetraalkylammonium ion solutions. The normalized melting temperatures calculated from literature data for poly(A)·poly(U) and two proteins, ribonuclease and lysozyme, in tetraalkylammonium ion solutions also increased linearly with inverse solvent viscosity. By contrast, the normalized melting temperatures calculated from literature data for DNA in solutions containing ethylene glycol or glycerol to modify the viscosity increased linearly with the logarithm of inverse solvent viscosity, not the first power of inverse solvent viscosity.


Assuntos
DNA/química , Compostos de Amônio Quaternário/química , Temperatura , Animais , Bovinos , Íons/química , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico , Solventes/química , Viscosidade
5.
Anal Chem ; 87(17): 9042-6, 2015 Sep 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26218420

RESUMO

Free solution capillary electrophoresis (CE) is a useful technique for measuring the translational diffusion coefficients of charged analytes. The measurements are relatively fast if the polarity of the electric field is reversed to drive the analyte back and forth past the detection window during each run. We have tested the validity of the resulting diffusion coefficients using double-stranded DNA molecules ranging in size from 20 to 960 base pairs as the model system. The diffusion coefficients of small DNAs are equal to values in the literature measured by other techniques. However, the diffusion coefficients of DNA molecules larger than ∼30 base pairs are anomalously high and deviate increasingly from the literature values with increasing DNA molar mass. The anomalously high diffusion coefficients are due to electrostatic coupling between the DNA and its counterions. As a result, the measured diffusion coefficients vary with the diffusion coefficient of the counterion, as well as with cation concentration and electric field strength. These effects can be reduced or eliminated by measuring apparent diffusion coefficients of the DNA at several different electric field strengths and extrapolating the results to zero electric field.


Assuntos
DNA/química , Difusão , Eletricidade Estática , Eletroforese Capilar , Íons/química
6.
Biophys J ; 108(9): 2291-9, 2015 May 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25954886

RESUMO

Capillary electrophoresis has been used to characterize the interaction of monovalent cations with 26-basepair DNA oligomers containing A-tracts embedded in flanking sequences with different basepair compositions. A 26-basepair random-sequence oligomer was used as the reference; lithium and tetrabutylammonium (TBA(+)) ions were used as the probe ions. The free solution mobilities of the A-tract and random-sequence oligomers were identical in solutions containing <∼ 100 mM cation. At higher cation concentrations, the A-tract oligomers migrated faster than the reference oligomer in TBA(+) and slower than the reference in Li(+). Hence, cations of different sizes can interact very differently with DNA A-tracts. The increased mobilities observed in TBA(+) suggest that the large hydrophobic TBA(+) ions are preferentially excluded from the vicinity of the A-tract minor groove, increasing the effective net charge of the A-tract oligomers and increasing the mobility. By contrast, Li(+) ions decrease the mobility of A-tract oligomers because of the preferential localization of Li(+) ions in the narrow A-tract minor groove. Embedding the A-tracts in AT-rich flanking sequences markedly alters preferential interactions of monovalent cations with the B(∗) conformation. Hence, A-tracts embedded in genomic DNA may or may not interact preferentially with monovalent cations, depending on the relative number of A · T basepairs in the flanking sequences.


Assuntos
Pareamento de Bases , DNA Forma A/química , DNA de Forma B/química , Lítio/química , Compostos de Amônio Quaternário/química
7.
Electrophoresis ; 35(12-13): 1855-63, 2014 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24648187

RESUMO

The free solution mobilities of ssDNA and dsDNA molecules with variable charge densities have been measured by CE. DNA charge density was modified either by appending positively or negatively charged groups to the thymine residues in a 98 bp DNA molecule, or by replacing some of the negatively charged phosphate internucleoside linkers in small ssDNA or dsDNA oligomers with positively charged phosphoramidate linkers. Mobility ratios were calculated for each dataset by dividing the mobility of a charge variant by the mobility of its unmodified parent DNA. Mobility ratios essentially eliminate the effect of the BGE on the observed mobility, making it possible to compare analytes measured under different experimental conditions. Neutral moieties attached to the thymine residues in the 98-bp DNA molecule had little or no effect on the mobility ratios, indicating that bulky substituents in the DNA major groove do not affect the mobility significantly. The mobility ratios observed for the thymine-modified and linker-modified DNA charge variants increased approximately linearly with the logarithm of the fractional negative charge of the DNA. Mobility ratios calculated from previous studies of linker-modified DNA charge variants and small multicharged organic molecules also increased approximately linearly with the logarithm of the fractional negative charge of the analyte. The results do not agree with the Debye-Hückel-Onsager theory of electrophoresis, which predicts that the mobility of an analyte should depend linearly on analyte charge, not the logarithm of the charge, when the frictional coefficient is held constant.


Assuntos
DNA/química , Eletroforese Capilar/métodos , Compostos Orgânicos/química , Tamanho da Partícula , Soluções/química , Eletricidade Estática , Timina/química
8.
Biochemistry ; 52(24): 4138-48, 2013 Jun 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23675817

RESUMO

The intrinsic curvature of seven 98 bp DNA molecules containing up to four centrally located A6-tracts has been measured by gel and capillary electrophoresis as a function of the number and arrangement of the A-tracts. At low cation concentrations, the electrophoretic mobility observed in polyacrylamide gels and in free solution decreases progressively with the increasing number of phased A-tracts, as expected for DNA molecules with increasingly curved backbone structures. Anomalously slow electrophoretic mobilities are also observed for DNA molecules containing two pairs of phased A-tracts that are out of phase with each other, suggesting that out-of-phase distortions of the helix backbone do not cancel each other out. The mobility decreases observed for the A-tract samples are due to curvature, not cation binding in the A-tract minor groove, because identical free solution mobilities are observed for a molecule with four out-of-phase A-tracts and one with no A-tracts. Surprisingly, the curvature of DNA A-tracts is gradually lost when the monovalent cation concentration is increased to ∼200 mM, regardless of whether the cation is a hydrophilic ion like Na+, NH4+, or Tris+ or a hydrophobic ion like tetrabutylammonium. The decrease in A-tract curvature with increasing ionic strength, along with the known decrease in A-tract curvature with increasing temperature, suggests that DNA A-tracts are not significantly curved under physiological conditions.


Assuntos
Cátions Monovalentes/química , DNA/química , Sequência de Bases , Difusão , Eletroforese Capilar , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Íons , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Distribuição Normal , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico , Soluções
9.
Biochemistry ; 50(15): 3084-94, 2011 Apr 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21410141

RESUMO

The effect of monovalent cations on the thermal stability of a small model DNA hairpin has been measured by capillary electrophoresis, using an oligomer with 16 thymine residues as an unstructured control. The melting temperature of the model hairpin increases approximately linearly with the logarithm of increasing cation concentration in solutions containing Na(+), K(+), Li(+), NH(4)(+), Tris(+), tetramethylammonium (TMA(+)), or tetraethylammonium (TEA(+)) ions, is approximately independent of cation concentration in solutions containing tetrapropylammonium (TPA(+)) ions, and decreases with the logarithm of increasing cation concentration in solutions containing tetrabutylammonium (TBA(+)) ions. At constant cation concentration, the melting temperature of the DNA model hairpin decreases in the order Li(+) ∼ Na(+) ∼ K(+) > NH(4)(+) > TMA(+) > Tris(+) > TEA(+) > TPA(+) > TBA(+). Isothermal studies indicate that the decrease in the hairpin melting temperature with increasing cation hydrophobicity is not due to saturable, site-specific binding of the cation to the random coil conformation, but to the concomitant increase in cation size with increasing hydrophobicity. Larger cations are less effective at shielding the charged phosphate residues in B-form DNA because they cannot approach the DNA backbone as closely as smaller cations. By contrast, larger cations are relatively more effective at shielding the phosphate charges in the random coil conformation, where the phosphate-phosphate distance more closely matches cation size. Hydrophobic interactions between alkylammonium ions interacting electrostatically with the phosphate residues in the coil may amplify the effect of cation size on DNA thermal stability.


Assuntos
Cátions Monovalentes/química , Cátions Monovalentes/farmacologia , DNA/química , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico/efeitos dos fármacos , Sequência de Bases , Cátions Monovalentes/metabolismo , DNA/genética , DNA/metabolismo , Relação Dose-Resposta a Droga , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Sequências Repetidas Invertidas , Metais Alcalinos/farmacologia , Desnaturação de Ácido Nucleico/efeitos dos fármacos , Fosfatos/química , Compostos de Amônio Quaternário/química , Compostos de Amônio Quaternário/farmacologia , Soluções , Eletricidade Estática , Temperatura de Transição/efeitos dos fármacos
10.
Methods Enzymol ; 463: 373-85, 2009.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19892183
11.
Biochemistry ; 48(5): 1047-55, 2009 Feb 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19154116

RESUMO

The binding of five different monovalent cations to DNA oligomers containing A-tracts, runs of four or more contiguous adenine residues, has been assessed by capillary electrophoresis, using the Replacement Ion method. In this method, a nonbinding cation in the background electrolyte is gradually replaced by a binding cation, keeping the ionic strength of the solution constant. Monovalent cation binding reduces the effective charge of an A-tract-containing oligomer, decreasing its free solution mobility. The cations bind in the A-tract minor groove, because the binding site can be blocked by the minor groove binding drug netropsin. Li(+), NH(4)(+), and Tris(+) ions bind to A-tracts with similar affinities; the binding of Na(+) ions is weaker, and K(+) ion binding is highly variable. Each A-tract appears to bind one monovalent cation upon saturation of the binding site(s). For a given cation, the apparent dissociation constants depend on A-tract sequence and orientation, but not on the phasing of the A-tracts with respect to the helix repeat. Differences in the cooperativity of binding of the various cations to A-tracts with different sequences suggest that monovalent cation binding may be coupled with a conformational transition leading to the formation of the characteristic narrow minor groove A-tract structure.


Assuntos
Nucleotídeos de Adenina/química , Sequência de Bases , Cátions Monovalentes/química , DNA/química , DNA/metabolismo , Nucleotídeos de Adenina/metabolismo , Sítios de Ligação/genética , Eletroforese Capilar
12.
J Chromatogr A ; 1216(10): 1917-29, 2009 Mar 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19100556

RESUMO

DNA electrophoretic mobilities are highly dependent on the nature of the matrix in which the separation takes place. This review describes the effect of the matrix on DNA separations in agarose gels, polyacrylamide gels and solutions containing entangled linear polymers, correlating the electrophoretic mobilities with information obtained from other types of studies. DNA mobilities in various sieving media are determined by the interplay of three factors: the relative size of the DNA molecule with respect to the effective pore size of the matrix, the effect of the electric field on the matrix, and specific interactions of DNA with the matrix during electrophoresis.


Assuntos
DNA/química , Eletroforese/métodos , Polímeros/química , Eletro-Osmose , Porosidade
13.
Anal Biochem ; 373(2): 407-9, 2008 Feb 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18022379

RESUMO

Capillary electrophoresis has been used to determine whether zwitterions contribute to the ionic strength of a solution, by measuring the mobility of a double-stranded DNA oligomer in cacodylate-buffered solutions containing various concentrations of the ionic salt tetraethylammonium chloride (TEA(+)Cl(-)) or the zwitterion tricine(+/-). The mobility of the DNA decreased as the square root of ionic strength, as expected from the Debye-Hückel-Onsager theory of electrophoresis, when TEA(+)Cl(-) was added to the buffer. However, the mobility was independent of the concentration of added tricine(+/-). Hence, zwitterions do not contribute to the ionic strength of a solution.


Assuntos
DNA/isolamento & purificação , Glicina/análogos & derivados , Íons/química , Concentração Osmolar , Eletroforese Capilar , Glicina/química , Soluções/química , Tetraetilamônio/química
14.
Biochemistry ; 46(38): 10931-41, 2007 Sep 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17764160

RESUMO

The electrophoretic mobilities of 24 single-stranded DNA oligomers, each containing 26 nucleotide residues, have been measured in polyacrylamide gels and in free solution. The mobilities observed at 20 degrees C differed by approximately 20% in polyacrylamide gels and by approximately 10% in free solution, even though the oligomers contained the same number of bases. Increasing the temperature or adding urea to the solution equalized the mobilities of the oligomers, suggesting that the variable mobilities observed at 20 degrees C are due to the formation of stable secondary structures, most likely hairpins. Thermal melting profiles were measured for eight oligomers in 40 mM Tris acetate buffer. The observed melting temperatures of most oligomers correlated roughly with the mobilities observed at 20 degrees C; however, one oligomer was much more stable than the others. The melting temperatures of four of the oligomers were close to the values predicted by DINAMelt [Markham, N. R., and Zuker, M. (2005) Nucleic Acids Res. 33, W577-W581]; melting temperatures of the other oligomers differed significantly from the predicted values. Thermal melting profiles were also measured for two oligomers as a function of the Tris acetate buffer concentration. The salt concentration dependence of the melting temperatures suggests that 0.15 Tris+ ion per phosphate is released upon denaturation. Because the apparent number of Tris+ ions released is greater than that observed by others for the release of Na+ ions from similar hairpins, the results suggest that DNA hairpins (and, presumably, duplexes) bind more Tris+ ions than Na+ ions in solution.


Assuntos
DNA de Cadeia Simples/química , Eletroforese Capilar/métodos , Eletroforese em Gel de Poliacrilamida/métodos , Oligodesoxirribonucleotídeos/química , Algoritmos , Pareamento de Bases , Sequência de Bases , Soluções Tampão , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico , Desnaturação de Ácido Nucleico , Ácidos Nucleicos Heteroduplexes/química , Sais/química , Termodinâmica , Temperatura de Transição , Ureia/química
15.
Anal Biochem ; 365(1): 103-10, 2007 Jun 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17416339

RESUMO

Capillary electrophoresis (CE) has been used to characterize the hairpin-random coil transition of four octamers in the GCxxxxGC minihairpin family, where xxxx is GAAA, TTTC, TTTT, or AAAA. The transition can be monitored by CE because differences in the frictional coefficients of the hairpin and coil forms of each octamer lead to a difference of approximately 9% in the free solution mobilities of the two conformations. The GAAA octamer is unusually stable, with a melting temperature of 65 degrees C. The TTTT octamer forms a minihairpin with a melting temperature of 29 degrees C, the TTTC octamer has a melting temperature of 16 degrees C, and the AAAA octamer has a melting temperature below 0 degrees C. The thermal transitions of the TTTT, TTTC, and AAAA octamers are well fitted by a structure prediction algorithm; however, the GAAA minihairpin is considerably more stable than predicted. The melting temperature of the GAAA minihairpin is reduced to 47 degrees C in aqueous buffers containing 7.2M urea and to 33 degrees C in buffers containing 7.2M urea plus 40% (v/v) formamide. The combined results indicate that CE is a sensitive technique for monitoring conformational transitions in small DNA molecules.


Assuntos
DNA/química , Eletroforese Capilar/métodos , Desnaturação de Ácido Nucleico , Oligodesoxirribonucleotídeos/química , Sequência de Bases , Soluções Tampão , Temperatura Alta , Modelos Moleculares , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico , Ureia/química
16.
Electrophoresis ; 28(7): 1053-62, 2007 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17295422

RESUMO

The free solution mobilities of the adenosine nucleotides 5'-adenosine triphosphate (ATP), 5'-adenosine diphosphate (ADP), 5'-adenosine monophosphate (AMP), and 3'-5'-cyclic AMP (cAMP) have been measured in diethylmalonate buffers containing a wide variety of monovalent cations. The mobilities of all nucleotides increase gradually with the increase in intrinsic conductivity of the cation in the BGE. However, at a given conductivity, the mobilities observed for ATP, ADP, and AMP in BGEs containing alkali metal ions and other cations are lower than these observed in BGEs containing tetraalkylammonium ions. Since the mobility of cAMP is independent of the cation in the BGE, the results suggest that the relatively low mobilities observed for ATP, ADP, and AMP in BGEs containing cations other than a tetraalkylammonium ion are due to cation binding, reducing the effective net charge of the nucleotide and thereby reducing the observed mobility. To measure the binding quantitatively, the mobilities of the nucleotides were measured as a function of ionic strength. The mobilities of ATP, ADP, and AMP decrease nonlinearly with the square root of ionic strength (I(1/2)) in BGEs containing an alkali metal ion or Tris(+). By contrast, the mobilities decrease linearly with I(1/2) in BGEs containing a nonbinding quaternary ammonium ion, as expected from Debye-Hückel-Onsager (DHO) theory. The mobility of cAMP, a nonbinding analyte, decreases linearly with I(1/2), regardless of the cation in the BGE. Hence, a nonlinear decrease of the mobility of an analyte with I(1/2) appears to be a hallmark of counterion binding. The curved mobility profiles observed for ATP, ADP, and AMP in BGEs containing an alkali metal ion or Tris(+) were analyzed by nonlinear curve fitting, using difference mobility profiles to correct for the effect of the physical properties of BGE on the observed mobilities. The calculated apparent dissociation constants range from 22 to 344 mM, depending on the particular cation-nucleotide pair. Similar values have been obtained by other investigators, using different methods. Interestingly, Tris(+) and Li(+) bind to the adenosine nucleotides with approximately equal affinities, suggesting that positively charged Tris(+) buffer ions can compete with alkali metal ions in Tris-buffered solutions.


Assuntos
Nucleotídeos de Adenina/química , Cátions Monovalentes/química , Eletroforese Capilar , Modelos Químicos , Soluções Tampão , AMP Cíclico/química , Dinâmica não Linear , Concentração Osmolar , Compostos de Amônio Quaternário/química
17.
Biochemistry ; 46(7): 2050-8, 2007 Feb 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17253778

RESUMO

A variation of affinity capillary electrophoresis, called the replacement ion (RI) method, has been developed to measure the binding of monovalent cations to random sequence, double-stranded (ds) DNA. In this method, the ionic strength is kept constant by gradually replacing a non-binding ion in the solution with a binding ion and measuring the mobility of binding and non-binding analytes as a function of binding ion concentration. The method was validated by measuring the binding of Li+ ions to adenosine nucleotides; the apparent dissociation constants obtained by the RI method are comparable to literature values obtained by other methods. The binding of Tris+, NH4+, Li+, Na+, and K+ to dsDNA was then investigated. The apparent dissociation constants observed for counterion binding to a random-sequence 26-base pair (bp) oligomer ranged from 71 mM for Tris+ to 173 mM for Na+ and K+. Hence, positively charged Tris buffer ions will compete with other monovalent cations in Tris-buffered solutions. The bound cations identified in this study may correspond to the strongly correlated, tightly bound ions recently postulated to exist as a class of ions near the surface of dsDNA (Tan, Z.-J., and Chen, S.-J. (2006) Biophys. J. 91, 518-536). Monovalent cation binding to random-sequence dsDNA would be expected to occur in addition to any site-specific binding of cations to A-tracts or other DNA sequence motifs. Single-stranded DNA oligomers do not bind the five tested cations under the conditions investigated here.


Assuntos
Cátions Monovalentes/química , DNA/química , Soluções Tampão , Eletroforese Capilar/métodos , Lítio/química , Concentração Osmolar , Potássio/química , Compostos de Amônio Quaternário/química , Sódio/química , Trometamina/química
18.
Electrophoresis ; 27(8): 1462-70, 2006 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16609931

RESUMO

The free solution mobilities of curved and normal 199-bp DNA fragments have been measured in buffer solutions containing various quantities of the organic cosolvents methanol, ethanol, 2-propanol, 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol (MPD), ethylene glycol, and ACN, using CE. The curved fragment, taken from the VP1 gene of SV40, contains five unevenly spaced A- and T-tracts in a centrally located "curvature module"; the A- and T-tracts have been mutated to other sequences in the normal 199-bp fragment. The free solution mobility of the curved 199-bp fragment is significantly lower than that of its normal counterpart in aqueous solutions [Stellwagen, E., Lu, Y. J., Stellwagen, N. C., Nucleic Acids Res. 2005, 33, 4425-4432]. The mobilities of both the curved and normal fragments decrease with increasing cosolvent concentration, due to the effect of the cosolvent on the viscosity and dielectric constant of the solution. The mobility differences between the curved and normal 199-bp fragments and the mobility ratios decrease approximately linearly with the increasing mole fraction of cosolvent in the solution. Hence, MPD and other organic cosolvents affect DNA electrophoretic mobility by a common mechanism, most likely the preferential hydration of the DNA surface that occurs in aqueous cosolvents. The gradual loss of the anomalously slow mobility of the curved 199-bp fragment with increasing cosolvent concentration, combined with other data in the literature, suggests that preferential hydration gradually widens the narrow A-tract minor groove, releasing site-bound counterions in the minor groove and shifting the conformation toward that of normal DNA.


Assuntos
Fragmentação do DNA , Eletroforese Capilar/métodos , Álcoois , Sequência de Bases , Etilenoglicol , Glicóis , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico , Solventes
19.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 33(14): 4425-32, 2005.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16085753

RESUMO

The electrophoretic mobility of a curved DNA restriction fragment taken from the VP1 gene in the SV40 minichromosome has been measured in polyacrylamide gels and free solution, using capillary electrophoresis. The 199 bp restriction fragment has an apparent bend angle of 46 +/- 2 degrees located at SV40 sequence position 1922 +/- 2 bp [Lu Y.J., Weers B.D. and Stellwagen N. C. (2005) Biophys. J., 88, 1191-1206]. The 'curvature module' surrounding the apparent bend center contains five unevenly spaced A- and T-tracts, which are responsible for the observed curvature. The parent 199 bp fragment and sequence mutants containing at least one A-tract in the curvature module migrate anomalously slowly in free solution, as well as in polyacrylamide gels. Hence, the anomalously slow mobilities observed for curved DNA molecules in polyacrylamide gels are due in part to their anomalously slow mobilities in free solution. Analysis of the gel and free solution mobility decrements indicates that each A- or T-tract contributes independently, but not equally, to the curvature of the 199 bp fragment and its A-tract mutants. The relative contribution of each A- or T-tract to the observed curvature depends on its spacing with respect to the first A-tract in the curvature module.


Assuntos
DNA/química , Eletroforese em Gel de Poliacrilamida , Sequência Rica em At , Sequência de Bases , Proteínas do Capsídeo/genética , DNA Viral/química , Eletroforese Capilar , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico , Soluções
20.
J Pharm Pharmacol ; 57(7): 845-50, 2005 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15969943

RESUMO

The cis- and trans-isomers of enalapril and enalaprilat can be resolved by HPLC and by capillary electrophoresis. The isomeric content of enalapril is perturbed by the ionization of both its carboxyl and amine groups, while the isomeric content of enalaprilat is only perturbed by the ionization of its amine group. Increasing the hydrophobicity of the analyte solvent, as reflected in its molar polarization, increases the Z (cis) content of enalapril and markedly decreases the kinetics for isomerization. Far UV circular dichroic measurements suggest that the increase in Z (cis) content of enalapril is due to protonation of its carboxylate group. Taken together, the in-vitro properties of enalapril and enalaprilat suggest that the in-vivo transformation of the prodrug enalapril to the inhibitor enalaprilat and its delivery to angiotensin-converting enzyme should not be significantly limited by cis/trans-isomerization.


Assuntos
Anti-Hipertensivos/química , Enalapril/química , Enalaprilato/química , Cromatografia Líquida de Alta Pressão , Eletroforese Capilar , Isomerismo , Solventes
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