Comparative Study
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Kinetic evidence for interaction of TMPyP4 with two different G-quadruplex conformations of human telomeric DNA.

BACKGROUND: Stabilization of G-quadruplex helices by small ligands has attracted growing attention because they inhibit the activity of the enzyme telomerase, which is overexpressed in >80% cancer cells. TMPyP4, one of the most studied G-quadruplex ligands, is used as a model to show that the ligands can exhibit different binding features with different conformations of a human telomeric specific sequence.

METHODS: UV-Vis, FRET melting Assay, Isothermal Titration Calorimetry, Time-resolved Fluorescence lifetime, T-Jump and Molecular Dynamics.

RESULTS: TMPyP4 yields two different complexes with two Tel22 telomeric conformations in the presence of Na+ or K+ . T-Jump kinetic experiments show that the rates of formation and dissociation of these complexes in the ms time scale differ by one order of magnitude. MD simulations reveal that, in K+ buffer, "hybrid 1" conformation yields kinetic constants on interaction with TMPyP4 one order lower than "hybrid 2". The binding involves π-π stacking with external loop bases.

CONCLUSIONS: For the first time we show that for a particular buffer TMPyP4 interacts in a kinetically different way with the two Tel22 conformations even if the complexes formed are thermodynamically indistinguishable.

GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE: G-quadruplexes, endowed with technological applications and potential impact on regulation mechanisms, define a new research field. The possibility of building different conformations from same sequence is a complex issue that confers G-quadruplexes very interesting features. The obtaining of reliable kinetic data constitutes an efficient tool to determine reaction mechanisms between conformations and small molecules.

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