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Title: | Molecular Mechanism of Direct Proflavine-DNA Intercalation: Evidence for Drug-Induced Minimum Base-Stacking Penalty Pathway |
Authors: | SASIKALA, WILBEE D. MUKHERJEE, ARNAB Dept. of Chemistry |
Keywords: | Amber Force-Field Free-Energy Nucleic-Acids Conformational Energies Dynamics Method Simulation Binding Complex Relaxation Daunomycin 2012 |
Issue Date: | Sep-2012 |
Publisher: | American Chemical Society |
Citation: | Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 116(40), 12208-12212. |
Abstract: | DNA intercalation, a biophysical process of enormous clinical significance, has surprisingly eluded molecular understanding for several decades. With appropriate configurational restraint (to prevent dissociation) in all-atom metadynamics simulations, we capture the free energy surface of direct intercalation from minor groove-bound state for the first time using an anticancer agent proflavine. Mechanism along the minimum free energy path reveals that intercalation happens through a minimum base stacking penalty pathway where nonstacking parameters (Twist→Slide/Shift) change first, followed by base stacking parameters (Buckle/Roll→Rise). This mechanism defies the natural fluctuation hypothesis and provides molecular evidence for the drug-induced cavity formation hypothesis. The thermodynamic origin of the barrier is found to be a combination of entropy and desolvation energy. |
URI: | http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/5157 https://doi.org/10.1021/jp307911r |
ISSN: | 1520-6106 |
Appears in Collections: | JOURNAL ARTICLES |
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