Abstract
31P NMR provides a convenient monitor of the phosphate ester backbone conformational changes upon binding of the intercalating drugs ethidium, quinacrine, and daunomycin to sonicated poly(A) .cntdot. poly(U) and calf thymus DNA. 31P chemical shifts can also be used to assess differences in the duplex unwinding angles in the presence of the drug. Thus a new 31P signal, 1.8-2.2 ppm downfield from the double-stranded helix signals, is observed in the ethidium ion-poly(A) .cntdot. poly(U) complex. This siganl arises from phosphates which are in perturbed environments due to intercalation of the drug. This is in keeping with the hypothesis that the P-O ester torsional angle in phosphates linking the intercalated base pairs is more trans-like. Similar though smaller deshielding of the 31P signals is observed in sonicated poly(A) .cntdot. poly(U)-quinacrine complexes as well as in the daunomycin complexes. The effect of added ethidium ion, quinacrine, and daunomycin on the 31P spectra of sonicated calf thymus DNA is consistent with Wilson and Jones'' (1982) earlier study. In these drug-DNA complexes the drug produces a gradual downfield shift in the DNA 31P signal without the appearance of a separate downfield peak. These differences are attributed to differences in the rate of chemical exchange of the drug between free and bound duplex states. The previous correlation of 31P chemical shift with drug duplex unwinding angle (Wilson and Jones, 1982) is confirmed for both the RNA and DNA duplexes.