4.6 Article

The Binding Pocket at the Interface of Multimeric Telomere G-quadruplexes: Myth or Reality?

Journal

CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL
Volume 27, Issue 45, Pages 11707-11720

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/chem.202101486

Keywords

Human Telomeric DNA; Multimeric G-quadruplexes; Naphthalene diimide dyads; Fluorescence Lifetime and Multiwavelength Global Analysis; Isothermal Titration Calorimetry

Funding

  1. Italian Association for Cancer Research [14708]

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The study investigated naphthalene diimide monomers and dyads as ligands of human telomeric DNA G4 structures and revealed their binding features at the G4 interface. In the absence of NMR and crystallographic data, the research provides important evidence of binding at the interface pocket and clues on the role played by the ligand structure.
Human telomeric DNA with hundreds of repeats of the 5'-TTAGGG-3' motif plays a crucial role in several biological processes. It folds into G-quadruplex (G4) structures and features a pocket at the interface of two contiguous G4 blocks. Up to now no structural NMR and crystallographic data are available for ligands interacting with contiguous G4s. Naphthalene diimide monomers and dyads were investigated as ligands of a dimeric G4 of human telomeric DNA comparing the results with those of the model monomeric G4. Time-resolved fluorescence, circular dichroism, isothermal titration calorimetry and molecular modeling were used to elucidate binding features. Ligand fluorescence lifetime and induced circular dichroism unveiled occupancy of the binding site at the interface. Thermodynamic parameters confirmed the hypothesis as they remarkably change for the dyad complexes of the monomeric and dimeric telomeric G4. The bi-functional ligand structure of the dyads is a fundamental requisite for binding at the G4 interface as only the dyads engage in complexes with 1 : 1 stoichiometry, lodging in the pocket at the interface and establishing multiple interactions with the DNA skeleton. In the absence of NMR and crystallographic data, our study affords important proofs of binding at the interface pocket and clues on the role played by the ligand structure.

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