1. Academic Validation
  2. Probing structure and dynamics of DNA with 2-aminopurine: effects of local environment on fluorescence

Probing structure and dynamics of DNA with 2-aminopurine: effects of local environment on fluorescence

  • Biochemistry. 2001 Jan 30;40(4):946-56. doi: 10.1021/bi001664o.
E L Rachofsky 1 R Osman J B Ross
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biochemistry and MolecularBiology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, One Gustave L. Levy Place, New York, New York 10029, USA.
Abstract

2-Aminopurine (2AP) is an analogue of adenine that has been utilized widely as a fluorescence probe of protein-induced local conformational changes in DNA. Within a DNA strand, this fluorophore demonstrates characteristic decreases in quantum yield and emission decay lifetime that vary sensitively with base sequence, temperature, and helix conformation but that are accompanied by only small changes in emission wavelength. However, the molecular interactions that give rise to these spectroscopic changes have not been established. To develop a molecular model for interpreting the fluorescence measurements, we have investigated the effects of environmental polarity, hydrogen bonding, and the purine and pyrimidine bases of DNA on the emission energy, quantum yield, and intensity decay kinetics of 2AP in simple model systems. The effects of environmental polarity were examined in a series of solvents of varying dielectric constant, and hydrogen bonding was investigated in binary mixtures of water with 1,4-dioxane or N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF). The effects of the purine and pyrimidine bases were studied by titrating 2AP deoxyriboside (d2AP) with the nucleosides adenosine (rA), cytidine (rC), guanosine (rG), and deoxythymidine (dT), and the nucleoside triphosphates ATP and GTP in neutral aqueous solution. The nucleosides and NTPs each quench the fluorescence of d2AP by a combination of static (affecting only the quantum yield) and dynamic (affecting both the quantum yield and the lifetime, proportionately) mechanisms. The peak wavelength and shape of the emission spectrum are not altered by either of these effects. The static quenching is saturable and has half-maximal effect at approximately 20 mM nucleoside or NTP, consistent with an aromatic stacking interaction. The rate constant for dynamic quenching is near the diffusion limit for collisional interaction (k(q) approximately 2 x 10(9) M(-1) s(-1)). Neither of these effects varies significantly between the various nucleosides and NTPs studied. In contrast, hydrogen bonding with water was observed to have a negligible effect on the emission wavelength, fluorescence quantum yield, or lifetime of 2AP in either dioxane or DMF. In nonpolar solvents, the fluorescence lifetime and quantum yield decrease dramatically, accompanied by significant shifts in the emission spectrum to shorter wavelengths. However, these effects of polarity do not coincide with the observed emission wavelength-independent quenching of 2AP fluorescence in DNA. Therefore, we conclude that the fluorescence quenching of 2AP in DNA arises from base stacking and collisions with neighboring bases only but is insensitive to base-pairing or other hydrogen bonding interactions. These results implicate both structural and dynamic properties of DNA in quenching of 2AP and constitute a simple model within which the fluorescence changes induced by protein-DNA binding or other perturbations may be interpreted.

Figures
Products