The antimalarial and cytotoxic drug cryptolepine intercalates into DNA at cytosine-cytosine sites

Cryptolepine, a naturally occurring indoloquinoline alkaloid used as an antimalarial drug in Central and Western Africa, has been found to bind to DNA in a formerly unknown intercalation mode. Evidence from competition dialysis assays demonstrates that cryptolepine is able to bind CG-rich sequences...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature Structural Biology 2002-01, Vol.9 (1), p.57-60
Hauptverfasser: Aymami, Juan, Lisgarten, John N, Coll, Miquel, Portugal, Jose, Wright, Colin W
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cryptolepine, a naturally occurring indoloquinoline alkaloid used as an antimalarial drug in Central and Western Africa, has been found to bind to DNA in a formerly unknown intercalation mode. Evidence from competition dialysis assays demonstrates that cryptolepine is able to bind CG-rich sequences containing nonalternating CC sites. Here we show that cryptolepine interacts with the CC sites of the DNA fragment d(CCTAGG)2 in a base-stacking intercalation mode. This is the first DNA intercalator complex, from ∼90 solved by X-ray crystallography, to bind a nonalternating (pyrimidine-pyrimidine) DNA sequence. The asymmetry of the drug induces a perfect stacking with the asymmetric site, allowing for the stability of the complex in the absence of hydrogen bonding interactions. The crystal structure of this antimalarial drug-DNA complex provides evidence for the first nonalternating intercalation and, as such, provides a basis for the design of new anticancer or antimalarial drugs.
ISSN:1072-8368
1545-9993
2331-365X
1545-9985
DOI:10.1038/nsb729