Haq Ihtshamul
Centre for Chemical Biology, Department of Chemistry, Krebs Institute, The University of Sheffield, Dainton Building, Brook Hill, Sheffield S3 7HF, UK.
Arch Biochem Biophys. 2002 Jul 1;403(1):1-15. doi: 10.1016/S0003-9861(02)00202-3.
Many anticancer, antibiotic, and antiviral drugs exert their primary biological effects by reversibly interacting with nucleic acids. Therefore, these biomolecules represent a major target in drug development strategies designed to produce next generation therapeutics for diseases such as cancer. In order to improve the clinical efficacy of existing drugs and also to design new ones it is necessary to understand the molecular basis of drug-DNA interactions in structural, thermodynamic, and kinetic detail. The past decade has witnessed an increase in the number of rigorous biophysical studies of drug-DNA systems and considerable knowledge has been gained in the energetics of these binding reactions. This is, in part, due to the increased availability of high-sensitivity calorimetric techniques, which have allowed the thermodynamics of drug-DNA interactions to be probed directly and accurately. The focus of this article is to review thermodynamic approaches to examining drug-DNA recognition. Specifically, an overview of a recently developed method of analysis that dissects the binding free energy of these reactions into five component terms is presented. The results of applying this analysis to the DNA binding interactions of both minor groove drugs and intercalators are discussed. The solvent water plays a key role in nucleic acid structure and consequently in the binding of ligands to these biomolecules. Any rational approach to DNA-targeted drug design requires an understanding of how water participates in recognition and binding events. Recent studies examining hydration changes that accompany DNA binding by intercalators will be reviewed. Finally some aspects of cooperativity in drug-DNA interactions are described and the importance of considering cooperative effects when examining these reactions is highlighted.
许多抗癌、抗生素和抗病毒药物通过与核酸可逆性相互作用发挥其主要生物学效应。因此,这些生物分子是旨在开发癌症等疾病下一代治疗药物的药物研发策略中的主要靶点。为了提高现有药物的临床疗效并设计新的药物,有必要从结构、热力学和动力学细节上了解药物与DNA相互作用的分子基础。在过去十年中,对药物-DNA系统进行严格生物物理研究的数量有所增加,并且在这些结合反应的能量学方面已经获得了相当多的知识。这在一定程度上归因于高灵敏度量热技术的可用性增加,这些技术使得能够直接且准确地探测药物与DNA相互作用的热力学。本文的重点是综述用于研究药物-DNA识别的热力学方法。具体而言,本文概述了一种最近开发的分析方法,该方法将这些反应的结合自由能分解为五个组成部分。讨论了将这种分析应用于小沟药物和嵌入剂的DNA结合相互作用的结果。溶剂水在核酸结构中起着关键作用,因此在配体与这些生物分子的结合中也起着关键作用。任何针对DNA的药物设计的合理方法都需要了解水如何参与识别和结合事件。将综述最近研究嵌入剂与DNA结合时伴随的水合变化的研究。最后,描述了药物-DNA相互作用中的协同性的一些方面,并强调了在研究这些反应时考虑协同效应的重要性。