Walmsley J A, Wilson R M, Garza L A, West R T, Lytle T E, Heldt R C, Maguire M J
Division of Earth and Physical Sciences, University of Texas at San Antonio 78249, USA.
J Biomol Struct Dyn. 1995 Oct;13(2):319-37. doi: 10.1080/07391102.1995.10508843.
The hydrogen-bonding, base stacking, and formation of extended aggregates has been investigated for salts of guanylyl-3'-5')-cytidine, GpC, and cytidylyl-(3'-5')- guanosine, CpG, in which the cation was Na+, K+, or tetramethylammonium (TMA+). Variable temperature studies were done at 2-70 degrees C on aqueous solutions at pD4 and 8 using 1H NMR and FTIR. At low temperatures it has been found that at pD 8 both GpC and CpG form Watson-Crick dimers which stack upon each other to form larger species. A slight cation effect is observed below 35 degrees C which has the order: TMA+ > Na+ > K+. This order suggests that the cations are interacting with the phosphate and interactions with the bases are unlikely. The 1H NMR spectrum for TMACpG at pD 4 has been assigned and exhibits chemical shift differences from those at pD 8 which are consistent with protonation of the N3 of the cytidine residue. Based on NMR line broadening, CpG at pD 4 has a greater degree of self-association at low temperature than it or GpC have at pD 8. A different type of hydrogen bonding and self-association occur in CpG at pD 4 compared to pD 8, but the structures are uncertain. Due to hemi-protonation of the cytidine N3, parallel G-G/C-C+ base paired dimers or G-tetrads may be forming.