Chiang S Y, Bruice T C, Azizkhan J C, Gawron L, Beerman T A
Experimental Therapeutics Department, Roswell Park Cancer Institute, Buffalo, NY 14263, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1997 Apr 1;94(7):2811-6. doi: 10.1073/pnas.94.7.2811.
Microgonotropen (MGT) DNA binding drugs, which consist of an A+T-selective DNA minor groove binding tripyrrole peptide and polyamine chains attached to a central pyrrole that extend drug contact into the DNA major groove, were found to be extraordinarily effective inhibitors of E2 factor 1 (E2F1) association with its DNA promoter element (5'-TTTCGCGCCAAA). The most active of these drugs, MGT-6a, was three orders of magnitude more effective than distamycin and inhibited complexes between E2F1 and the dihydrofolate reductase promoter by 50% at 0.00085 microM. A relationship was found between the measured equilibrium constants for binding of MGTs to the A+T region of d(GGCGA3T3GGC)/d(CCGCT3A3CCG) and their inhibition of complex formation between E2F1 and the DNA promoter element. A representative of the potent MGT inhibitors was significantly more active on inhibition of E2F1-DNA complex formation compared with disruption of a preexisting complex.