Using Diffusion NMR To Characterize Guanosine Self‐Association: Insights into Structure and Mechanism
- 15 December 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Chemistry – A European Journal
- Vol. 11 (1), 164-173
- https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.200400782
Abstract
This paper presents results from a series of pulsed field gradient (PFG) NMR studies on lipophilic guanosine nucleosides that undergo cation‐templated assembly in organic solvents. The use of PFG‐NMR to measure diffusion coefficients for the different aggregates allowed us to observe the influences of cation, solvent and anion on the self‐assembly process. Three case studies are presented. In the first study, diffusion NMR confirmed formation of a hexadecameric G‐quadruplex [G 1]16⋅4 K+⋅4 pic− in CD3CN. Furthermore, hexadecamer formation from 5′‐TBDMS‐2′,3′‐isopropylidene G 1 and K+ picrate was shown to be a cooperative process in CD3CN. In the second study, diffusion NMR studies on 5′‐(3,5‐bis(methoxy)benzoyl)‐2′,3′‐isopropylidene G 4 showed that hierarchical self‐association of G8‐octamers is controlled by the K+ cation. Evidence for formation of both discrete G8‐octamers and G16‐hexadecamers in CD2Cl2 was obtained. The position of this octamer–hexadecamer equilibrium was shown to depend on the K+ concentration. In the third case, diffusion NMR was used to determine the size of a guanosine self‐assembly where NMR signal integration was ambiguous. Thus, both diffusion NMR and ESI‐MS show that 5′‐O‐acetyl‐2′,3′‐O‐isopropylidene G 7 and Na+ picrate form a doubly charged octamer [G 7]8⋅2 Na+⋅2 pic− 9 in CD2Cl2. The anion's role in stabilizing this particular complex is discussed. In all three cases the information gained from the diffusion NMR technique enabled us to better understand the self‐assembly processes, especially regarding the roles of cation, anion and solvent.This publication has 80 references indexed in Scilit:
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