화학공학소재연구정보센터
Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.45, No.7, 3124-3132, 2006
DNA oxidation in anionic reverse micelles: Ruthenium-mediated damage at guanine in single- and double-stranded DNA
One-electron guanine oxidation in DNA has been investigated in anionic reverse micelles (RMs). A photochemical method for generating Ru3+ from the ruthenium polypyridyl complex tris(2-2'-bipyridine)ruthenium(II) chloride ([Ru(bpy)(3)]Cl-2) is combined with high-resolution polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) to quantify piperidine-labile guanine oxidation products. As characterized by emission spectroscopy of Ru(bPY)(3)(2+), the addition of DNA to RMs containing Ru(bPY)(3)(2+) does not perturb the environment of Ru(bPY)(3)(2+). The steady-state quenching efficiency of Ru(bPY)(3)(2+center dot) with K-3[Fe(CN)(6)] in buffer solution is approximately 2-fold higher than that observed in RMs. Consistent with the difference in quenching efficiency in the two media, a 1.5-fold higher yield of piperidine-labile damage products as monitored by PAGE is observed for duplex oligonucleotide in buffer vs RMs. In contrast, a 13-fold difference in the yield of PAGE-detected G oxidation products is observed when single-stranded DNA is the substrate. Circular dichroism spectra showed that single-stranded DNA undergoes a structural change in anionic RMs. This structural change is potentially due to cation-mediated adsorption of the DNA phosphates on the anionic headgroups of the RMs, leading to protection of the guanine from oxidatively generated damage.