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Biophys J, January 2001, p. 140-148, Vol. 80, No. 1
Center for Advanced Research in Biotechnology, Rockville, Maryland 20850 USA
It has been argued that the stacking of adenyl groups in
water must be driven primarily by electrostatic interactions, based upon NMR data showing stacking for two adenyl groups joined by a 3-atom
linker but not for two naphthyl groups joined by the same linker. In
contrast, theoretical work has suggested that adenine stacking is
driven primarily by nonelectrostatic forces, and that electrostatic
interactions actually produce a net repulsion between adenines stacking
in water. The present study provides evidence that the experimental
data for the 3-atom-linked bis-adenyl and bis-naphthyl compounds are
consistent with the theory indicating that nonelectrostatic
interactions drive adenine stacking. First, a theoretical
conformational analysis is found to reproduce the observed ranking of
the stacking tendencies of the compounds studied experimentally. A
geometric analysis identifies two possible reasons, other than stronger
electrostatic interactions, why the 3-atom-linked bis-adenyl compounds
should stack more than the bis-naphthyl compounds. First, stacked
naphthyl groups tend to lie further apart than stacked adenyl groups,
based upon both quantum calculations and crystal structures. This may
prevent the bis-naphthyl compound from stacking as extensively as the
bis-adenyl compound. Second, geometric analysis shows that more stacked
conformations are sterically accessible to the bis-adenyl compound than
to the bis-naphthyl compound because the linker is attached to the
sides of the adenyl groups, but to the ends of the naphthyl groups.
Finally, ab initio quantum mechanics calculations and energy
decompositions for relevant conformations of adenine and naphthalene
dimers support the view that stacking in these compounds is driven
primarily by nonelectrostatic interactions. The present analysis
illustrates the importance of considering all aspects of a molecular
system when interpreting experimental data, and the value of computer
models as an adjunct to chemical intuition.
Biophys J, January 2001, p. 140-148, Vol. 80, No. 1
© 2001 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/01/01/140/09 $2.00
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