The interpretation of Mg(2+) binding isotherms for nucleic acids using Poisson-Boltzmann theory.

Magnesium ions play a crucial role in the structural integrity and biological activity of nucleic acids. Experimental thermodynamic descriptions of Mg(2+) interactions with nucleic acids in solution have generally relied on the analyses of binding polynomials to estimate the energetic contributions of diffuse and site-bound ions. However, since ion binding is dominated by long-range electrostatic forces, such models provide only a phenomenological description of the experimental Mg(2+) binding data and provide little insight into the actual mechanism of the binding equilibria. Here, we present a rigorous theoretical framework based on the non-linear Poisson-Boltzmann (NLPB) equation for understanding diffuse ion interactions that can be used to interpret experimental Mg(2+) binding isotherms. As intuitively expected, in the NLPB model binding is simply the total accumulation of the ion around the nucleic acid. Comparing the experimental data to the calculated curves shows that the NLPB equation provides a remarkably accurate description of Mg(2+) binding to linear polynucleotides like DNA and poly(A x U) without any fitted parameters. In particular, the NLPB model explains two general features of magnesium binding; the strong dependence on univalent salt concentration, and its substantial anticooperativity. Each of these effects can be explained by changes in the Mg(2+) distribution around the polyion under different solution conditions. In order to more fully understand these different aspects of magnesium binding, the free energy of Mg(2+) binding, DeltaGMg, is calculated and partitioned into several salt-dependent contributions: the change in the electrostatic interaction free energy of the charges, DeltaDeltaGE.D (including Mg(2+)-phosphate, Mg(2+)-Mg(2+), Mg(2+)-Na(+), Na(+)-Na(+), Na(+)-phosphate interactions, and similar contributions for Cl(-)) and the cratic free energies of (re)organizing the MgCl2 and NaCl atmospheres, DeltaG(Mg)org and DeltaDeltaG(Na)org, respectively. For the systems studied here, DeltaGMg is strongly influenced by entropic free energy changes in the distributions of both NaCl and MgCl2, DeltaG(Mg)org and DeltaDeltaG(Na)org. From this analysis, we also raise the possibility that coions added with the magnesium salt might play an important role in the overall stability of nucleic acids under some conditions.

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