Effects of neutralization pattern and stereochemistry on DNA bending by methylphosphonate substitutions.

Asymmetric phosphate neutralization has been hypothesized to play a role in DNA bending by proteins. Neutralization is thought to involve salt bridges between the negatively charged phosphate backbone of duplex DNA and the cationic amino acids of an approaching protein. According to this model, the resulting unbalanced charge distribution along the duplex DNA induces the double helix to collapse toward the neutralized surface. Previous work has confirmed that DNA bending is induced by the asymmetric incorporation of racemic methylphosphonate linkages creating a neutral region on one face of duplex DNA. Neutralization was accomplished by substitution of three consecutive phosphodiesters on each strand, arranged across one minor groove of the DNA (a total of six neutralized phosphates). We now measure DNA bending induced by a more diffuse patch of neutralization (alternating neutralized and anionic phosphates) and explore the effect of methylphosphonate stereochemistry. DNA duplexes with patches of alternating methylphosphonate and phosphodiester linkages are less bent than DNAs wherein consecutive phosphates are neutralized. Furthermore, duplexes neutralized by incorporation of pure (RP)-methylphosphonate isomers are bent approximately 30% less than duplexes neutralized by racemic methylphosphonates.