18 resultados para van der Waals


Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The solution structures of calicheamicin gamma 1I, its cycloaromatized analog (calicheamicin epsilon), and its aryl tetrasaccharide complexed to a common DNA hairpin duplex have been determined by NMR and distance-refined molecular dynamics computations. Sequence specificity is associated with carbohydrate-DNA recognition that places the aryl tetrasaccharide component of all three ligands in similar orientations in the minor groove at the d(T-C-C-T).d(A-G-G-A) segment. The complementary fit of the ligands and the DNA minor groove binding site creates numerous van der Waals contacts as well as hydrogen bonding interactions. Notable are the iodine and sulfur atoms of calicheamicin that hydrogen bond with the exposed amino proton of the 5'- and 3'-guanines, respectively, of the d(A-G-G-A) segment. The sequence-specific carbohydrate binding orients the enediyne aglycone of calicheamicin gamma 1I such that its C3 and C6 proradical centers are adjacent to the cleavage sites. While the enediyne aglycone of calicheamicin gamma 1I is tilted relative to the helix axis and spans the minor groove, the cycloaromatized aglycone is aligned approximately parallel to the helix axis in the respective complexes. Specific localized conformational perturbations in the DNA have been identified from imino proton complexation shifts and changes in specific sugar pucker patterns on complex formation. The helical parameters for the carbohydrate binding site are comparable with corresponding values in B-DNA fibers while a widening of the groove is observed at the adjacent aglycone binding site.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

In this paper I review the ways in which the glassy state is obtained both in nature and in materials science and highlight a "new twist"--the recent recognition of polymorphism within the glassy state. The formation of glass by continuous cooling (viscous slowdown) is then examined, the strong/fragile liquids classification is reviewed, and a new twist-the possibility that the slowdown is a result of an avoided critical point-is noted. The three canonical characteristics of relaxing liquids are correlated through the fragility. As a further new twist, the conversion of strong liquids to fragile liquids by pressure-induced coordination number increases is demonstrated. It is then shown that, for comparable systems, it is possible to have the same conversion accomplished via a first-order transition within the liquid state during quenching. This occurs in the systems in which "polyamorphism" (polymorphism in the glassy state) is observed, and the whole phenomenology is accounted for by Poole's bond-modified van der Waals model. The sudden loss of some liquid degrees of freedom through such weak first-order transitions is then related to the polyamorphic transition between native and denatured hydrated proteins, since the latter are also glass-forming systems--water-plasticized, hydrogen bond-cross-linked chain polymers (and single molecule glass formers). The circle is closed with a final new twist by noting that a short time scale phenomenon much studied by protein physicists-namely, the onset of a sharp change in d/dT ( is the Debye-Waller factor)--is general for glass-forming liquids, including computer-simulated strong and fragile ionic liquids, and is closely correlated with the experimental glass transition temperature. The latter thus originates in strong anharmonicity in certain components of the vibrational density of states, which permits the system to access the multiple minima of its configuration space. The connection between the anharmonicity in these modes, vibrational localization, the Kauzmann temperature, and the fragility of the liquid is proposed as the key problem in glass science.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

We have used self-assembled purines and pyrimidines on planar gold surfaces and on gold-coated atomic force microscope (AFM) tips to directly probe intermolecular hydrogen bonds. Electron spectroscopy for chemical analysis (ESCA) and thermal programmed desorption (TPD) measurements of the molecular layers suggested monolayer coverage and a desorption energy of about 25 kcal/mol. Experiments were performed under water, with all four DNA bases immobilized on AFM tips and flat surfaces. Directional hydrogen-bonding interaction between the tip molecules and the surface molecules could be measured only when opposite base-pair coatings were used. The directional interactions were inhibited by excess nucleotide base in solution. Nondirectional van der Waals forces were present in all other cases. Forces as low as two interacting base pairs have been measured. With coated AFM tips, surface chemistry-sensitive recognition atomic force microscopy can be performed.