Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.116, No.35, 10639-10648, 2012
Theoretical Study on Steric Effects of DNA Phosphorothioation: B-Helical Destabilization in Rp-Phosphorothioated DNA
Phosphorothioation, with sulfur replacing a nonbridging oxygen of phosphate, has surfaced in bacterial DNA electrophoresis. To understand structural characteristics of the thio-substituted DNA, we have investigated the correlation between the relative energy of phosphate/phosphorothioate linkage and the backbone torsions. The relative energies (R.E.) computed by the quantum mechanical method, the PBE1PBE(CPCM, solvent=water)//PBE1PBE/6-31+G(2df) level of theory, were used to construct energy-scoring functions against backbone torsion variables, resulting in the squared correlation coefficients r(2) of 0.90-0.95. Then, the DNA energy alteration by phosphorothioation is estimated with the relative energy difference (Delta R.E.) between phosphate and phosphorothioate of the phosphate linkages in the DNA crystallographic database (NDB). As a result, Rp-phosphorothioation shifts the relative energy of B-helical structures by 2.7 +/- 3.4 kcal/mol, destabilizing about 95% linkages, while Sp-phosphorothioation by -1.4 +/- 2.4 kcal/mol, stabilizing over 84% linkages in the data sets. The B-helical destabilization is likely caused by the steric effect between the sulfur atom of Rp-phosphorothioate and the neighboring C-H groups of deoxyribose on the groove wall in B-helix. The unfavorable interaction may be magnified by the increasing rigidness of P-O-involving backbone torsions alpha and zeta upon the nonbridging phosphorothioations. Since B-helix is the most prevalent DNA double-helical structure and Rp-phosphorothioation is the exclusive configuration in bacteria thio-DNA found to date, the observed stereospecificity-destabilization correlation may reflect a structure-function relationship of biological DNA-phosphorothiation.