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Nucleic Acids Research, 1984, Vol. 12, No. 17 6813-6825
© 1984


CHEMISTRY

X-ray structure of cytidine-5'-O-dimethylphosphate. Novel stacking between the ribosyl O(2') hydroxyl oxygen atom and the base

Richard G. Brennan1, Norman S. Kondo2 and Muttaiya Sundaralingam1

1Department of Biochemistry, College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, University of Wasconsin Medison Medison, WI 53706, USA 2Department of Chemistry, University of the District of Columbia Wasington, DC 20008, USA

Received July 17, 1984. Accepted August 16, 1984.

The anionic oxygen atoms of the phosphodiester backbone of RNA and DNA are particularly susceptible to esterification by many mutagenic and carcinogenic alkylating agents. To better understand the geometric, electronic and conformational properties of the alkylated sugar phosphate moiety, the X-ray structure of the phosphotriesterified nucleotide, cytidine-5'-O-dimethylphos-phate (C11H18N3O8P), was undertaken. The compound crystallizes in the monoclinic space group P2, with unit cell parameters of a=5.741(2), b=11.625(1), c=11.425(1)Å, ß=94.43(2)°. The structure was solved by direct methods and refined by block-diagonal least-squares technique to an R index of 0.034 (Rw=0.046). The D-ribofuranosyl ring is in the T2 twist conformation (P=13.1(2)°, {tau}m=36.7(2)°) and the conformation about the C(1')-N(1) glycosyl bond is anti (XCN=8.3(2)°). The four P-O bond lengths are significantly shorter than those of the nonalkylated nucleotides. The three sets of phosphodiester linkages, ({omega}Formula , $$({\omega }_{\hbox{ B }}^{\text{'}},{\omega }_{\hbox{ B }})$$, and ({omega}$$({\omega }_{\hbox{ C }}^{\text{'}},{\omega }_{\hbox{ C }})$$, take the (g ,t), (t,g ) and (g ,t) conformations, respectively. Three is no base-base or alkyl-base stacking, however, a novel intermolecular stacking is found between the ribosyl 0(2') hydroxyl oxygen atom and a neighboring pyrimidine ring. This hydroxyl-base stacking interaction way have implications in the stabilization of the tertiary and quarternary structure of ribonucleic acids and nucleic acid-protein complexes.


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