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Nucleic Acids Research, 1994, Vol. 22, No. 3 506-513
© 1994


CHEMISTRY

Ultraviolet light-induced cleavage of DNA in presence of iodoHoechst 33258: the sequence specificity of the reaction

Vincent Murray+ and Roger F. Martin*

Molecular Sciences Group, Peter MacCallum Cencer Institute 481 Little Lonsdale Streeet, Melbourne, Victoria 3000, Australia

*To whom correspondence should be addressed

Received August 4, 1993. Accepted December 18, 1993.

IodoHoechst 33258 sensitizes DNA to cleavage by near ultraviolet light (UV-A). Following an earlier study which showed that the UV-induced cleavage is at discrete locations corresponding to the ligand binding sites, this paper reports a more extensive analysis of the sequence specificity of cleavage. The experiments involved use of double-stranded DNA synthesised on primed M13 templates. Analysis of cleavage in a 280bp sequence In M13mp18 and a 310bp sequence in three M13mp9 clones (‘alpha-32’, ‘alpha-82’ and ‘alpha-22’) derived from human alpha-DNA, showed that for all of the twenty-nine strong and very strong damage sites, cleavage was at the 3' end of a run of three or more consecutive AT base pairs. The extent of cleavage was higher for sites with consecutive Ts than for consecutive As, and greatest for the sequence cTTTTca. Comparison of three closely-related alpha-DNA clones enabled assessment of single bp changes and essentially confirmed the results of detailed analysis of binding cleavage sites In mpl8 and alpha-32. Decreasing the input ratio of IodoHoechst/per bp DNA from 0.13 to 0.013 altered the sequence specificity, and sites possessing only three consecutive AT bps were generally not cleaved. The contributions of both the strength of iigand binding and the efficiency of photolytic cleavage to the overall extent of cleavage by UV/IodoHoechst are discussed, in view of the potential utility of the ligand as a probe of DNA conformation.


+Present address: University of New South Wales, PO Box 1, Kensington, NEW 2033, Australia


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