| Literature DB >> 30450756 |
Kishor B Kale1, Divya P Ottoor1.
Abstract
This paper discusses multi-spectroscopic and molecular docking analysis of the interaction between atenolol (ATN) and deoxyribose nucleic acid (DNA) using alizarin (ALZ) as a spectroscopic probe. ATN is a β1 -receptor antagonist belonging to the β-blocker class of molecules. Experimental findings that were based on different spectroscopic analysis, melting studies, viscometric analysis, 1 H nuclear magnetic resonance and circular dichroism studies revealed the presence of a grove-binding mode. The effect of ionic strength was also studied, and observations suggested that electrostatic interaction also played a minor role during interaction. Molecular docking analysis suggested that the dominant force for the grove-binding phenomenon was hydrogen bonding between the 24-H residue of ATN and O of the 10-G residue, and the 40-H residue of ATN and N of the 17-A base residue. Competitive binding study of the ALZ-DNA complex with ATN showed that, despite an increase in the amount of ATN in the ALZ-DNA complex, the overall absorbance remained unchanged. The decrease in fluorescence in the ALZ-DNA system may be due to new non-fluorescent ATN-DNA-ALZ complex formation.Entities:
Keywords: alizarin; atenolol; fluorescence spectroscopy; grove-binding; quenching constant
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30450756 DOI: 10.1002/bio.3574
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Luminescence ISSN: 1522-7235 Impact factor: 2.464