Summary information and primary citation
- PDB-id
-
1ihh;
DSSR-derived features in text and
JSON formats
- Class
- DNA
- Method
- X-ray (2.4 Å)
- Summary
- 2.4 angstrom crystal structure of an oxaliplatin
1,2-d(gpg) intrastrand cross-link in a DNA dodecamer
duplex
- Reference
-
Spingler B, Whittington DA, Lippard SJ (2001): "2.4 A
crystal structure of an oxaliplatin 1,2-d(GpG)
intrastrand cross-link in a DNA dodecamer duplex."
Inorg.Chem., 40, 5596-5602.
doi: 10.1021/ic010790t.
- Abstract
- (1R,2R-Diaminocyclohexane)oxalatoplatinum(II)
(oxaliplatin) is a third-generation platinum anticancer
compound that produces the same type of inter- and
intrastrand DNA cross-links as cisplatin. In combination
with 5-fluorouracil, oxaliplatin has been recently approved
in Europe, Asia, and Latin America for the treatment of
metastatic colorectal cancer. We present here the crystal
structure of an oxaliplatin adduct of a DNA
dodecanucleotide duplex having the same sequence as that
previously reported for cisplatin (Takahara, P. M.;
Rosenzweig, A. C.; Frederick, C. A.; Lippard, S. J. Nature
1995, 377, 649-652). Pt-MAD data were used to solve this
first X-ray structure of a platinated DNA duplex derived
from an active platinum anticancer drug other than
cisplatin. The overall geometry and crystal packing of the
complex, refined to 2.4 A resolution, are similar to those
of the cisplatin structure, despite the fact that the two
molecules crystallize in different space groups. The
platinum atom of the [Pt(R,R-DACH)](2+) moiety forms a
1,2-intrastrand cross-link between two adjacent guanosine
residues in the sequence 5'-d(CCTCTGGTCTCC), bending the
double helix by approximately 30 degrees toward the major
groove. Both end-to-end and end-to-groove packing
interactions occur in the crystal lattice. The latter is
positioned in the minor groove opposite the platinum
cross-link. A novel feature of the present structure is the
presence of a hydrogen bond between the pseudoequatorial NH
hydrogen atom of the (R,R)-DACH ligand and the O6 atom of
the 3'-G of the platinated d(GpG) lesion. This finding
provides structural evidence for the importance of
chirality in mediating the interaction between oxaliplatin
and duplex DNA, calibrating previously published models
used to explain the reactivity of enantiomerically pure
vicinal diamine platinum complexes with DNA in solution. It
also provides a new kind of chiral recognition between an
enantiomerically pure metal complex and the DNA double
helix.