Polyethylene glycols affect electron transfer rate in phenosafranin-DNA complex.


Journal

Spectrochimica acta. Part A, Molecular and biomolecular spectroscopy
ISSN: 1873-3557
Titre abrégé: Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc
Pays: England
ID NLM: 9602533

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
15 Jan 2020
Historique:
received: 03 06 2019
revised: 06 08 2019
accepted: 09 08 2019
pubmed: 30 8 2019
medline: 17 6 2020
entrez: 30 8 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Long distance electron transfer (ET) between small ligands and DNA is a much studied phenomenon and is principally believed to occur through electron (or hole) hopping. Several studies have been carried out in aqueous environments while in real biological milieu the DNA molecules experience a more dense and heterogeneous environment containing otherwise indifferent molecular crowders. It is therefore expected that the ET could get modified in the presence of crowding agent and to investigate that we have made elaborate studies on steady state and time-resolved (picosecond (ps) and femtosecond (fs)-resolved) emission properties of a phenosafranine (PSF) intercalated to calf thymus (CT) DNA in the presence of ethylene glycol (EG) and polyethylene glycols (PEG) of different chain lengths (PEG 200, 400 and 1000). The emission of PSF gets considerably quenched when intercalated to DNA; the quenching is released when PEGs are added into it. The structural integrity of the CT DNA has been established using circular dichroism spectroscopy. CD measurements have evidenced only marginal changes in the DNA structure upon the addition of PEGs. ps-Resolved fluorescence measurements show significant decrease in the contribution of the DNA induced quenched time-constant of PSF upon the addition of PEGs, however, fs-resolved measurements show less noticeable changes in the time constants. Our study shows that the electron hopping rate through the guanine base in DNA core remains unaffected whereas the 'through space' electron transfer process does get affected in the presence of molecular crowders.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31465973
pii: S1386-1425(19)30854-6
doi: 10.1016/j.saa.2019.117464
pii:
doi:

Substances chimiques

Coloring Agents 0
Intercalating Agents 0
Ligands 0
Phenazines 0
Polyethylene Glycols 3WJQ0SDW1A
phenosafranine 81-93-6
DNA 9007-49-2
calf thymus DNA 91080-16-9

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

117464

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier B.V.

Auteurs

Partha Pyne (P)

Department of Chemical, Biological and Macromolecular Sciences, S N Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences, Block JD, Sector III, Salt Lake, Kolkata 700 106, India.

Nirnay Samanta (N)

Department of Chemical, Biological and Macromolecular Sciences, S N Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences, Block JD, Sector III, Salt Lake, Kolkata 700 106, India.

Animesh Patra (A)

Department of Chemical, Biological and Macromolecular Sciences, S N Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences, Block JD, Sector III, Salt Lake, Kolkata 700 106, India.

Aritra Das (A)

Department of Chemistry, Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, Kanpur 208 016, UP, India.

Pratik Sen (P)

Department of Chemistry, Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, Kanpur 208 016, UP, India. Electronic address: psen@iitk.ac.in.

Rajib Kumar Mitra (RK)

Department of Chemical, Biological and Macromolecular Sciences, S N Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences, Block JD, Sector III, Salt Lake, Kolkata 700 106, India. Electronic address: rajib@bose.res.in.

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