D. Rentzeperis et al., THERMODYNAMICS OF DNA HAIRPINS - CONTRIBUTION OF LOOP SIZE TO HAIRPINSTABILITY AND ETHIDIUM BINDING, Nucleic acids research, 21(11), 1993, pp. 2683-2689
A combination of calorimetric and spectroscopic techniques was used to
evaluate the thermodynamic behavior of a set of DNA hairpins with the
sequence d(GCGCT(n)GCGC), where n = 3, 5 and 7, and the interaction o
f each hairpin with ethidium. All three hairpins melt in two-state mon
omolecular transitions, with t(m)'s ranging from 79.1-degrees-C (T3) t
o 57.5-degrees-C (T7), and transition enthalpies of approximately 38.5
kcal mol-1. Standard thermodynamic profiles at 20-degrees-C reveal th
at the lower stability of the T5 and T7 hairpins corresponds to a DELT
AG-degrees term of + 0.5 kcal mol-1 per thymine residue, due to the en
tropic ordering of the thymine loops and uptake of counterions. Deconv
olution of the ethidium-hairpin calorimetric titration curves indicate
two sets of binding sites that correspond to one ligand in the stem w
ith binding affinity, K(b), Of approximately 1.8 x 10(6) M-1, and two
ligands in the loops with K(b) of approximately 4.3 x 10(4) M-1. Howev
er, the binding enthalpy, DELTAH(b), ranges from - 8.6 (T3) to - 11.6
kcal mol-1 (T7) for the stem site, and - 6.6 (T3) to - 12.7 kcal mol-1
(T7) for the loop site. Relative to the T3 hairpin, we obtained an ov
erall thermodynamic contribution (per dT residue) of DELTADELTAH(b) =
DELTA(TDELTAS(b)) = - 0.7(5) kcal mol-1 for the stem sites and DELTADE
LTAH(b) = DELTA(TDELTAS(b)) = - 1.5 kcal mol-1 for the loop sites. The
refore, the induced structural perturbations of ethidium binding resul
ts in a differential compensation of favorable stacking interactions w
ith the unfavorable ordering of the ligands.