Quinone methides and related electrophiles represent a common class of inte
rmediates that form during metabolism of drugs and xenobiotics and may lead
to DNA alkylation. The intrinsic reactivity of these species has now been
characterized using a stable model compound, O-(tert-butyldimethylsilyl)-2-
bromomethylphenol, designed to generate an o-quinone methide in the presenc
e of fluoride. The resulting deoxynucleoside adducts were assigned unambigu
ously through use of two-dimensional NMR and,in particular, heteronuclear m
ultiple-bond connectivity (HMBC); Both purines, dG and dA, reacted at their
exo-amino groups. In contrast, dC had previously been shown to react at it
s cyclic N3 position [Rokita, S. E.; Yang, J.; Pande, P.; Greenberg, W. A.
J. Org. Chem. 1997, 62, 3010-3012], and the relatively nonnucleophilic T re
mained inert under all conditions examined. Surprisingly, the efficiency of
cytosine modification exceeded that of adenine and guanine by more than 10
-fold in competition studies with the deoxymononucleosides. Reaction of all
residues was suppressed in duplex DNA, but none was affected more than cyt
osine (>3600-fold). Guanine consequently emerged as the predominant target
in duplex DNA in accord with the selectivity of most natural products formi
ng quinone methide-like species. These general observations may then in par
t reflect the ability of the exo-amino group of guanine to maintain its rea
ctivity most effectively from nucleoside to helical DNA.