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  • Acid-base and metal ion binding properties of 2-thiocytidine in aqueous solution.

Acid-base and metal ion binding properties of 2-thiocytidine in aqueous solution.

Journal of biological inorganic chemistry : JBIC : a publication of the Society of Biological Inorganic Chemistry (2008-03-01)
Justyna Brasuń, Agnieszka Matera, Elzbieta Sochacka, Jolanta Swiatek-Kozlowska, Henryk Kozlowski, Bert P Operschall, Helmut Sigel
摘要

The thionucleoside 2-thiocytidine (C2S) occurs in nature in transfer RNAs; it receives attention in diverse fields like drug research and nanotechnology. By potentiometric pH titrations we measured the acidity constants of H(C2S)(+) and the stability constants of the M(C2S)(2+) and M(C2S-H)(+) complexes (M(2+) = Zn(2+), Cd(2+)), and we compared these results with those obtained previously for its parent nucleoside, cytidine (Cyd). Replacement of the (C2)=O unit by (C2)=S facilitates the release of the proton from (N3)H(+) in H(C2S)(+) (pK (a) = 3.44) somewhat, compared with H(Cyd)(+) (pK (a) = 4.24). This moderate effect of about 0.8 pK units contrasts with the strong acidification of about 4 pK units of the (C4)NH(2) group in C2S (pK (a) = 12.65) compared with Cyd (pK (a) approximately 16.7); the reason for this result is that the amino-thione tautomer, which dominates for the neutral C2S molecule, is transformed upon deprotonation into the imino-thioate form with the negative charge largely located on the sulfur. In the M(C2S)(2+) complexes the (C2)S group is the primary binding site rather than N3 as is the case in the M(Cyd)(2+) complexes, though owing to chelate formation N3 is to some extent still involved in metal ion binding. Similarly, in the Zn(C2S-H)(+) and Cd(C2S-H)(+) complexes the main metal ion binding site is the (C2)S(-) unit (formation degree above 99.99% compared with that of N3). However, again a large degree of chelate formation with N3 must be surmised for the M(C2S-H)(+) species in accord with previous solid-state studies of related ligands. Upon metal ion binding, the deprotonation of the (C4)NH(2) group (pK (a) = 12.65) is dramatically acidified (pK (a) approximately 3), confirming the very high stability of the M(C2S-H)(+) complexes. To conclude, the hydrogen-bonding and metal ion complex forming capabilities of C2S differ strongly from those of its parent Cyd; this must have consequences for the properties of those RNAs which contain this thionucleoside.