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Title: Heavy metal-nucleoside interactions. Binding of methylmercury(II) to inosine and catalysis of the isotopic exchange of the C-8 hydrogen studied by 1-H nuclear magnetic resonance and raman difference spectrophotometry. Author: Mansy S, Tobias RS. Journal: Biochemistry; 1975 Jul; 14(13):2952-61. PubMed ID: 238579. Abstract: Raman difference spectrophotometry reveals that CH3HgII binds quantitatively to N(1) of inosine at pH 8, substituting for the proton. When N(1) is saturated, binding occurs at a second site. Measurements of the 1-H nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of both inosine and of CH3Hg-II are in agreement with the N(1) binding and indicate that the second site for mercuriation is N(7). This second binding reaction is observed to increase the rate of exchange of the C(8) hydrogen with solvent, consistent with results observed for alkylation at N(7). Coordination of the electrophilic CH3Hg-II to N(7) increases the acidity of H(8), facilitating OHminus--catalyzed proton abstraction and reprotonation by themedium. For comparison, the reaction of CH3Hg-II with [8-2-H]inosine has been studied. Displacement of the N(1) hydrogen upon mercuriation of inosine causes a significant electron delocalization into the ring, increasing the basicity of N(7), and accounting for the synergic effect in metal binding observed originally by Simpson. In contrast, 1-methylinosine interacts only slightly with CH3Hg-II at pH 8. Coordination appears to be at N(7), since H(8) again is observed to exchange rapidly with solvent protons. In acidic solution, pH less than 2, binding to inosine is almost quantitative and exclusively to N(7). The behavior of CH3Hg-II is compared with that of Pt(II) and with Ni(II), Co(II), AND Zn(II). A brief comparison is made among ultraviolet absorption spectrophotometry, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and Raman difference spectrophotometry for studying reactions of nucleosides and nucleotides.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]