Metal Complexes as DNA Intercalators
Nanjing Normal University · University of Warwick
Abstract
DNA has a strong affinity for many heterocyclic aromatic dyes, such as acridine and its derivatives. Lerman in 1961 first proposed intercalation as the source of this affinity, and this mode of DNA binding has since attracted considerable research scrutiny. Organic intercalators can inhibit nucleic acid synthesis in vivo, and they are now common anticancer drugs in clinical therapy. The covalent attachment of organic intercalators to transition metal coordination complexes, yielding metallointercalators, can lead to novel DNA interactions that influence biological activity. Metal complexes with σ-bonded aromatic side arms can act as dual-function complexes: they bind to DNA both by metal coordination and…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 27.68
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 66
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Intercalation (chemistry)
- Chemistry
- Nucleobase
- DNA
- Ligand (biochemistry)
- Stereochemistry
- Acridine
- Nucleic acid
- Good health and well-being