DNA-binding properties of cosmomycin D, an anthracycline with two trisaccharide chains

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Abstract

Cosmomycin D (CosD) is the major constituent fraction isolated from a culture of Streptomyces olindensis ICB20. The ability of this compound to intercalate with double-stranded DNA was studied by gel mobility shift assays and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). ESI-MS experiments showed that the complex of CosD with 16-mer double-stranded DNA was at least as stable as a complex of daunorubicin with the same DNA sequence. This is the first study showing DNA binding properties of an anthracycline containing a β-rhodomycinone aglycone chromophore O-linked to two trisaccharide chains.

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Furlan, R. L. A., Watt, S. J., Garrido, L. M., Amarante-Mendes, G. P., Nur-E-Alam, M., Rohr, J., … Padilla, G. (2004). DNA-binding properties of cosmomycin D, an anthracycline with two trisaccharide chains. Journal of Antibiotics, 57(10), 647–654. https://doi.org/10.7164/antibiotics.57.647

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