%N 30 %J Angewandte Chemie International Edition %A W-H Tseng %A C-K Chang %A P-C Wu %A N-J Hu %A G-H Lee %A C-C Tzeng %A S Neidle %A M-H Hou %V 56 %K DNA deformation, induced-fit recognition, neurological disease, trinucleotide repeats, X-ray crystallography %X Smallâ€molecule compounds targeting trinucleotide repeats in DNA have considerable potential as therapeutic or diagnostic agents against many neurological diseases. Ni^{II}(Chro)_{2} (Chro=chromomycin A3) binds specifically to the minor groove of (CCG)_{n} repeats in duplex DNA, with unique fluorescence features that may serve as a probe for disease detection. Crystallographic studies revealed that the specificity originates from the largeâ€scale spatial rearrangement of the DNA structure, including extrusion of consecutive bases and backbone distortions, with a sharp bending of the duplex accompanied by conformational changes in the Ni^{II} chelate itself. The DNA deformation of CCG repeats upon binding forms a GGCC tetranucleotide tract, which is recognized by Ni^{II}(Chro)_{2}. The extruded cytosine and last guanine nucleotides form waterâ€mediated hydrogen bonds, which aid in ligand recognition. The recognition can be accounted for by the classic inducedâ€fit paradigm. %T Induced-Fit Recognition of CCG Trinucleotide Repeats by a Nickel-Chromomycin Complex Resulting in Large-Scale DNA Deformation %O This version is the author accepted manuscript. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher's terms and conditions. %P 8761-8765 %D 2017 %L discovery10096361 %I WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH