ABSTRACT

Volume 25, entitled Modern Avenues in Metal-Nucleic Acid Chemistry, of the series Metal Ions in Life Sciences (MILS), provides a timely overview of selected relevant developments in a field which previously had a pronounced focus on fundamental chemistry aspects such as coordination principles, structural chemistry, and consequences for biological processes and disease-related medicinal issues. More recently, also as a consequence of the advent of supramolecular chemistry, advancements in nanochemistry, and new bio-analytical methods, novel aspects of this field have emerged. MILS-25 gives a state-of-the-art account on the present state of research in this field, addressing, among others, porous materials, non-covalent interactions, stimuli-responsive bioconjugates, DNA-templated metal arrays and nanoclusters, genotyping, guanine quadruplexes, and riboswitches. It consists of 15 comprehensive chapters with over 1600 citations, 160 figures (90 of them in color), with key contributions from 40 international experts from Europe, Asia, and America. It is an essential resource for scientists from numerous disciplines, ranging from materials science to biochemistry, by way of classical chemistry and physics.

  • It offers an update on nucleic acid – metal complex bioconjugates and their applications
  • It provides an insight into coordination polymers involving nucleic acid components
  • It covers a wide range of nucleic acids, from DNA duplexes, triplexes and quadruplexes to RNA

chapter 3|28 pages

Coordination Polymers with Nucleobase Derivatives

From Electronic Nanodevices to Sensors

chapter 4|26 pages

Heavy Coinage Metal Nucleobase, Nucleoside and (Oligo)Nucleotide Systems

Recent Developments in Self-Assembly, Opto-Electronics and DNA Integration

chapter 9|17 pages

Metals in Genotyping

From SNPs to Sequencing

chapter 13|30 pages

G-Quadruplex Nucleic Acids and the Role of Metal Ions

Insights from Quantum Chemical Bonding Analyses

chapter 15|36 pages

Metabolite Regulation by Riboswitches

The Role of Metal Ions in Folding, Ligand Binding and Functionality