The anticancer platinum compound cis-Pt(NH3)(2)Cl-2 (cisplatin) forms covalent cross-linked adducts with DNA, with the intrastrand didentate adduct between two adjacent guanines being the major product. The platinum atom is coordinated at the N7 positions of adjacent guanines. The duplex consisting of d(CCTG*G*TCC) and its complement d(GGACCAGG), where G*G* stands for the cisplatin cross-linked lesion site, has been analyzed by 1D- and 2D-NMR spectroscopy and its structure solved by the NOE-restrained refinement procedure with the aim to understand the structural distortion associated with the lesion. The refined duplex is unwound (similar to -21 degrees) and kinked (similar to 58 degrees) toward the major groove at the G*G* site, and the minor groove is significantly widened. The deoxyriboses of the G(4)* and G(5)* nucleotides are of the N-type (C3'-endo) and S-type (C2'-endo) conformations, respectively. The two guanine bases adopt the R-configuration (the alpha/beta angles being 112 degrees/290 degrees, respectively), such that the G(5)*H8 proton (upfield at 8.19 ppm) senses the ring current shielding effect of the G(4)* base (G(4)*H8 at 8.76 ppm). The G(4)*. C-13 base pair is perturbed significantly, consistent with the lack of detection of its imino proton. The intrastrand Pt-G*pG* cross-link is metastable in the present DNA duplex. The molecule is slowly converted into a more stable interstrand didentate adduct (between G(4) and G(9)) promoted by the presence of the nucleophilic chloride ion. The reason why the Pt-N7(3'-G*) bond can be ruptured and a new Pt-N7 bond formed may be due to the fact that the more flexible 5'-G*. C base pair at the didentate lesion site is able to absorb the strain better, but the more rigid 3'-G*. C base pair cannot and results in substitution. The biological implications of this structural isomerization are discussed.