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Sequence-specific DNA binding of short peptide dimers derived from a plant basic leucine zipper protein EmBP1 was studied. A homodimer of the EmBP1 basic region peptide recognized a palindromic DNA sequence, and a heterodimer of EmBP1 and GCN4 basic region peptides targets a non-palindromic DNA sequence when a beta-cyclodextrin/adamantane complex is utilized as a dimerization domain. A homodimer of the EmBP1 basic region peptide binds the native EmBP1 binding 5'-GCCACGTGGC-3' and the native GCN4 binding 5'-ATGACGTCAT-3' sequences with almost equal affinity in the alpha-helical conformation, indicating that the basic region of EmBP1 by itself has a dual recognition codes for the DNA sequences. The GCN4 basic region peptide binds 5'-ATGAC-3' in the alpha-helical conformation, but it neither shows affinity nor helix formation with 5'-GCCAC-3'. Because native EmBP1 forms 100 times more stable complex with 5'-GCCACGTGGC-3' over 5'-ATGACGTCAT-3', our results suggest that the sequence-selectivity of native EmBP1 is dictated by the structure of leucine zipper dimerization domain including the hinge region spanning between the basic region and the leucine zipper.  相似文献   

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Basic region leucine zipper (bZip) proteins contain a bipartite DNA-binding motif consisting of a coiled-coil leucine zipper dimerization domain and a highly charged basic region that directly contacts DNA. The basic region is largely unfolded in the absence of DNA, but adopts a helical conformation upon DNA binding. Although a coil --> helix transition is entropically unfavorable, this conformational change positions the DNA-binding residues appropriately for sequence-specific interactions with DNA. The N-terminal residues of the GCN4 DNA-binding domain, DPAAL, make no DNA contacts and are not part of the conserved basic region, but are nonetheless important for DNA binding. Asp and Pro are often found at the N-termini of alpha-helices, and such N-capping motifs can stabilize alpha-helical structure. In the present study, we investigate whether these two residues serve to stabilize a helical conformation in the GCN4 basic region, lowering the energetic cost for DNA binding. Our results suggest that the presence of these residues contributes significantly to helical structure and to the DNA-binding ability of the basic region in the absence of the leucine zipper. Similar helix-capping motifs are found in approximately half of all bZip domains, and the implications of these findings for in vivo protein function are discussed.  相似文献   

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C/EBP and GCN4 are basic region-leucine zipper (bZIP) DNA-binding proteins that recognize the dyad-symmetric sequences ATTGCGCAAT and ATGAGTCAT, respectively. The sequence specificities of these and other bZIP proteins are determined by their alpha-helical basic regions, which are related at the primary sequence level. To identify amino acids that are responsible for the different DNA sequence specificities of C/EBP and GCN4, two kinds of hybrid proteins were constructed: GCN4-C/EBP chimeras fused at various positions in the basic region and substitution mutants in which GCN4 basic region amino acids were replaced by the corresponding residues from C/EBP. On the basis of the DNA-binding characteristics of these hybrid proteins, three residues that contribute significantly to the differences in C/EBP and GCN4 binding specificity were defined. These residues are clustered along one face of the basic region alpha helix. Two of these specificity residues were not identified as DNA-contacting amino acids in a recently reported crystal structure of a GCN4-DNA complex, suggesting that the residues used by C/EBP and GCN4 to make base contacts are not identical. A random binding site selection procedure also was used to define the optimal recognition sequences for three of the GCN4-C/EBP fusion proteins. These experiments identify an element spanning the hinge region between the basic region and leucine zipper domains that dictates optimal half-site spacing (either directly abutted for C/EBP or overlapping by one base pair for GCN4) in high-affinity binding sites for these two proteins.  相似文献   

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DNA binding by a 29-residue, monomeric, GCN4 basic region peptide, GCN4br, as well as by peptide br-C, a monomeric basic-region analogue that is helix stabilized at its C-terminal end by a Lys25. Asp29 side-chain lactam-bridged alanine-rich sequence, was studied at 25 C in an aqueous buffer containing 100 mm NaCl. Mixing of both peptides with duplex DNA containing the cAMP-responsive element (CRE) was accompanied by significant helix stabilization in the peptides, whereas mixing of the peptides with duplex DNA containing a scrambled CRE site was not. Peptide NBD-br-C was synthesized as a fluorescent probe to evaluate these peptide-DNA interactions further. Quantitative analysis of the fluorescence quenching of peptide NBD-br-C by CRE half-site DNA indicated the formation of a 1:1 complex with a dissociation constant of 1.41 +/- 0.22 microm. Competitive displacement fluorescence assays of CRE half-site binding gave dissociation constants of 0.65 +/- 0.09 microm for peptide br-C and 3.9 +/- 0.5 microM for GCN4br, which corresponds to a free energy difference of 1.1 kcal/mol that is attributed to the helix stabilization achieved in peptide br-C. This result indicates that helix initiation by the alpha-helical leucine zipper dimerization motif in native bzip proteins, such as GCN4, contributes significantly to the affinity of basic region peptides for their recognition sites on DNA. Our fluorescence assay should also prove useful for determining dissociation constants for CRE binding by other GCN4 basic region analogues under equilibrium conditions and physiological salt concentrations.  相似文献   

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DNA-induced increase in the alpha-helical content of C/EBP and GCN4   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Leucine zipper proteins comprise a recently identified class of DNA binding proteins that contain a bipartite structural motif consisting of a "leucine zipper" dimerization domain and a segment rich in basic residues responsible for DNA interaction. Protein fragments encompassing the zipper plus basic region domains (bZip) have previously been used to determine the conformational and dynamic properties of this motif. In the absence of DNA, the coiled-coil portion is alpha-helical and dimeric, whereas the basic region is flexible and partially disordered. Addition of DNA containing a specific recognition sequence induces a fully helical conformation in the basic regions of these fragments. However, the question remained whether the same conformational change would be observed in native bZip proteins where the basic regions might be stabilized in an alpha-helical conformation even in the absence of DNA, through interactions with portions of the protein not included in the bZip motif. We have now examined the DNA-induced conformational transition for an intact bZip protein, GCN4, and for the bZip fragment of C/EBP with two enhancers that are differentially symmetric. Our results are consistent with the induced helical fork model wherein the basic regions are largely flexible in the absence of DNA and become fully helical in the presence of the specific DNA recognition sequence.  相似文献   

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The article describes the use of a PNA duplex (PNA zipper) as a tool to dimerize or bring in close proximity two polypeptides or protein domains. The amino acid sequence to be dimerized is covalently bound to complementary PNA sequences. Annealing of the PNA strands results in dimer formation. To test the ability of the “PNA‐zipper” as a dimerization tool, we designed a GCN4 mimetic, where the leucine‐zipper dimerization domain was replaced by the PNA zipper, whereas the basic DNA‐binding domain was covalently attached to the PNA. The molecule was assembled by chemical ligation of the peptide corresponding to the DNA‐binding domain of GCN4 modified with a succinyl thioester with two complementary PNAs harboring a cysteine residue. Electromobility‐shift experiments show the ability of the PNA zipper‐GCN4 to bind selected DNA duplexes. The PNA zipper‐GCN4 binds both the TRE and CRE DNA sites, but it does not bind TRE and CRE mutants containing even a single base mutation, as the native GCN4. The ability to fold upon complexation with DNA was investigated by CD. A good correlation between the ability of the PNA zipper‐GCN4 to fold into α helices and the ability to bind DNA was found. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 93: 434–441, 2010. This article was originally published online as an accepted preprint. The “Published Online” date corresponds to the preprint version. You can request a copy of the preprint by emailing the Biopolymers editorial office at biopolymers@wiley.com  相似文献   

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