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1.
The histone-like protein integration host factor (IHF) of Escherichia coli binds to specific binding sites on the chromosome or on mobile genetic elements, and is involved in many cellular processes. We have analyzed the interaction of IHF with five different binding sites in vitro and in vivo using UV laser footprinting, a technique that probes the immediate environment and conformation of a segment of DNA. Using this generally applicable technique we can directly compare the binding modes and interaction strengths of a DNA binding protein in its physiological environment within the cell to measurements performed in vitro. We conclude that the interactions between IHF and its specific binding sites are identical in vitro and in vivo. The footprinting signal is consistent with the model of IHF-binding to DNA proposed by Yang and Nash (1989). The occupancy of binding sites varies with the concentration of IHF in the cell and allows to estimate the concentration of free IHF protein in the cell.  相似文献   

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The phage lambda attachment site, attP, contains three binding sites for an Escherichia coli protein, IHF, that is needed for efficient integrative recombination. We have used synthetic oligodeoxyribonucleotides to direct multiple base changes at each of these three sites. Alteration by two base-pairs of the consensus sequence for the leftmost binding site specifically interferes with IHF binding to that site and modestly depresses recombination in vitro. For each of the three binding sites, alteration of the consensus sequence by four base-pairs strongly depresses recombination in vitro, indicating that all three sites are important for attP function. The mutated attP sites are also depressed for recombination in vivo but some of the mutants are less affected than they are in vitro. The disparity between effects in vivo and in vitro for some mutants but not others suggests that the three binding sites are not functionally equivalent and that at some sites additional E. coli factors may replace or assist IHF. The non-equivalence of the three IHF sites is also indicated by the behavior of prophage attachment sites carrying mutations in the binding sites.  相似文献   

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Bending of DNA is a prerequisite of site-specific recombination and gene expression in many regulatory systems involving the assembly of specific nucleoprotein complexes. We have investigated how the uniquely clustered Dam methylase sites, GATCs, in the origin of Escherichia coli replication ( oriC  ) and their methylation status modulate the geometry of oriC and its interaction with architectural proteins, such as integration host factor (IHF), factor for inversion stimulation (Fis) and DnaA initiator protein. We note that 3 of the 11 GATC sites at oriC are strategically positioned within the IHF protected region. Methylation of the GATCs enhances IHF binding and alters the IHF-induced bend at oriC . GATC motifs also contribute to intrinsic DNA curvature at oriC and the degree of bending is modulated by methylation. The IHF-induced bend at oriC is further modified by Fis protein and IHF affinity for its binding site may be impaired by protein(s) binding to GATCs within the IHF site. Thus, GATC sites at oriC affect the DNA conformation and GATCs, in conjunction with the protein-induced bends, are critical cis -acting elements in specifying proper juxtapositioning of initiation factors in the early steps of DNA replication.  相似文献   

7.
The manner in which integration host factor (IHF) regulates lambda site-specific recombination has been analyzed by examining the behavior of both wild-type and mutant DNAs in integrative and excisive recombination as well as in protein binding. While integrative recombination of an attP with two base changes in the H1 site required 8-fold more IHF than did wild type, binding to this site was lowered at least 500-fold, suggestive of cooperative interactions. A mutant attP with nine base changes did not integrate at all in vitro, with the defect being less severe in vivo. IHF inhibition of excisive recombination was relieved by both mutations in vitro and in vivo. These results imply that occupancy of the H1 site is critical for determining the direction of recombination. It is proposed that IHF inhibition of excision provides a monitor of the strength of the induction stimulus and the nutritional state of the cell; this would allow the prophage to excise selectively in conditions which favor successful completion of the lytic cycle.  相似文献   

8.
Integration host factor (IHF) is a bacterial protein that binds and severely bends a specific DNA target. IHF binding sites are approximately 30 to 35 bp long and are apparently divided into two domains. While the 3' domain is conserved, the 5' domain is degenerate but is typically AT rich. As a result of physical constraints that IHF must impose on DNA in order to bind, it is believed that this 5' domain must possess structural characteristics conducive for both binding and bending with little regard for specific contacts between the protein and the DNA. We have examined the sequence requirements of the 5' binding domain of the IHF binding target. Using a SELEX procedure, we randomized and selected variants of a natural IHF site. We then analyzed these variants to determine how the 5' binding domain affects the structure, affinity, and function of an IHF-DNA complex in a native system. Despite finding individual sequences that varied over 100-fold in affinity for IHF, we found no apparent correlation between affinity and function.  相似文献   

9.
gamma delta, a prokaryotic transposon, encodes a transposase that is essential for its transposition. We show here, by DNase I protection experiments, that purified gamma delta transposase binds at the transposon's inverted repeats (IRs). Immediately adjacent to each transposase binding site (and within gamma delta DNA) we have identified a binding site for an additional protein factor, the Escherichia coli-encoded integration host factor (IHF). The binding of transposase and IHF to these adjacent sites is mutually cooperative. An IHF binding-site was also found in the original target DNA, just outside one of the ends of gamma delta. The affinity of IHF for this flanking site is reduced by transposase. These results demonstrate that gamma delta transposase binds at the IRs of gamma delta, and suggest that IHF may be involved in forming a transposase-DNA complex and/or influencing the target site selection during the transposition of gamma delta.  相似文献   

10.
The P1 ParB protein is required for active partition and thus stable inheritance of the plasmid prophage. ParB and the Escherichia coli protein integration host factor (IHF) participate in the assembly of a partition complex at the centromere-like site parS. In this report the role of IHF in the formation of the partition complex has been explored. First, ParB protein was purified for these studies, which revealed that ParB forms a dimer in solution. Next, the IHF binding site was mapped to a 29-base pair region within parS, including the sequence TAACTGACTGTTT (which differs from the IHF consensus in two positions). IHF induced a strong bend in the DNA at its binding site. Versions of parS which have lost or damaged the IHF binding site bound ParB with greatly reduced affinity in vitro and in vivo. Measurements of binding constants showed that IHF increased ParB affinity for the wild-type parS site by about 10,000-fold. Finally, DNA supercoiling improved ParB binding in the presence of IHF but not in its absence. These observations led to the proposal that IHF and superhelicity assist ParB by promoting its precise positioning at parS, a spatial arrangement that results in a high affinity of ParB for parS.  相似文献   

11.
Teter B  Goodman SD  Galas DJ 《Plasmid》2000,43(1):73-84
The binding of many proteins to DNA is profoundly affected by DNA bending, twisting, and supercoiling. When protein binding alters DNA conformation, interaction between inherent and induced DNA conformation can affect protein binding affinity and specificity. Integration host factor (IHF), a sequence-specific, DNA-binding protein of Escherichia coli, strongly bends the DNA upon binding. To assess the influence of inherent DNA bending on IHF binding, we took advantage of the high degree of natural static curvature associated with an IHF site on a 163-bp minicircle and measured the binding affinity of IHF for its recognition site contained on this DNA in both circular and linear form. IHF showed a higher affinity for the circular form of the DNA when compared to the linear form. In addition, the presence of IHF during DNA cyclization changed the topology of cyclization products and their ability to bind IHF, consistent with IHF untwisting DNA. These results show that inherent DNA conformation anisotropy is an important determinant of IHF binding affinity and suggests a mechanism for modulation of IHF activity by local DNA conformation.  相似文献   

12.
The origin of transfer (oriT) of the IncFV plasmid pED208 contains a region with three binding sites for both the plasmid-encoded TraM protein and the integration host factor (IHF) of Escherichia coli, a sequence-specific DNA-binding protein. One region, containing overlapping TraM and IHF binding sites, could be interpreted as containing two binding sites for each protein. Using gel retardation assays, an affinity constant for IHF binding to the three main sites was estimated in the presence and absence of 0.1 M potassium glutamate, which increased the avidity of IHF binding to the weaker sites by two orders of magnitude. DNase I protection analyses and electron microscopy were used to determine the affinity of IHF for oriT-containing DNA in the presence and absence of TraM. The binding of IHF and TraM was found to be non-cooperative by the two techniques employed. Electron microscopy also demonstrated that IHF bent the oriT region in a manner consistent with its previously determined mode of action, while TraM had no discernible effect on the appearance of the DNA. This suggested that IHF and TraM interact with a 295 by sequence in the oriT region and organize it into a higher order structure that may have a role in the initiation of DNA transfer and control of traM expression.  相似文献   

13.
Integration host factor (IHF) is a bacterial histone-like protein whose primary biological role is to condense the bacterial nucleoid and to constrain DNA supercoils. It does so by binding in a sequence-independent manner throughout the genome. However, unlike other structurally related bacterial histone-like proteins, IHF has evolved a sequence-dependent, high affinity DNA-binding motif. The high affinity binding sites are important for the regulation of a wide range of cellular processes. A remarkable feature of IHF is that it employs an indirect readout mechanism to bind and wrap DNA at both the nonspecific and high affinity (sequence-dependent) DNA sites. In this study we assessed the contributions of pre-formed and protein-induced DNA conformations to the energetics of IHF binding. Binding energies determined experimentally were compared with energies predicted for the IHF-induced deformation of the DNA helix (DNA deformation energy) in the IHF-DNA complex. Combinatorial sets of de novo DNA sequences were designed to systematically evaluate the influence of sequence-dependent structural characteristics of the conserved IHF recognition elements of the consensus DNA sequence. We show that IHF recognizes pre-formed conformational characteristics of the consensus DNA sequence at high affinity sites, whereas at all other sites relative affinity is determined by the deformational energy required for nearest-neighbor base pairs to adopt the DNA structure of the bound DNA-IHF complex.  相似文献   

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We have analysed the complete sequence of the Escherichia coli K12 isolate MG1655 genome for chromatin-associated protein binding sites, and compared the predicted location of predicted sites with experimental expression data from 'DNA chip' experiments. Of the dozen proteins associated with chromatin in E. coli, only three have been shown to have significant binding preferences: integration host factor (IHF) has the strongest binding site preference, and FIS sites show a weak consensus, and there is no clear consensus site for binding of the H-NS protein. Using hidden Markov models (HMMs), we predict the location of 608 IHF sites, scattered throughout the genome. A subset of the IHF sites associated with repeats tends to be clustered around the origin of replication. We estimate there could be roughly 6000 FIS sites in E. coli, and the sites tend to be localised in two regions flanking the replication termini. We also show that the regions upstream of genes regulated by H-NS are more curved and have a higher AT content than regions upstream of other genes. These regions in general would also be localised near the replication terminus.  相似文献   

16.
P Prentki  M Chandler    D J Galas 《The EMBO journal》1987,6(8):2479-2487
The integration host factor of Escherichia coli (IHF) is a small, histone-like protein which participates in the integration of bacteriophage lambda into the E. coli chromosome and in a number of regulatory processes. Our recent footprinting analysis has shown that IHF binds specifically to the ends of the transposable element IS1, as well as to several sites within a short segment of the plasmid pBR322. We have extended our studies of the binding of the IHF molecule to these sites in vitro using a gel retardation assay. We report here that IHF bends the DNA upon binding, as judged from the strong cyclic dependence of the protein-induced mobility shift on the position of the binding site. Using cloned, synthetic ends of IS1 as substrates, we have found that some mutations within the conserved bases of the IHF consensus binding sequence abolish binding, and that alterations of the flanking sequences can greatly reduce IHF binding. The presence of multiple IHF sites on a single DNA fragment increases binding very little, indicating that IHF does not bind cooperatively in this complex. We discuss the possibility that DNA bending is related to the role IHF plays in forming and stabilizing nucleoprotein complexes, and suggest that bending at the IHF sites may be important to its diverse effects in the cell.  相似文献   

17.
The site-specific DNA inversion that controls phase variation of type 1 fimbriation in E. coli is catalysed by two recombinases, FimB and FimE. Efficient inversion by either recombinase also requires the leucine-responsive regulatory protein (Lrp). In addition, FimB recombination is stimulated by the integration host factor (IHF). The effect of IHF on FimE inversion has not previously been reported. Here it is shown that IHF stimulates FimE recombination; in strain MG1655, mutants containing lesions in either the α ( ihfA ) or β ( ihfB ) subunits of IHF show a marked decrease in both FimB- (100-fold) and FimE (15 000-fold)-promoted switching. IHF is shown to bind with high affinity to sites both adjacent to (site I) and within (site II) the fim invertible element. Furthermore, mutations in site I or site II that lower the affinity of IHF binding in vitro were found to lower the frequency of FimE and/or FimB recombination in vivo . Although site I and site II mutations in combination have an effect on FimB-promoted switching comparable to that of IHF knockout mutations (100-fold), the cis site mutations have a much less marked effect (100-fold) on FimE-promoted switching.  相似文献   

18.
We have measured the intracellular abundance of integration host factor (IHF), a site-specific, heterodimeric DNA-binding protein, in exponential- and stationary-phase cultures of Escherichia coli K-12. Western immunoblot analysis showed that cultures that had been growing exponentially for several generations contained 0.5 to 1.0 ng of IHF subunits per microgram of total protein and that this increased to 5 to 6 ng/microgram in late-stationary-phase cultures. IHF is about one-third to one-half as abundant in exponentially growing cells as HU, a structurally related protein that binds DNA with little or no site specificity. Wild-type IHF is metabolically stable, but deletion mutations that eliminated one subunit reduced the abundance of the other when cells enter stationary phase. We attribute this reduction to the loss of stabilizing interactions between subunits. A mutation that inactivates IHF function but not subunit interaction increased IHF abundance, consistent with results of previous work showing that IHF synthesis is negatively autoregulated. We estimate that steady-state exponential-phase cultures contain about 8,500 to 17,000 IHF dimers per cell, a surprisingly large number for a site-specific DNA-binding protein with a limited number of specific sites. Nevertheless, small reductions in IHF abundance had significant effects on several IHF-dependent functions, suggesting that the wild-type exponential phase level is not in large excess of the minimum required for occupancy of physiologically important IHF-binding sites.  相似文献   

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A M Segall  S D Goodman    H A Nash 《The EMBO journal》1994,13(19):4536-4548
Integration host factor (IHF) is required in lambda site-specific recombination to deform the DNA substrates into conformations active for recombination. HU, a homolog of IHF, can also deform DNA but binds without any apparent sequence specificity. We demonstrate that HU can replace IHF by cooperating with the recombinase protein, integrase, to generate a stable and specific complex with electrophoretic mobility and biochemical activity very close to the complex formed by IHF and integrase. The eukaryotic HMG1 and HMG2 proteins differ entirely in structure from HU but they also bind DNA non-specifically and induce or stabilize deformed DNA. We show that the eukaryotic HMG1 and HMG2 proteins cooperate with integrase at least as well as does HU to make a defined structure. We also find that the eukaryotic core histone dimer H2A-H2B can replace IHF, suggesting that the histone dimer is functional outside the context of a nucleosome. HU and the HMG proteins not only contribute to the formation of stable complexes, but they can at least partially replace IHF for the integrative and excisive recombination reactions. These results, together with our analysis of nucleoprotein complexes made with damaged recombination sites, lead us to conclude that the cooperation between HU and integrase does not depend on protein-protein contacts. Rather, cooperation is manifested through building of higher order structures and depends on the capacity of the non-specific DNA binding proteins to bend DNA. While all these non-specific binding proteins appear to fulfil the same bending function, they do so with different efficiencies. This probably reflects subtle structural differences between the assembled complexes.  相似文献   

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