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1.
The RepA protein from bacteriophage P1 binds DNA to initiate replication. RepA covers one face of the DNA and the binding site has a completely conserved T that directly faces RepA from the minor groove at position +7. Although all four bases can be distinguished through contacts in the major groove of B-form DNA, contacts in the minor groove cannot easily distinguish between A and T bases. Therefore the 100% conservation at this position cannot be accounted for by direct contacts approaching into the minor groove of B-form DNA. RepA binding sites with modified base pairs at position +7 were used to investigate contacts with RepA. The data show that RepA contacts the N3 proton of T at position +7 and that the T=A hydrogen bonds are already broken in the DNA before RepA binds. To accommodate the N3 proton contact the T+7 /A+7 base pair must be distorted. One possibility is that T+7 is flipped out of the helix. The energetics of the contact allows RepA to distinguish between all four bases, accounting for the observed high sequence conservation. After protein binding, base pair distortion or base flipping could initiate DNA melting as the second step in DNA replication.  相似文献   

2.
The basic replicon of plasmid pCU1 contains three different replication origins. Replication initiated from the oriB origin requires pCU1-encoded protein RepA. Previously, information analysis of 19 natural RepA binding sequences predicted a 20-bp sequence as a RepA binding site. Guanines contacting RepA in the major groove of DNA have also been determined. In this study, we used the missing-nucleoside method to determine all of the bases relevant to RepA binding. The importance of some thymine bases was also confirmed by a missing-thymine site interference assay. Participation of the 5-methyl groups of two thymines (at positions -6 and 7) in RepA binding was pointed out by a missing-thymine methyl site interference assay. Phosphate groups of the DNA backbone which strongly interfered with RepA binding upon ethylation were also identified. The pattern of contacting positions mapped by hydroxyl radical protection footprinting indicates that RepA binds to one face of B-form DNA. The length of the binding site was found to be 20 bp by dissociation rate measurement of complexes formed between RepA and a variety of binding sequences. The symmetry of the binding site and that of the contacting bases, particularly the reacting 5-methyl groups of two thymines, suggest that pCU1-encoded RepA may contact its site as a homodimer.  相似文献   

3.
The gal operon is regulated by binding of Gal repressor to two operator loci, OE and OI, which are separated by 114 base pairs (bp). We have probed the actual operator DNA segments with and without Gal repressor occupation by characterizing the regions protected by repressor from DNase I digestion and dimethyl sulfate methylation. The segments which are protected from DNase I digestion in both OE and OI are about 22 bp long and seem to include 2-3 extra bp on either side of a 16-bp similar sequence containing an approximate dyad symmetry, with a consensus half-symmetry sequence GTG(G/T)AA-C. Repressor occupation hinders the reactivity of the consensus guanines in the four half-symmetry sequences, as shown by retardation of methylation at the N-7 positions by dimethyl sulfate owing to repressor binding. The protected guanines are symmetrically located. Since a dimeric Gal repressor affects symmetrically located bases, it is consistent with the notion that each half-operator is occupied by a repressor subunit. Because the N-7 positions of methylation of guanines lie in the major grooves and the protected guanines are located at positions 1, 3, 8 and the rotational 1', 3', and 8' in the 16-bp dyad symmetry, we suggest that Gal repressor establishes direct contacts with bases at 1, 3, 1', and 3' through two major grooves lying on one face of an operator helix and prevents reactivity of the guanines at 8 and 8' of a third major groove on the opposite face by changing the DNA helical structure at this position. Contacts at other positions are also discussed.  相似文献   

4.
We have investigated the interaction between phage Mu transposase (A protein) and the ends (att sites) of Mu by chemical and nuclease protection and interference studies. These studies define a 24-base pair contact region at five of the six att sites (L1, L3 at att L and R1, R2, R3 at att R). Hydroxyl radical footprints show that the transposase binds to one face of the DNA helix and covers two consecutive major grooves. Binding specificity is achieved primarily through the major groove. Strong contacts are found with 3 guanines which are conserved at five of the sites. Two of these guanines are missing in the weakest binding site (L2) where 13 base pairs are mainly contacted. A pair of DNAase I hypersensitive sites, one on each strand, appear at the back of only one of the two contacted major grooves at most sites except at L2, and can be correlated with the degree of A protein-induced bend (Kuo, C.-F., Zou, A., Jayaram, M., Getzoff, E. D., and Harshey, R. M. (1991) EMBO J. 10, 1585-1591) at these sites. No contacts are observed for 4-5 base pairs in the vicinity of L1 and R1, where the A protein nicks DNA during transposition.  相似文献   

5.
The mutagenic and carcinogenic chemical aflatoxin B1 (AFB1) reacts almost exclusively at the N(7)-position of guanine following activation to its reactive form, the 8,9-epoxide (AFB1 oxide). In general N(7)-guanine adducts yield DNA strand breaks when heated in base, a property that serves as the basis for the Maxam-Gilbert DNA sequencing reaction specific for guanine. Using DNA sequencing methods, other workers have shown that AFB1 oxide gives strand breaks at positions of guanines; however, the guanine bands varied in intensity. This phenomenon has been used to infer that AFB1 oxide prefers to react with guanines in some sequence contexts more than in others and has been referred to as "sequence specificity of binding". Herein, data on the reaction of AFB1 oxide with several synthetic DNA polymers with different sequences are presented, and (following hydrolysis) adduct levels are determined by high-pressure liquid chromatography. These results reveal that for AFB1 oxide (1) the N(7)-guanine adduct is the major adduct found in all of the DNA polymers, (2) adduct levels vary in different sequences, and, thus, sequence specificity is also observed by this more direct method, and (3) the intensity of bands in DNA sequencing gels is likely to reflect adduct levels formed at the N(7)-position of guanine. Knowing this, a reinvestigation of the reactivity of guanines in different DNA sequences using DNA sequencing methods was undertaken. The reactivities of 190 guanines were determined quantitatively and considered in a pentanucleotide context, 5'-WXGYZ-3', where the central, underlined G represents the reactive guanine and W, X, Y, and Z can be any of the nucleotide bases. Methods are developed to determine that the X (5'-side) base and the Y (3'-side) base are most influential in determining guanine reactivity. The influence of the bases in the 5'-position (X) is 5'-G (1.0) greater than C (0.8) greater than A (0.3) greater than T (0.2), while the influence of the bases in the 3'-position (Y) is 3'-G (1.0) greater than T (0.8) greater than C (0.4) greater than A (0.3). These rules in conjunction with molecular modeling studies (to be published elsewhere) were used to assess the binding sites that might be utilized by AFB1 oxide in its reaction with DNA.  相似文献   

6.
7.
In Escherichia coli K-12, the repression of tyrP requires the binding of the TyrR protein to the operator in the presence of coeffectors, tyrosine and ATP. This operator contains two 22-bp palindromic sequences which are termed TyrR boxes. Methylation, uracil, and ethylation interference experiments were used to identify the important sites in the TyrR boxes that make contacts with the TyrR protein. Methylation interference studies demonstrated that guanines at positions +8, -5, and -8 of the strong TyrR box and positions +8, -4, and -8 of the weak box are close to the TyrR protein. Uracil interference revealed that strong van der Waals contacts are made by the thymines at position -7 and +5 of the top strands of both strong and weak boxes and that weaker contacts are made by the thymines at positions +7 (strong box) and -5 and +7 (weak box) of the bottom strand. In addition, ethylation interference suggested that the phosphate backbone contacts are located at the end and central regions of the palindrome. These findings are supported by our results derived from studies of symmetrical mutations of the tyrP strong box. Overall, the results confirm the critical importance of the invariant (G x C)(C x G)8 base pairs for TyrR recognition and also indicate that interactions with (T x A)(A x T)7 are of major importance. In contrast, mutations in other positions result in weaker effects on the binding affinity of TyrR protein, indicating that these positions play a lesser role in TyrR protein recognition. Alanine scanning of both helices of the putative helix-turn-helix DNA-binding motif of TyrR protein has identified those amino acids whose side chains play an essential role in protein structure and DNA binding.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Single amino acid substitutions have been introduced throughout the N-terminal DNA binding region of the Mnt repressor, and the operator binding properties of the resulting mutant repressors have been assayed. These studies show that the side chains of Arg2, His6, Asn8, and Arg10 are critical for high affinity binding to operator DNA. Other side chains in the N-terminal region do not appear to play major roles in DNA recognition and binding. Specific alterations in the pattern of methylation protection afforded by the Arg2----Lys mutant protein suggest that Arg2 contacts the N7 groups of guanines 10 and 12 in the operator. In conjunction with previous results, these findings suggest that part of the N-terminal region of Mnt binds as an extended polypeptide strand within the major groove of the mnt operator.  相似文献   

10.
S Jain  G Zon  M Sundaralingam 《Biochemistry》1989,28(6):2360-2364
The crystal structure of a complex of spermine with the DNA octamer d(GTGTACAC) has been determined at 2.0-A resolution. The alternating sequence adopts an A-DNA conformation with a novel purine-purine extra-Watson-Crick hydrogen bond involving the central guanine G3 (G11) and adenine A13 (A5) in the deep groove. The oligocation spermine binds in the floor of the deep groove by interacting with the bases and assumes an S-shape. Its dyad is coincident with that of the DNA, reminiscent of repressor binding to B-DNA. The terminal and central ammonium groups of the top half of spermine form hydrogen-bonding interactions to the 5'-bases, GTG, of one strand; then the spermine winds across the groove to interact with the corresponding set of bases on the other strand. The methylene groups of spermine form a hydrophobic cluster with the methyl groups of the thymines and the O6 atoms of the guanines of the TGT sequences on either side of the dyad. The observed mode of binding of spermine to A-DNA can serve as a model for deep groove binding in RNA and DNA-RNA hybrids that show a propensity also for the A-conformation. It will be of interest to see if base binding of spermine to DNA is involved in the regulation of gene expression, since spermine and other oligocations are ubiquitous in cells and their concentration is coupled to stages in cell cycle.  相似文献   

11.
We have investigated interaction of Mycobacterium smegmatis topoisomerase I at its specific recognition sequence. DNase I footprinting demonstrates a large region of protection on both the scissile and non-scissile strands of DNA. Methylation protection and interference analyses reveal base-specific contacts within the recognition sequence. Missing contact analyses reveal additional interactions with the residues in both single and double-stranded DNA, and hence underline the role for the functional groups associated with those bases. These interactions are supplemented by phosphate contacts in the scissile strand. Conformation specific probes reveal protein-induced structural distortion of the DNA helix at the T-A-T-A sequence 11 bp upstream to the recognition sequence. Based on these footprinting analyses that define parameters of topoisomerase I-DNA interactions, a model of topoisomerase I binding to its substrate is presented. Within the large protected region of 30 bp, the enzyme makes direct contact at two locations in the scissile strand, one around the cleavage site and the other 8-12 bases upstream. Thus the enzyme makes asymmetric recognition of DNA and could carry out DNA relaxation by either of the two proposed mechanisms: enzyme bridged and restricted rotation.  相似文献   

12.
Antitumor drugs, such as anthracyclines, interfere with mammalian DNA topoisomerase II by forming a ternary complex, DNA-drug-enzyme, in which DNA strands are cleaved and covalently linked to the enzyme. In this work, a synthetic 36-bp DNA oligomer derived from SV40 and mutated variants were used to determine the effects of base mutations on DNA cleavage levels produced by murine topoisomerase II with and without idarubicin. Although site competition could affect cleavage levels, mutation effects were rather similar among several cleavage sites. The major sequence determinants of topoisomerase II DNA cleavage without drugs are up to five base pairs apart from the strand cut, suggesting that DNA protein contacts involving these bases are particularly critical for DNA site recognition. Cleavage sites with adenines at positions -1 were detected without idarubicin only under conditions favouring enzyme binding to DNA, showing that these sites are low affinity sites for topoisomerase II DNA cleavage and/or binding. Moreover, the results indicated that the sequence 5'-(A)TA/(A)-3' (the slash indicates the cleaved bond, parenthesis indicate conditioned preference) from -3 to +1 positions constitutes the complete base sequence preferred by anthracyclines. An important finding was that mutations that improve the fit to the above consensus on one strand can also increase cleavage on the opposite strand, suggesting that a drug molecule may effectively interact with one enzyme subunit only and trap the whole dimeric enzyme. These findings documented that DNA recognition by topoisomerase II may occur at one or the other strand, and not necessarily at both of them, and that the two subunits can act cooperatively to cleave a double helix.  相似文献   

13.
Residues 2, 6, 8 and 10 of Mnt repressor are the major determinants of operator DNA binding and recognition. Here, we investigate the interaction of wild-type Mnt and mutants bearing the Arg2----Lys, His6----Ala, Asn8----Ala and Arg10----Lys mutations with operator DNA modified by methylation or by symmetric base substitutions. The wild-type pattern of methylation interference is altered in specific ways for each of the mutant proteins. In addition, some of the mutant proteins show a 'loss of contact' phenotype with specific mutant operators. Taken together, these and previous results predict the following contacts between side chains in the Mnt tetramer and operator DNA: Arg2 recognizes the guanines at operator positions 10 and 12; His6 contacts the guanines at operator positions 5 and 17; Asn8 contacts operator positions 4, 7, 15 and 18; Arg10 contacts the guanines at operator positions 8 and 14. The proposed contacts can be accommodated in a structural model in which the anti-parallel beta-sheet motifs of Mnt dimers lie in the major grooves of each operator half-site, centered over pseudo-symmetry axes that are 5.5 bp from the central dyad axis of the operator.  相似文献   

14.
The EcoRV restriction endonuclease recognises palindromic GATATC sequences and cuts between the central T and dA bases in a reaction that has an absolute requirement for a divalent metal ion, physiologically Mg(2+). Use has been made of base analogues, which delete hydrogen bonds between the protein and DNA (or hydrophobic interactions in the case of the 5-CH(3) group of thymine), to evaluate the roles of the outer two base-pairs (GATATC) in DNA recognition. Selectivity arises at both the binding steps leading to the formation of the enzyme-DNA-metal ion ternary complex (assayed by measuring the dissociation constant in the presence of the non-reactive metal Ca(2+)) and the catalytic step (evaluated using single-turnover hydrolysis in the presence of Mg(2+)), with each protein-DNA contact contributing to recognition. With the A:T base-pair, binding was reduced by the amount expected for the simple loss of a single contact; much more severe effects were observed with the G:C base-pair, suggesting additional conformational perturbation. Most of the modified bases lowered the rate of hydrolysis; furthermore, the presence of an analogue in one strand of the duplex diminished cutting at the second, unmodified strand, indicative of communication between DNA binding and the active site. The essential metal ion Mg(2+) plays a key role in mediating interactions between the DNA binding site and active centre and in many instances rescue of hydrolysis was seen with Mn(2+). It is suggested that contacts between the GATATC site are required for tight binding and for the correct assembly of metal ions and bound water at the catalytic site, functions important in providing acid/base catalysis and transition state stabilisation.  相似文献   

15.
The Hin recombinase of Salmonella catalyzes a site-specific recombination event which leads to flagellar phase variation. Starting with a fully symmetrical recombination site, hixC, a set of 40 recombination sites which vary by pairs of single base substitutions was constructed. This set was incorporated into the Salmonella-specific bacteriophage P22 based challenge phage selection and used to define the DNA sequence determinants for the binding of Hin to DNA in vivo. The critical sequence-specific contacts between a Hin monomer and a 13 bp hix half-site are at two T:A base pairs in the major groove of the DNA which are separated by one base pair, and two consecutive A:T contacts in the minor groove. The base substitutions in the major groove recognition portion which were defective in binding Hin still retained residual binding capability in vivo, while the base pair substitutions affecting the minor groove recognition region lost all in vivo binding. Using in vitro binding assays, Hin was found to bind to hix symmetrical sites with A:T base pairs or I:C base pairs in the minor groove recognition sequences, but not to G:C base pairs. In separate in vitro binding assays, Hin was equally defective in binding to either a G:C or a I:C contact in a major groove recognition sequence. Results from in vitro binding assays to hix sites in which 3-deazaadenine was substituted for adenine are consistent with Hin making a specific contact to either the N3 of adenine or O2 of thymine in the minor groove within the hix recombination site on each symmetric half-site. These results taken with the results of previous studies on the DNA binding domain of Hin suggest a sequence-specific minor groove DNA binding motif.  相似文献   

16.
Nagaoka M  Shiraishi Y  Uno Y  Nomura W  Sugiura Y 《Biochemistry》2002,41(28):8819-8825
In the typical base recognition mode of the C(2)H(2)-type zinc finger, the amino acid residues at alpha-helical positions -1, 3, and 6 make a contact with the base in one strand (the primary strand), and the residue at position 2 interacts with the base in a complementary strand (the secondary strand). The N-terminal zinc finger of the three-zinc-finger domain of Sp1 has inherently a unique five-base-pair binding mode in which the guanine bases are recognized in both strands. To clarify the effect of the amino acid at position 2 on DNA binding affinity and base specificity, we have created a library of the mutants by the interconversion between serine and aspartic acid in the N-terminal zinc finger of Sp1 and recombinant variants of finger order. Gel mobility shift and methylation interference assays showed that the combination of arginine and serine at positions -1 and 2, respectively, provides a newly strong guanine contact in the secondary strand and a higher binding affinity than that of wild-type Sp1. Of special interest are the facts that the mutant with lysine and aspartic acid at positions -1 and 2 in the alpha helix predominantly recognizes the bases in the secondary strand and that its DNA binding affinity is higher than that of the wild-type. The aspartic acid or serine at position 2 independently contributes to the DNA binding affinity and base specificity. The present results provide useful information for the design of a novel zinc finger protein with priority for the bases in the secondary strand.  相似文献   

17.
We have found that DnaA dependent replication of R1 still occurred when 5 of the 9 bases in the dnaA box present in oriR were changed by site directed mutagenesis although the replication efficiency decreased to 20% and 70% of the wild-type origin in vitro and in vivo respectively. Additional mutation of a second dnaA box, 28 bp upstream oriR, that differs in only one base from the consensus sequence, did not affect the level of replication whereas polyclonal antibodies against DnaA totally abolished in vitro replication in the absence of the dnaA box. Wild-type RepA as well as a RepA mutant, RepA2623, that binds to oriR but that is inactive in promoting in vitro replication of plasmid R1, induce efficient binding of DnaA to the dnaA box. However, specific binding of DnaA to oriR was not detected by DNase I protection experiments in the absence of the dnaA box. These results suggest that the entrance of the DnaA protein in oriR is promoted initially by interactions with a RepA-oriR pre-initiation complex and that, in the absence of the dnaA box, these interactions can support, with reduced efficiency, DnaA dependent replication of plasmid R1.  相似文献   

18.
We have examined the DNA damage produced by reaction of peroxyl radicals with human fibroblast DNA. DNA damage consisted of both strand breaks and base modifications. The extent of strand breaks and base modifications induced as a function of peroxyl radical concentration was determined by quantitation of fragment size distributions using denaturing glyoxal-agarose gel electrophoresis. Both strand breaks and base modifications increased in a log linear fashion with respect to peroxyl radical concentration. Oxidative base modifications were observed to occur to a greater extent than strand breaks at every concentration measured. The sequence-specific distribution of peroxyl radical induced base damage was mapped for 803 nucleotide positions using the method of ligation mediated PCR. A total of 87% of all guanine positions in the examined sequences was found to be significantly oxidized. The order of reactivity of DNA bases toward oxidation by peroxyl radicals was found to be G > C > T. Adenine is essentially unreactive. The yield of oxidative base modifications at guanines and cytosines by peroxyl radicals depends on the exact specification of 5' and 3' flanking bases in a polarity dependent manner. Every guanine in the 5'XGC3' motif was found to be oxidized, where X is any 5' neighbor. In contrast, 5' and 3' purine flanks drastically reduced the extent of peroxyl radical G oxidation. The pattern of base modification and the influence of nearest neighbors differs substantially from that previously reported for hydrogen peroxide damage mediated by low valent transition metal ions for the identical DNA sequences.  相似文献   

19.
Chen FM  Sha F 《Biochemistry》2001,40(17):5218-5225
Despite the absence of the GpC sequence and complete self-complementarity, d(CGTCGTCG) has recently been shown to bind strongly to actinomycin D (ACTD) with a binding density of about one drug molecule per strand. To further elucidate the nature of such a binding, studies are herein made with single-base G --> A and C --> T replacements in d(CGTCGTCG) to identify the DNA bases that play important roles in the strong ACTD binding of this oligomer. On the basis of these results, the octamer d(TGTCATTG) has been identified as a potentially strong ACTD binder. Indeed, binding titration confirms such an expectation and reveals an ACTD binding constant of about 1 x 10(7) M(-1) and a binding density of roughly 0.8 drug molecule per DNA strand for this strong binding mode. Similar binding studies with single-base substitutions on d(TGTCATTG) further reveal the relative importance of the C and G bases on its ACTD binding, with the 3'-terminus G appearing to be the most crucial base. Further base substitutions lead to the conclusion that these C and G bases act in concert rather than individually in the ACTD binding of d(TGTCATTG). Spectral comparisons with the apparently single-stranded GpC-containing d(TGCTTTG) led to the proposal of a speculated monomeric hairpin binding model to account for the experimental observations. This model makes use of the notion that ACTD prefers to have the 3'-sides of both G bases stacking on the opposite faces of its planar phenoxazone chromophore, a principle akin to its classic preference for the GpC sequence in duplex form. The finding that ACTD can bind strongly to single-stranded DNA of special sequence motifs may have important implications.  相似文献   

20.
The NarI restriction enzyme recognition site, G1G2CG3CC, has been identified as a hotspot for -2 frameshift mutations induced by N-2-acetylaminofluorene (AAF) on the basis of a forward mutation assay in plasmid pBR322 in the bacterium Escherichia coli. AAF binds primarily to the C-8 position of guanine residues, and the three guanines of the NarI site are similarly reactive. Despite this similar chemical reactivity, only binding of AAF to the G3 residue causes the -2 frameshift mutations. To study the mechanisms underlying the specificity of the mutagenic processing further, we monitored the structural changes induced by a single AAF adduct within the NarI site by means of CD spectroscopy and thermal denaturation. The NarI sequence was studied as part of the 12-mer ACCGGCGCCACA. The purification and characterization of the three isomers having a single AAF adduct covalently bound to one of the three guanines of this 12 mer are described. The analysis of the melting profiles of the duplexes formed when these three isomers are annealed with the oligonucleotide of complementary sequence shows the same destabilizing effect of the AAF adduct on the three DNA helices. It is also shown, from the CD spectra, that modification of guanine G1 or G2 by AAF does not induce major changes in the helical structure of DNA. On the other hand, modification of guanine G3 induces a change in the CD signal that suggests the formation of a local left handed structure within the 12-mer duplex. These results show the polymorphic nature of the DNA structure in the vicinity of an AAF adduct.  相似文献   

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