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1.
Zinc finger modules are capable of specifically interacting with DNA that contains 5-methylcytosine (5-mC) in place of cytosine, suggesting that zinc finger-DNA binding could be regulated by extrinsic methylation of DNA. Here, we have used phage display to engineer zinc finger proteins that detect and discriminate DNA methylation by the prokaryotic enzymes HaeIII and HhaI. In these systems, zinc finger-DNA complexes are induced by DNA modification using the appropriate enzyme, which can therefore act as a switch. To further develop the specificity of the switch, zinc finger discrimination between 5-mC and thymine in DNA sequences is demonstrated despite the presence of the characteristic major groove methyl group that is common to both bases. Specificity was achieved using a DNA-binding strategy involving synergy between adjacent zinc fingers. We propose that engineered zinc fingers that recognise particular DNA modifications, such as sequence-specific DNA methylation, could be integrated into artificial regulatory circuits for the control of gene expression and other biological processes.  相似文献   

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一种特异识别SV40启动子的人工转录因子的构建   总被引:6,自引:3,他引:3  
转录因子是真核表达调控中非常重要的一类反式作用因子,通常由DNA结合域与效应域两部分组成,而锌指结构是DNA结合域的常见组成单元。人工转录因子就是基于转录因子的这种结构特点,人为地选择针对特定序列的DNA结合域与具有特定作用的效应域组合而成。利用噬菌体展示技术,筛选到与SV40启动子上9bp序列特异结合的锌指结构,再连接KOX1的KRAB域构建了一种人工转录因子。转染实验表明它对SV40下游的报告基因的表达有很显著的抑制作用。  相似文献   

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The Cys(2)-His(2)-type zinc finger DNA-binding proteins can be engineered to bind specifically to many different DNA sequences. A single zinc finger typically binds to a 3-4-base pair DNA subsite. One strategy for design is to identify highly specific fingers that recognize each of the 64 possible DNA triplets. We started with a subgroup of the 64 triplets, the GNN-binding fingers. The GNN-binding fingers have been examined in several studies, but previous studies did not produce specific fingers for all of the 16 GNN triplets. These previous studies did not provide any information on the possible positional or context effects on the performance of these fingers. To identify the most specific design and take the possible positional effects into consideration, we did a large-scale site selection experiment on our GNN designs. From this study, we identified very specific fingers for 14 of the 16 GNN triplets, demonstrating for the first time a clear positional dependence for many of the designs. Further systematic specificity study reveals that the in vivo functionality of these zinc finger proteins in a reporter assay depends on their binding affinities to their target sequences, thus giving a better understanding of how these zinc finger proteins might function inside cells.  相似文献   

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Klug A 《FEBS letters》2005,579(4):892-894
It has long been the goal of molecular biologists to design DNA-binding proteins for the specific control of gene expression. The zinc finger design is ideally suited for such purposes, discriminating between closely related sequences both in vitro and in vivo. Whereas other DNA-binding proteins generally make use of the 2-fold symmetry of the double helix, zinc fingers do not and so can be linked linearly in tandem to recognize DNA sequences of different lengths, with high fidelity. This modular design offers a large number of combinatorial possibilities for the specific recognition of DNA. By fusing zinc finger peptides to repression or activation domains, genes can be selectively targeted and switched off and on. Several recent applications of such engineered zinc finger proteins (ZFPs) are described, including the activation of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in a human cell line and an animal model. Clinical trials have recently begun on using VEGF-activating ZFPs to treat human peripheral arterial disease, by stimulating vascular growth. Also in progress are pre-clinical studies using ZFPs to target the defective genes in two monogenic disorders, SCID and SCA. The aim is to replace them in each case by a correct copy from an extrachromosomal DNA donor by means of homologous recombination. Promising results are reported.  相似文献   

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Chimeric restriction enzymes: what is next?   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Chimeric restriction enzymes are a novel class of engineered nucleases in which the non-specific DNA cleavage domain of Fokl (a type IIS restriction endonuclease) is fused to other DNA-binding motifs. The latter include the three common eukaryotic DNA-binding motifs, namely the helix-turn-helix motif, the zinc finger motif and the basic helix-loop-helix protein containing a leucine zipper motif. Such chimeric nucleases have been shown to make specific cuts in vitro very close to the expected recognition sequences. The most important chimeric nucleases are those based on zinc finger DNA-binding proteins because of their modular structure. Recently, one such chimeric nuclease, Zif-QQR-F(N) was shown to find and cleave its target in vivo. This was tested by microinjection of DNA substrates and the enzyme into frog oocytes (Carroll et al., 1999). The injected enzyme made site-specific double-strand breaks in the targets even after assembly of the DNA into chromatin. In addition, this cleavage activated the target molecules for efficient homologous recombination. Since the recognition specificity of zinc fingers can be manipulated experimentally, chimeric nucleases could be engineered so as to target a specific site within a genome. The availability of such engineered chimeric restriction enzymes should make it feasible to do genome engineering, also commonly referred to as gene therapy.  相似文献   

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Multiple genes encoding zinc finger domains are expressed in human T cells   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Proteins containing zinc finger domains have been implicated in developmental control of gene expression in Drosophila, Xenopus, mouse, and humans. Multiple cDNAs encoding zinc (II) finger structures were isolated from human cell lines of T-cell origin to explore whether zinc finger genes participate in the differentiation of human hematopoietic cells. Initial restriction analysis, genomic Southern blotting, and partial sequence comparisons revealed at least 30 nonoverlapping cDNAs designated cKox(1-30) encoding zinc finger motifs. Analysis of cKox1 demonstrated that Kox1 is a single-copy gene that is expressed in a variety of hematopoietic and nonhaematopoietic cell lines. cKox1 encodes 11 zinc fingers that were shown to bind zinc when expressed as a beta-gal-Kox1 fusion protein. Further analysis of the predicted amino acid sequence revealed a heptad repeat of leucines NH2-terminal to the finger region, which suggests a potential domain for homo- or heterodimer protein formation. On the basis of screening results it was estimated that approximately 70 zinc finger genes are expressed in human T cells. Zinc finger motifs are probably present in a large family of proteins with quite diverse and distinct functions. However, comparisons of individual finger regions in cKox1 with finger regions of cKox2 to cKox30 showed that some zinc fingers are highly conserved in their putative alpha-helical DNA binding region, supporting the notion of a zinc finger-specific DNA recognition code.  相似文献   

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The C2H2 zinc finger is the most commonly utilized framework for engineering DNA-binding domains with novel specificities. Many different selection strategies have been developed to identify individual fingers that possess a particular DNA-binding specificity from a randomized library. In these experiments, each finger is selected in the context of a constant finger framework that ensures the identification of clones with a desired specificity by properly positioning the randomized finger on the DNA template. Following a successful selection, multiple zinc-finger clones are typically recovered that share similarities in the sequences of their DNA-recognition helices. In principle, each of the clones isolated from a selection is a candidate for assembly into a larger multi-finger protein, but to date a high-throughput method for identifying the most specific candidates for incorporation into a final multi-finger protein has not been available. Here we describe the development of a specificity profiling system that facilitates rapid and inexpensive characterization of engineered zinc-finger modules. Moreover, we demonstrate that specificity data collected using this system can be employed to rationally design zinc fingers with improved DNA-binding specificities.  相似文献   

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Site-specific recombinases have become essential tools in genetics and molecular biology for the precise excision or integration of DNA sequences. However, their utility is currently limited to circumstances where the sites recognized by the recombinase enzyme have been introduced into the DNA being manipulated, or natural 'pseudosites' are already present. Many new applications would become feasible if recombinase activity could be targeted to chosen sequences in natural genomic DNA. Here we demonstrate efficient site-specific recombination at several sequences taken from a 1.9 kilobasepair locus of biotechnological interest (in the bovine β-casein gene), mediated by zinc finger recombinases (ZFRs), chimaeric enzymes with linked zinc finger (DNA recognition) and recombinase (catalytic) domains. In the "Z-sites" tested here, 22 bp casein gene sequences are flanked by 9 bp motifs recognized by zinc finger domains. Asymmetric Z-sites were recombined by the concomitant action of two ZFRs with different zinc finger DNA-binding specificities, and could be recombined with a heterologous site in the presence of a third recombinase. Our results show that engineered ZFRs may be designed to promote site-specific recombination at many natural DNA sequences.  相似文献   

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