首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The nucleic acid binding properties of the testis protein, TP, were studied with the help of physical techniques, namely, fluorescence quenching, UV difference absorption spectroscopy, and thermal melting. Results of quenching of tyrosine fluorescence of TP upon its binding to double-stranded and denatured rat liver nucleosome core DNA and poly(rA) suggest that the tyrosine residues of TP interact/intercalate with the bases of these nucleic acids. From the fluorescence quenching data, obtained at 50 mM NaCl concentration, the apparent association constants for binding of TP to native and denatured DNA and poly(rA) were calculated to be 4.4 X 10(3) M-1, 2.86 X 10(4) M-1, and 8.5 X 10(4) M-1, respectively. UV difference absorption spectra upon TP binding to poly(rA) and rat liver core DNA showed a TP-induced hyperchromicity at 260 nm which is suggestive of local melting of poly(rA) and DNA. The results from thermal melting studies of binding of TP to calf thymus DNA at 1 mM NaCl as well as 50 mM NaCl showed that although at 1 mM NaCl TP brings about a slight stabilization of the DNA against thermal melting, a destabilization of the DNA was observed at 50 mM NaCl. From these results it is concluded that TP, having a higher affinity for single-stranded nucleic acids, destabilizes double-stranded DNA, thus behaving like a DNA-melting protein.  相似文献   

2.
Interaction of nucleolar phosphoprotein B23 with nucleic acids   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
T S Dumbar  G A Gentry  M O Olson 《Biochemistry》1989,28(24):9495-9501
The interaction of eukaryotic nucleolar phosphoprotein B23 with nucleic acids was examined by gel retardation and filter binding assays, by fluorescence techniques, and by circular dichroism. All studies utilized protein prepared under native conditions by a newly developed purification procedure. Electrophoretic gel mobility shift assays with phage M13 DNA suggested that protein B23 is a single-stranded nucleic acid binding protein. This was confirmed in competition binding assays with native or heat-denatured linearized plasmid pUC18 DNA where the protein showed a marked preference for the denatured form. In other competition assays, there was no apparent preference for single-stranded synthetic ribo- versus deoxyribonucleotides. Equilibrium binding with poly(riboethenoadenylic acid) indicated cooperative ligand binding with a protein binding site size of 11 nucleotides and an apparent binding constant (K omega) of 5 x 10(7) M-1 which includes an intrinsic binding constant (K) of 6.3 x 10(4) M-1 and a cooperativity factor (omega) of 800. In circular dichroism (CD) studies, protein B23, when combined with the single-stranded synthetic nucleic acids poly(rA) and poly(rC), effected a decrease in ellipticity and a shift of the positive peak at 260-270 nm toward higher wavelengths, indicating helix destabilizing activity. No CD changes were seen with double-stranded poly(dA.dT). The change in ellipticity of poly(rA) was sigmoidal upon addition of protein, confirming the cooperative behavior seen with fluorescence methods. These studies indicate that protein B23 binds cooperatively with high affinity for single-stranded nucleic acids and exhibits RNA helix destabilizing activity. These features may be related to its role in ribosome assembly.  相似文献   

3.
Bacteriophage T7 gene 2.5 protein has been purified to homogeneity from cells overexpressing its gene. Native gene 2.5 protein consists of a dimer of two identical subunits of molecular weight 25,562. Gene 2.5 protein binds specifically to single-stranded DNA with a stoichiometry of approximately 7 nucleotides bound per monomer of gene 2.5 protein; binding appears to be noncooperative. Electron microscopic analysis shows that gene 2.5 protein is able to disrupt the secondary structure of single-stranded DNA. The single-stranded DNA is extended into a chain of gene 2.5 protein dimers bound along the DNA. In fluorescence quenching and nitrocellulose filter binding assays, the binding constants of gene 2.5 protein to single-stranded DNA are 1.2 x 10(6) M-1 and 3.8 x 10(6) M-1, respectively. Escherichia coli single-stranded DNA-binding protein and phage T4 gene 32 protein bind to single-stranded DNA more tightly by a factor of 25. Fluorescence spectroscopy suggests that tyrosine residue(s), but not tryptophan residues, on gene 2.5 protein interacts with single-stranded DNA.  相似文献   

4.
Mou TC  Gray CW  Gray DM 《Biophysical journal》1999,76(3):1537-1551
The Ff gene 5 protein (g5p) is considered to be a nonspecific single-stranded DNA binding protein, because it binds cooperatively to and saturates the Ff bacteriophage single-stranded DNA genome and other single-stranded polynucleotides. However, the binding affinity Komega (the intrinsic binding constant times a cooperativity factor) differs by over an order of magnitude for binding to single-stranded polynucleotides such as poly[d(A)] and poly[d(C)]. A polynucleotide that is more stacked, like poly[d(A)], binds more weakly than one that is less stacked, like poly[d(C)]. To test the hypothesis that DNA base stacking, a nearest-neighbor property, is involved in the binding affinity of the Ff g5p for different DNA sequences, Komega values were determined as a function of NaCl concentration for binding to six synthetic sequences 48 nucleotides in length: dA48, dC48, d(AAC)16, d(ACC)16, d(AACC)12, and d(AAACC)9A3. The binding affinities of the protein for these sequences were indeed found to be related to the nearest-neighbor compositions of the sequences, rather than to simple base compositions. That is, the g5p binding site, which is spanned by four nucleotides, discriminates among these sequences on the basis of the relative numbers of nearest neighbors (AA, CC, and AC plus CA) in the sequence. The results support the hypothesis that the extent of base stacking/unstacking of the free, nonbound ssDNA plays an important role in the binding affinity of the Ff gene 5 protein.  相似文献   

5.
The DNA binding properties of the Escherichia coli RecQ helicase   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The RecQ helicase family is highly conserved from bacteria to men and plays a conserved role in the preservation of genome integrity. Its deficiency in human cells leads to a marked genomic instability that is associated with premature aging and cancer. To determine the thermodynamic parameters for the interaction of Escherichia coli RecQ helicase with DNA, equilibrium binding studies have been performed using the thermodynamic rigorous fluorescence titration technique. Steady-state fluorescence anisotropy measurements of fluorescein-labeled oligonucleotides revealed that RecQ helicase bound to DNA with an apparent binding stoichiometry of 1 protein monomer/10 nucleotides. This stoichiometry was not altered in the presence of AMPPNP (adenosine 5'-(beta,gamma-imido) triphosphate) or ADP. Analyses of RecQ helicase interactions with oligonucleotides of different lengths over a wide range of pH, NaCl, and nucleic acid concentrations indicate that the RecQ helicase has a single strong DNA binding site with an association constant at 25 degrees C of K=6.7 +/- 0.95 x 10(6) M(-1) and a cooperativity parameter of omega=25.5 +/- 1.2. Both single-stranded DNA and double-stranded DNA bind competitively to the same site. The intrinsic affinities are salt-dependent, and the formation of DNA-helicase complex is accompanied by a net release of 3-4 ions. Allosteric effects of nucleotide cofactors on RecQ binding to DNA were observed only for single-stranded DNA in the presence of 1.5 mM AMPPNP, whereas both AMPPNP and ADP had no detectable effect on double-stranded DNA binding over a large range of nucleotide cofactor concentrations.  相似文献   

6.
The interaction of the entire LexA repressor and its amino-terminal DNA binding domain with poly[d(A-T)] and random DNA has been studied by circular dichroism. Binding of both protein species induces an about 2-fold increase of the positive circular dichroism band at about 270 nm of both polynucleotides, allowing a precise determination of the principal parameters as a function of mono- and divalent salt concentration and pH. Both proteins interact much more strongly (about 2000-fold) with poly[d(A-T)] than with random DNA as expected from the homology with the specific consensus binding site of LexA (CTGTATATATATACAG). For both LexA and its DNA binding domain we find that the interaction with poly[d(A-T)] is cooperative with a cooperativity factor omega of about 50-70 for both proteins over a wide range of solvent conditions, suggesting that the carboxy-terminal domain of LexA is not involved in this type of cooperativity. On the contrary, no cooperativity could be detected for the interaction of the LexA DNA binding domain with a random DNA fragment. The overall binding constant K omega (or simply K in the case of random DNA) depends strongly on the salt concentration as observed for most protein-DNA interactions, but the behavior of LexA is unusual in that the steepness of this salt dependence (delta log K omega/delta log [NaCl]) is much more pronounced at slightly acidic pH values as compared to that at neutral or slightly alkaline pH. The behavior is not easily understood in terms of the current theories on the electrostatic contribution to protein-DNA interactions on the basis of polyelectrolyte theory. A comparison of the overall binding constant K omega of the entire LexA repressor and its DNA binding domain reveals that LexA binds only 20-50-fold stronger under a wide variety of salt and pH conditions. This result tends to demonstrate further that the additional energy due to the dimerization of LexA via the carboxy-terminal domain should be rather weak as expected from the small dimerization constant of LexA (2 X 10(-4) M-1).  相似文献   

7.
8.
The co-operative nature of the binding of the Escherichia coli single strand binding protein (SSB) to single-stranded nucleic acids has been examined over a range of salt concentrations (NaCl and MgCl2) to determine if different degrees of binding co-operativity are associated with the two SSB binding modes that have been identified recently. Quantitative estimates of the binding properties, including the co-operativity parameter, omega, of SSB to single-stranded DNA and RNA homopolynucleotides have been obtained from equilibrium binding isotherms, at high salt (greater than or equal to 0.2 M-NaCl), by monitoring the fluorescence quenching of the SSB upon binding. Under these high salt conditions, where only the high site size SSB binding mode exists (65 +/- 5 nucleotides per tetramer), we find only moderate co-operativity for SSB binding to both DNA and RNA, (omega = 50 +/- 10), independent of the concentration of salt. This value for omega is much lower than most previous estimates. At lower concentrations of NaCl, where the low site size SSB binding mode (33 +/- 3 nucleotides/tetramer) exists, but where SSB affinity for single-stranded DNA is too high to estimate co-operativity from classical binding isotherms, we have used an agarose gel electrophoresis technique to qualitatively examine SSB co-operativity with single-stranded (ss) M13 phage DNA. The apparent binding co-operativity increases dramatically below 0.20 M-NaCl, as judged by the extremely non-random distribution of SSB among the ssM13 DNA population at low SSB to DNA ratios. However, the highly co-operative complexes are not at equilibrium at low SSB/DNA binding densities, but are formed only transiently when SSB and ssDNA are directly mixed at low concentrations of NaCl. The conversions of these metastable, highly co-operative SSB-ssDNA complexes to their equilibrium, low co-operativity form is very slow at low concentrations of NaCl. At equilibrium, the SSB-ssDNA complexes seem to possess the same low degree of co-operativity (omega = 50 +/- 10) under all conditions tested. However, the highly co-operative mode of SSB binding, although metastable, may be important during non-equilibrium processes such as DNA replication. The possible relation between the two SSB binding modes, which differ in site size by a factor of two, and the high and low co-operativity complexes, which we report here, is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
We have carried out solution equilibrium binding studies of ICP8, the major single-stranded DNA (ssDNA)-binding protein of herpes simplex virus type I, in order to determine the thermodynamic parameters for its interaction with ssDNA. Fluorescence anisotropy measurements of a 5'-fluorescein-labeled 32-mer oligonucleotide revealed that ICP8 formed a nucleoprotein filament on ssDNA with a binding site size of 10 nucleotides/ICP8 monomer, an association constant at 25 degrees C, K = 0.55 +/- 0.05 x 10(6) M(-1), and a cooperativity parameter, omega = 15 +/- 3. The equilibrium constant was largely independent of salt, deltalog(Komega)/deltalog([NaCl]) = -2.4 +/- 0.4. Comparison of these parameters with other ssDNA-binding proteins showed that ICP8 reacted with an unusual mechanism characterized by low cooperativity and weak binding. In addition, the reaction product was more stable at high salt concentrations, and fluorescence enhancement of etheno-ssDNA by ICP8 was higher than for other ssDNA-binding proteins. These last two characteristics are also found for protein-DNA complexes formed by recombinases in their active conformation. Given the proposed role of ICP8 in promoting strand transfer reactions, they suggest that ICP8 and recombinase proteins may catalyze homologous recombination by a similar mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
T M Lohman  W Bujalowski 《Biochemistry》1988,27(7):2260-2265
We have examined the binding of the oligonucleotide dT (pT)34 to the Escherichia coli SSB protein as a function of NaCl and MgCl2 concentration (25 degrees C, pH 8.1) by monitoring the quenching of the intrinsic protein fluorescence. We find two binding sites for dT(pT)34 per single strand binding (SSB) protein tetramer, with each site possessing widely different affinities depending on the salt concentration. At 200 mM NaCl, we observe nearly stoichiometric binding of dT(pT)34 to both binding sites within the SSB tetramer, although a difference in the affinities is still apparent. However, when the NaCl concentration is lowered, the overall affinity of dT(pT)34 for the second site on the SSB tetramer decreases dramatically. At 1.5 mM NaCl, only a single molecule of dT(pT)34 can bind per SSB tetramer, even with a 10-fold molar excess of dT(pT)34. MgCl2 is effective at 100-fold lower concentrations than NaCl in promoting the binding of the second molecule of dT(pT)34. This binding behavior reflects an intrinsic property of the SSb tetramer, since it is also observed upon binding of smaller oligonucleotides, and the simplest explanation is that a salt-dependent negative cooperativity exists between DNA binding sites within the SSB tetramer. This phenomenon is also responsible for the transition between the two SSB-single strand (ss) polynucleotide binding modes that cover 35 and 56 nucleotides per tetramer [Bujalowski, W., & Lohman, T. M. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 7799-7802]. Extreme negative cooperativity stabilizes the (SSB)35 binding mode, in which the SSB tetramer binds tightly to ss DNA with only two of its subunits while the other two subunits remain unligated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
S G LaBonne  L B Dumas 《Biochemistry》1983,22(13):3214-3219
We sought a protein from yeast that would bind more strongly to single-stranded DNA than to duplex DNA and would stimulate the activity of the major yeast DNA polymerase, but not polymerases from other organisms. We isolated a protein that binds about 200 times more strongly to single-stranded DNA than duplex DNA and stimulates yeast DNA polymerase I activity 4-5-fold. It inhibits synthesis catalyzed by calf thymus DNA polymerase alpha and has little effect on T4 DNA polymerase. This yeast protein, SSB-1, has a molecular weight of approximately 40 000. At apparent saturation there is one protein molecule bound per 40 nucleotides. Protein binding causes the single-stranded DNA molecule to assume a relatively extended conformation. It binds to single-stranded RNA as strongly as to DNA. SSB-1 increases the initial rate of polymerization catalyzed by yeast DNA polymerase I apparently by increasing the processivity of the enzyme. We estimate there are 7500-30 000 molecules of SSB-1 per yeast cell, enough to bind at least 400-1600 nucleotides per replication fork. Thus it is present in sufficient abundance to participate in DNA replication in vivo in the manner suggested by these in vitro experiments.  相似文献   

12.
Meyer S  Urbanke C  Wahle E 《Biochemistry》2002,41(19):6082-6089
The nuclear poly(A) binding protein (PABPN1) binds the growing poly(A) tail during pre-mRNA 3'-end processing, stimulating its elongation and controlling its final length. Here we report binding studies of PABPN1 to poly(A) in solution. Quantitative fluorescence titration was used to determine the stoichiometry, intrinsic affinity, and cooperativity of binding to a series of size-fractionated poly(A). The intrinsic association constant K(i) was about 2 x 10(6) M(-1) for oligo(A) and all size classes of poly(A). The binding of PABPN1 to poly(A) was enhanced by protein-protein interactions which were, however, weak (cooperativity parameter omega < 50). No significant change of cooperativity could be detected with increasing polynucleotide length in the range of 140-450 nucleotides. An average binding site size n of 11-14 was found for all poly(A) lengths, which is close to the minimal site size m found for binding to oligo(A). The data are discussed with respect to the previous observation of two different forms of the poly(A)-PABPN1 complex.  相似文献   

13.
We have previously identified in human fibroblasts a multisubunit protein (designated PGB) that specifically bound single-stranded G-rich microsatellite DNA sequences. PGB was later found to be identical, or closely related to translin, an octameric protein that bound single-stranded DNA consisting of sequences flanking chromosomal translocations. Here, we report that recombinant translin binds single-stranded microsatellite repeats, d(GT)n, and G-strand telomeric repeats, d(TTAGGG)n, with higher affinities (Kdis approximately = 2 nM and Kdis approximately = 12.5 nM, respectively, in 100 mM NaCl and 25 degrees C) than the affinity with which it binds a prototypical sequence flanking translocation sites (Kdis approximately = 23 nM). Translin also binds d(GT)n and d(TTAGGG)n overhangs linked to double-stranded DNA with equilibrium constants in the nanomolar range. Formation of DNA quadruplexes by the d(TTAGGG)n repeats inhibits their binding to translin. A further study of the binding parameters revealed that the minimal length of d(GT)n and d(TTAGGG)n oligonucleotides that a translin octamer can bind is 11 nucleotides, but that such oligonucleotides containing up to 30 nucleotides can bind only a single translin octamer. However, the oligonucleotides d(GT)27 and d(TTAGGG)9 bind two octamers with negative cooperativity. Translin does not detectably bind single-stranded d(GT)n sequences embedded within double-stranded DNA. Based on our data, we propose that translin might be involved in the control of recombination at d(GT)n.d(AC)n microsatellites and in telomere maintenance.  相似文献   

14.
The binding of the recA gene product from E. coli to double-stranded and single-stranded nucleic acids has been investigated by following the change in melting temperature of duplex DNA and the fluorescence of single-stranded DNA or poly(dA) modified by reaction with chloroacetaldehyde. At low ionic strength, in the absence of Mg2+ ions, RecA protein binds preferentially to duplex DNA or poly(dA-dT). This leads to an increase of the DNA melting temperature. Stabilization of duplex DNA decreases when ionic strength or pH increases. In the presence of Mg2+ ions, preferential binding to single-stranded polynucleotides is observed. Precipitation occurs when duplex DNA begins to melt in the presence of RecA protein. From competition experiments, different single-stranded and double-stranded polydeoxynucleotides can be ranked according to their ability to bind RecA protein. Structural changes induced in nucleic acids upon RecA binding are discussed together with conformational changes induced in RecA protein upon magnesium binding.  相似文献   

15.
The bacteriophage T4 regA protein is a translational repressor of a group of T4 early mRNAs. We have characterized the binding of regA protein to polynucleotides and to specific RNAs. Binding to nucleic acids was monitored by the quenching of the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of regA protein. regA protein exhibited differential affinities for the polynucleotides examined, with the order of affinity being poly(rU) greater than poly(dT) greater than poly(dU) = poly(rG) greater than poly(rC) = poly(rA). The binding site size calculated for regA protein binding to poly(rU) was n = 9 +/- 1 nucleotides. Cooperativity was observed in binding to multiple-site oligonucleotides, with a cooperativity parameter (omega) value of 10-22. To study the specific interaction between regA protein and T4 gene 44 mRNA, the affinity of regA protein for synthetic gene 44 RNA fragments was measured. The association constant (Ka) for regA protein binding to gene 44 RNA fragments was 100-fold higher than for binding to nontarget RNA. Study of variant gene 44 RNA fragments indicated that the nucleotides required for specific binding are contained within a 12-nucleotide sequence spanning -12 to -1, relative to the AUG codon. The bases of five nucleotides (indicated in upper case type) are critical for specific regA protein interaction with the gene 44 recognition element, 5'-aaUGAGgAaauu-3'. These studies further showed that formation of a regA protein-RNA complex involves a maximum of 2-3 ionic interactions and is primarily an enthalpy-driven process.  相似文献   

16.
We have studied the circular dichroism and ultraviolet difference spectra of T7 bacteriophage DNA and various synthetic polynucleotides upon addition of Escherichia coli RNA polymerase. When RNA polymerase binds nonspecifically to T7 DNA, the CD spectrum shows a decrease in the maximum at 272 but no detectable changes in other regions of the spectrum. This CD change can be compared with those associated with known conformational changes in DNA. Nonspecific binding to RNA polymerase leads to an increase in the winding angle, theta, in T7 DNA. The CD and UV difference spectra for poly[d(A-T)] at 4 degrees C show similar effects. At 25 degrees C, binding of RNA polymerase to poly[d(A-T)] leads to hyperchromicity at 263 nm and to significant changes in CD. These effects are consistent with an opening of the double helix, i.e. melting of a short region of the DNA. The hyperchromicity observed at 263 nm for poly[d(A-T)] is used to determine the number of base pairs disrupted in the binding of RNA polymerase holoenzyme. The melting effect involves about 10 base pairs/RNA polymerase molecule. Changes in the CD of poly(dT) and poly(dA) on binding to RNA polymerase suggest an unstacking of the bases with a change in the backbone conformation. This is further confirmed by the UV difference spectra. We also show direct evidence for differences in the template binding site between holo- and core enzyme, presumably induced by the sigma subunit. By titration of the enzyme with poly(dT) the physical site size of RNA polymerase on single-stranded DNA is approximately equal to 30 bases for both holo- and core enzyme. Titration of poly[d(A-T)] with polymerase places the figure at approximately equal to 28 base pairs for double-stranded DNA.  相似文献   

17.
Mou TC  Gray CW  Terwilliger TC  Gray DM 《Biochemistry》2001,40(7):2267-2275
The gene 5 protein (g5p) of Ff bacteriophages is a well-studied model ssDNA-binding protein that binds cooperatively to the Ff ssDNA genome and single-stranded polynucleotides. Its affinity, K omega (the intrinsic binding constant times a cooperativity factor), can differ by several orders of magnitude for ssDNAs of different nearest-neighbor base compositions [Mou, T. C., Gray, C. W., and Gray, D. M. (1999) Biophys. J. 76, 1537-1551]. We found that the DNA backbone can also dramatically affect the binding affinity. The K omega for binding phosphorothioate-modified S-d(A)(36) was >300-fold higher than for binding unmodified P-d(A)(36) at 0.2 M NaCl. CD titrations showed that g5p bound phosphorothioate-modified oligomers with the same stoichiometry as unmodified oligomers. The CD spectrum of S-d(A)(36) underwent the same qualitative change upon protein binding as did the spectrum of unmodified DNA, and the phosphorothioate-modified DNA appeared to bind in the normal g5p binding site. Oligomers of d(A)(36) with different proportions of phosphorothioate nucleotides had binding affinities and CD perturbations intermediate to those of the fully modified and unmodified sequences. The influence of phosphorothioation on binding affinity was nearly proportional to the extent of the modification, with a small nearest-neighbor dependence. These and other results using d(ACC)(12) oligomers and mutant proteins indicated that the increased binding affinity of g5p for phosphorothioate DNA was not a polyelectrolyte effect and probably was not an effect due to the altered nucleic acid structure, but was more likely a general effect of the properties of the sulfur in the context of the phosphorothioate group.  相似文献   

18.
We have studied the interactions of single-stranded polyribonucleotides with murine leukemia virus structural proteins p10, p10' (a p10 variant), and Pr65gag, as well as Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) pp12 (a p10 analog). Two quantitative assays have been used to monitor protein-RNA association: the fluorescence enhancement of polyethenoadenylic acid) poly(epsilon A) upon binding protein, and tryptophan fluorescence quenching upon binding to poly(U). With each assay p10 was shown to bind stoichiometrically to single-stranded RNA, covering a length of nucleic acid chain (occluded site size, n) of about 6 residues. RSV pp12 was also shown to bind to poly(epsilon A), with n = 5 +/- 1. Addition of NaCl to fully titrated MuLV p10-nucleic acid mixtures effected nearly complete restoration of poly(epsilon A) or MuLV p10 fluorescence. Under conditions of 0.06 M NaCl, p10 bound noncooperatively to poly(epsilon A) with an intrinsic association constant, K = 2.3 X 10(6) M-1. K and n determined in this study were shown to relate to Kapp determined by other methods, by the approximation Kapp approximately NK, where N is the number of binding sites along the polynucleotide chain ((nucleotides/chain)/n). Chemical modifications of the p10 cysteine residues did not alter the affinity for poly(epsilon A). The affinity of Pr65gag for poly(epsilon A) appears to be higher than that of p10.  相似文献   

19.
M S Silver  A R Fersht 《Biochemistry》1983,22(12):2860-2866
The availability of epsilon DNA, a fluorescent ssDNA derivative, has made it possible to examine quantitatively the interactions between recA protein and single-stranded polynucleotides. Fluorescence titrations of epsilon DNA with recA protein and vice versa establish that each recA protein monomer covers 5.5 epsilon DNA nucleotides and that the dissociation constant of the recA-epsilon DNA complex is 10 nM. Fluorescence titrations of recA protein-epsilon DNA mixtures with poly(dT) establish that each recA protein monomer covers 5.1 poly(dT) nucleotides and that the dissociation constant of the recA-poly(dT) complex is 0.03 nM. Observations on how the addition of ssDNA affects the fluorescence of recA protein-epsilon DNA mixtures establish that the dissociation constant of the recA-ssDNA complex exceeds 20 microM. Stopped-flow kinetics in which excess recA protein binds to epsilon DNA indicate that k2 = 6 X 10(6) M-1 s-1 for the process. A more approximate kinetic technique indicates that recA protein binds to epsilon DNA at least one-tenth as fast as to poly(dT); the rate constant for dissociation of recA-epsilon DNA exceeds that for recA-poly(dT) by at least 30-fold. epsilon DNA is proven to be a versatile reagent for studying single-stranded polynucleotide-protein interactions. Not only can its own complexes with protein be investigated but also, under suitable circumstances, it can be used as a fluorescent probe to explore complexes incorporating nonfluorescent polynucleotides.  相似文献   

20.
The adenovirus DNA-binding protein (DBP) is a multifunctional protein that is essential for viral DNA replication. DBP binds both single-stranded and double-stranded DNA as well as RNA in a sequence-independent manner. Previous studies showed that DBP does not promote melting of duplex poly(dA-dT) in contrast to prokaryotic single-strand-binding proteins. However, here we show that DBP can displace oligonucleotides annealed to single-stranded M13 DNA. Depending upon the DBP concentration, strands of at least 200 nucleotides can be unwound. Although unwinding of short (17-bp), fully duplex DNA is facilitated by DBP, unwinding of larger (28-bp) duplexes is only possible if single-stranded protruding ends are present. These protruding ends must be at least 4 nucleotides long for optimal unwinding, and both 5' and 3' single-stranded overhangs suffice. DBP-promoted strand displacement is sensitive to MgCl2 and NaCl and not dependent upon ATP. Our results suggest that DBP, through formation of a protein chain on the displaced strand, may destabilize duplex DNA ahead of the replication fork, thereby assisting in strand displacement during replication.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号