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A synthetic combinatorial library of 10,000 components mostly containing aromatic amino acids was screened for inhibition of DNase I cleavage at two ARE sequences. Ten amino acid building blocks were used to generate the library in which the N and C terminal residues were fixed and the four central positions of the peptide ligands were varied. The DNase I footprinting assay led, after deconvolution through sublibrary synthesis, to the identification of CGL-6382 as an ARE-selective minor groove binder containing a N-terminal nicotinic acid motif adjacent to a N-methylimidazole unit and three N-methylpyrrole units coupled to a C-terminal argininamide residue. The optimized ligand CGL-6382 was found to recognize a 5'-GC(A/T)(A/T) motif within the two cloned androgen receptors responsive elements. The discovery of CGL-6382 as an ARE-selective ligand augurs well for the use of the DNase I footprinting methodology to identify sequence-specific DNA recognition ligands from large mixtures of small molecules.  相似文献   

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The gene encoding the TraM protein of the conjugative plasmid F was cloned, overexpressed and the gene product was purified. The TraM protein was found in the cytoplasm of cells carrying the F plasmid with a smaller amount in the inner membrane. DNase I footprinting experiments showed that the purified protein protects three regions in the F oriT locus with different affinity for the upper and lower strands of DNA. A 15-nucleotide motif was identified within the protected regions that represented the DNA-binding site. The TraM protein was also found to bind to a sequence in the oriT region of the non-conjugative plasmid ColE1 that resembles the three binding sites in the F oriT region.  相似文献   

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Footprinting is a simple method for assessing the sequence selectivity of DNA-binding ligands. The method is based on the ability of the ligand to protect DNA from cleavage at its binding site. This review describes the use of DNase I and hydroxyl radicals, the most commonly used footprinting probes, in footprinting experiments. The success of a footprinting experiment depends on using an appropriate DNA substrate and we describe how these can best be chosen or designed. Although footprinting was originally developed for assessing a ligand's sequence selectivity, it can also be employed to estimate the binding strength (quantitative footprinting) and to assess the association and dissociation rate constants for slow binding reactions.  相似文献   

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Deoxyribonuclease I digestion of the deoxyoligodecamer 5'd(ATCGTACGAT)2(3') has been examined in detail to study the kinetic and structural properties of this enzyme substrate system in solution. In addition, these studies have defined, in general, those DNase I conditions to be used in future drug-DNA footprinting experiments. Special attention has been taken of those properties of DNase I that are critical for quantitation of ligand binding to small DNA fragments, and that aid in designing oligomers to be used in footprinting experiments. Enzyme activity was observed at all phosphodiester bonds in the decamer studied with varying affinity, except for the first four bonds at the 5' end of the oligomer. The DNA substrate concentration is always in excess, in order to achieve conditions of no more than one DNase I cleavage per DNA molecule. Reactions were controlled so that 65% or more of the initial amount of decamer substrate remained after DNase I digestion. It was observed that the rate of enzyme reactivity decreases with digestion time and is sensitive to the experimental conditions.  相似文献   

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In footprinting experiments, an increase in DNA cleavage with addition of ligand to a system may be due to a ligand-induced structural change. Ligand binding also enhances cleavage by displacing the cleavage agent from ligand-binding sites, thus increasing its concentration elsewhere. The theory and characteristics of this mass-action enhancement are given, and it is shown how it may be recognized. Results of DNase I footprinting of small oligomers, with actinomycin D as ligand, are analyzed to reveal which enhancements are due to mass action, and which can reasonably be ascribed to structural changes. Patterns in the footprinting plots from our experiments on actinomycin D binding to a 139-base-pair DNA fragment (with DNase I as a probe) are studied in the same way. The likely origins of these patterns are discussed, as are enhancements occurring with other probes commonly used in footprinting experiments.  相似文献   

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