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1.
Interactions of the Escherichia coli PriA helicase with nucleotide cofactors have been studied using the fluorescence titration and analytical ultracentrifugation techniques. Binding of unmodified cofactors was characterized by the fluorescence competition titration method. The obtained data establish that at saturation the PriA helicase binds two nucleotide molecules per protein monomer. This result corroborates with the primary structure of the protein, which contains sequence motifs implicated as putative nucleotide-binding sites. The intrinsic affinities of the binding sites differ by 2-4 orders of magnitude. Thus, the PriA helicase has a strong and a weak nucleotide-binding site. The binding sites differ dramatically in their properties. The strong site is highly specific for adenosine cofactors, while the weak site shows very modest base specificity. The affinities of the strong and weak binding sites for ATP are lower than the affinities for ADP, although both sites have similar affinity for the inorganic phosphate group. Unlike the weak site, the affinity of the strong site profoundly depends on the structure of the phosphate group of the ATP cofactor. Binding of unmodified nucleotides indicates the presence of positive cooperative interactions between bound cofactors (i.e., the existence of communication between the two sites). Magnesium cations are specifically involved in controlling the cofactor affinity for the strong site, while the affinity of the weak site is predominantly determined by interactions between the phosphate group and ribose regions of the cofactor and the protein matrix. The significance of these results for the activities of the PriA helicase is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Kinetics of the nucleotide binding to the strong (S) and weak (W) nucleotide-binding site of the Escherichia coli PriA helicase have been studied using the fluorescence stopped-flow technique. Experiments were performed with TNP-ADP and TNP-ATP analogues. Binding of the ADP analogue to the strong binding site is a four-step sequential reaction: (PriA)S + D (k1)<-->(k(-1)) + (S)1 (k2)<-->(k(-2)) (S)2 (k3)<-->(k(-3)) (S)3 (k4)<-->(k(-4)) (S)4. Association of TNP-ATP proceeds through an analogous three-step mechanism. The first two steps and intermediates are similar for both cofactors. However, the (S)3 intermediate is dramatically different for ADP and ATP analogues. Its emission is close to the emission of the free TNP-ADP, while it is by a factor of approximately 16 larger than the free TNP-ATP fluorescence. Thus, only the ADP analogue passes through an intermediate where it leaves the hydrophobic cleft of the site. This behavior corroborates with the fact that ADP leaves the ATPase site without undergoing a chemical change. The fast bimolecular step and the sequential mechanism indicate that the site is easily accessible to the cofactor, and it does not undergo an adjustment prior to binding. The subsequent step is also fast and stabilizes the complex. Magnesium profoundly affects the population of intermediates. The data indicate that the dominant (S)2 species is a part of the ATP catalytic cycle. ADP analogue binding to the weak nucleotide-binding site proceeds in a simpler two-step mechanism: (PriA)W + D (k1)<-->(k(-1)) (W)1 (k2)<-->(k(-2)) (W)2 with (W)1 being a dominant intermediate both in the presence and in the absence of Mg2+. The results indicate that the weak site is an allosteric control site in the functioning of the PriA helicase.  相似文献   

3.
Interactions between the Escherichia coli primary replicative helicase DnaB protein and nucleotide cofactors have been studied using several fluorescent nucleotide analogs and unmodified nucleotides. The thermodynamically rigorous fluorescent titration technique has been used to obtain true binding isotherms, independently of the assumptions of any relationships between the observed quenching of protein fluorescence and the degree of nucleotide binding. Fluorescence titrations using several MANT derivatives of nucleoside diphosphates (MANT-ADP, 3',2'-O-(N-methylantraniloyl)adenosine-5'-diphosphate; MANT-GDP, 3',2'-O(N-methylantraniloyl)guanosine-5'-diphosphate; MANT-CDP, 3',2'-O-(N-methylantraniloyl)cytidine-5'-diphosphate; MANT-UDP, 3',2'-O-(N-methylantraniloyl)uridine-5'-diphosphate) have shown that the DnaB helicase has a preference for purine nucleotides. Binding of all modified nucleotides is characterized by similar negative cooperativity, indicating that negative cooperative interactions are base-independent. Thermodynamic parameters for the interactions of the unmodified nucleotides (ADP, GDP, CDP, and UDP) and inorganic phosphate (P(i)) have been obtained by using the competition titration approach. To analyze multiple ligand binding to a finite circular lattice, for a general case in which each lattice binding site can exist in different multiple states, we developed a matrix method approach to derive analytical expressions for the partition function and the average degree of binding for such cases. Application of the theory to competition titrations has allowed us to extract the intrinsic binding constants and cooperativity parameters for all unmodified ligands. This is the first quantitative estimate of affinities and the mechanisms of binding of different unmodified nucleotides and inorganic phosphate for a hexameric helicase. The intrinsic affinities of all of the studied ATP analogs are lower than the intrinsic affinities of the corresponding ADP analogs. The implications of these results for the mechanism of helicase action are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
PriA, a DEXH-type DNA helicase, binds specifically to the 3' end of DNA through its N-terminal domain, and is a candidate sensor protein that recognizes arrested DNA replication forks in bacteria. We crystallized an N-terminal fragment of PriA in the absence and the presence of oligonucleotides to elucidate the structural basis for the specific recognition of the 3' terminus of DNA.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Allosteric interactions between the strong and weak nucleotide-binding sites and the total and proper single-stranded (ss)DNA-binding sites of the Escherichia coli PriA helicase have been analyzed using the fluorescence titration technique. Binding of the DNA exclusively to the proper DNA-binding site of the helicase, profoundly affects the intrinsic affinities of both nucleotide-binding sites, indicating a direct communication between the nucleotide-binding sites and the proper DNA-binding site. The communication involves conformational changes of the entire protein molecule. Nevertheless, the bound DNA differently affects the structures of the strong and weak nucleotide-binding sites. While the polarity of the strong site is moderately diminished, the polarity of the weak site is dramatically increased, indicating an intimate involvement of the weak site in controlling the helicase interactions with the DNA. The strong site does not directly control the DNA affinity of the enzyme. Only when the helicase has both nucleotide-binding sites saturated with ADP but not with ATP analogues does the enzyme have an increased affinity for the ssDNA, indicating that the control of ssDNA affinity involves a coordinated action of both nucleotide-binding sites and depends upon the phosphate group of the bound cofactor. A dramatic increase of the DNA affinity, when the DNA encompasses the total DNA-binding site of the enzyme, with both nucleotide-binding sites saturated with ADP or NDP, indicates that an additional area of the protein within the total DNA-binding site becomes engaged in interactions with the DNA. The significance of these results for the enzyme activities in the DNA unwinding and recognition is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Galletto R  Jezewska MJ  Bujalowski W 《Biochemistry》2004,43(34):11002-11016
Kinetics of the Escherichia coli PriA helicase interactions with the ssDNA has been studied, using the fluorescence stopped-flow technique. Experiments have been performed with a series of fluorescent etheno derivatives of ssDNA adenosine oligomers, differing in the number of nucleotide residues. The PriA helicase binds the ssDNA in the sequential process defined by [reaction: see text]. In the first step, the enzyme associates fast with the ssDNA without inducing conformational changes in the DNA. The dependence of the partial equilibrium constant, characterizing the first step, upon the length of the ssDNA strictly reflects the statistical relationship between the size of the DNA-binding site and the number of potential binding sites on the ssDNA. Only the DNA-binding site that encompasses 6.3 +/- 1 residues is directly involved in interactions. The site is located on a structural domain allowing the enzyme to efficiently search and recognize small patches of the ssDNA. Intramolecular steps are independent of the ssDNA length and accompanied by changes in the DNA structure. Salt and glycerol effects on the studied kinetics indicate a very different nature of the intermediates. While the bimolecular step is characterized by net ion release and water uptake, net ion uptake and water release accompany intramolecular transitions. Specific ion binding stabilizes the helicase-ssDNA complex in (P)(2) and (P)(3) intermediates. However, magnesium and AMP-PNP do not affect the mechanism of enzyme-ssDNA interactions. The sequential character of the mechanism indicates that the enzyme does not exist in a preequilibrium conformational transition prior to the DNA binding.  相似文献   

8.
Regulation of Escherichia coli carbamyl phosphate synthetase by UMP and IMP was examined in studies with various analogs of these nucleotides. Whereas UMP inhibits enzyme activity, the arabinose analog of UMP was found to be an activator. dUMP neither activates nor inhibits, but binds to the enzyme in a manner similar to UMP as evaluated by direct binding studies, sedimentation behavior, and ultraviolet difference spectral measurements. dUMP decreases inhibition by UMP and activation by IMP, but has no effect on activation by L-ornithine. The findings are in accord with the view that IMP and UMP bind to the same region of the enzyme; a possible general model for such overlapping binding sites is considered. Additional evidence is presented that inorganic phosphate can modulate regulation of the activity by nucleotides. Phosphate (and arsenate) markedly increase inhibition by UMP, decrease activation by IMP, but do not affect activation by L-ornithine. The extent of activation by IMP and by L-ornithine and that of inhibition by UMP are decreased when Mg2+ concentrations are increased relative to a fixed concentration of ATP. The findings suggest that the allosteric effectors may affect affinity of the enzyme for divalent metal ions as well as, as previously shown, the affinity of the enzyme for Mg-ATP.  相似文献   

9.
Primosome assembly protein PriA functions in the assembly of the replisome at forked DNA structures. Whereas its N-terminal DNA binding domain (DBD) binds independently to DNA, the affinity of DBD protein for forked structures is relatively weak. Although the PriA helicase domain (HD) is required for high affinity fork binding, HD protein had very low affinity for DNA. It had only low levels of ATPase activity, and it hydrolyzed ATP when DNA was absent whereas PriA did not. HD catalyzed unwinding of a minimal substrate composed of a duplex with a 3' single-stranded tail. Single-strand binding protein (SSB) bound to the tail of this substrate inhibited this reaction by full-length PriA but enhanced the reaction by HD. SSB stabilized binding of PriA but not of DBD or HD to duplexes with a 5' or 3' single-stranded tail. On forked substrates SSB enhanced helicase action on the lagging-strand arm by PriA but not by HD. The results indicate that synergy of the DBD and HD allows stable binding at the interface between duplex and single-stranded DNA bound by SSB. This mode of binding may be analogous to fork binding, which orients the helicase to act on the lagging-strand side of the fork.  相似文献   

10.
Escherichia coli PriA is a primosome assembly protein with 3' to 5' helicase activity whose apparent function is to promote resumption of DNA synthesis following replication-fork arrest. Here, we describe how initiation of helicase activity on DNA forks is influenced by both fork structure and by single-strand DNA-binding protein. PriA could recognize and unwind forked substrates where one or both arms were primarily duplex, and PriA required a small (two bases or larger) single-stranded gap at the fork in order to initiate unwinding. The helicase was most active on substrates with a duplex lagging-strand arm and a single-stranded leading-strand arm. On this substrate, PriA was capable of translocating on either the leading or lagging strands to unwind the duplex ahead of the fork or the lagging-strand duplex, respectively. Fork-specific binding apparently orients the helicase domain to unwind the lagging-strand duplex. Binding of single-strand-binding protein to forked templates could inhibit unwinding of the duplex ahead of the fork but not unwinding of the lagging-strand duplex or translocation on the lagging-strand template. While single-strand-binding protein could inhibit binding of PriA to the minimal, unforked DNA substrates, it could not inhibit PriA binding to forked substrates. In the cell, single-strand-binding protein and fork structure may direct PriA helicase to translocate along the lagging-strand template of forked structures such that the primosome is specifically assembled on that DNA strand.  相似文献   

11.
Quantitative studies of interactions between the Escherichia coli replication factor DnaC protein and the DnaB helicase have been performed using sedimentation velocity and fluorescence energy transfer techniques. The applied novel analysis of the sedimentation data allows us to construct thermodynamic rigorous binding isotherms without any assumption as to the relationship between the observed molecular property of the complexes formed, the average sedimentation coefficient, or the degree of binding. Experiments have been performed with the fluorescein-modified DnaB helicase, which allows an exclusive monitoring of the DnaB-DnaC complex formation. The DnaC binding to the unmodified helicase has been characterized in competition experiments. The data establish that, in the presence of the ATP analog AMP-PNP, or ADP, a maximum of six DnaC monomers bind cooperatively to the DnaB hexamer. The positive cooperative interactions are limited to the two neighboring DnaC molecules. Analyses using a statistical thermodynamic hexagon model indicate that, under the solution conditions examined, the affinity is characterized by the intrinsic binding constant K=1.4(+/-0.5)x10(5)M(-1) and cooperativity parameter sigma=21+/-5. These data suggest strongly that the DnaC-DnaB complex exists in vivo as a mixture of complexes with a different number of bound DnaC molecules, although the complex with six DnaC molecules bound dominates the distribution. The DnaC nucleotide-binding site is not involved in the stabilization of the complex. Moreover, the hydrolysis of NTP bound to the helicase or the DnaC is not required for the release of the DnaC protein from the complex. The single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) bound to the helicase does not affect the DnaC protein binding. However, in the presence of the DNA, there is a significant difference in the energetics and structure of the ternary complex, DnaC-DnaB-ssDNA, formed in the presence of AMP-PNP as compared to ADP. The topology of the ternary complex DnaC-DnaB-ssDNA has been determined using the fluorescence energy transfer method. In solution, the DnaC protein-binding site is located on the large 33 kDa domain of the DnaB helicase. The significance of the results in the functioning of the DnaB helicase-DnaC protein complex is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Escherichia coli DnaC protein bound to ATP forms a complex with DnaB protein. To identify the domain of DnaC that interacts with DnaB, a genetic selection was used based on the lethal effect of induced dnaC expression and a model that inviability arises by the binding of DnaC to DnaB to inhibit replication fork movement. The analysis of dnaC alleles that preserved viability under elevated expression revealed an N-terminal domain of DnaC involved in binding to DnaB. Mutant proteins bearing single amino acid substitutions (R10P, L11Q, L29Q, S41P, W32G, and L44P) that reside in regions of predicted secondary structure were inert in DNA replication activity because of their inability to bind to DnaB, but they retained ATP binding activity, as indicated by UV cross-linking to [alpha-(32)P]ATP. These alleles also failed to complement a dnaC28 mutant. Other selected mutations that map to regions carrying Walker A and B boxes are expected to be defective in ATP binding, a required step in DnaB-DnaC complex formation. Lastly, we found that the sixth codon from the N terminus encodes aspartate, resolving a reported discrepancy between the predicted amino acid sequence based on DNA sequencing data and the results from N-terminal amino acid sequencing (Nakayama, N., Bond, M. W., Miyajima, A., Kobori, J., and Arai, K. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 10475-10480).  相似文献   

13.
DEAD box RNA helicases use the energy of ATP hydrolysis to unwind double-stranded RNA regions or to disrupt RNA/protein complexes. A minimal RNA helicase comprises nine conserved motifs distributed over two RecA-like domains. The N-terminal domain contains all motifs involved in nucleotide binding, namely the Q-motif, the DEAD box, and the P-loop, as well as the SAT motif, which has been implicated in the coordination of ATP hydrolysis and RNA unwinding. We present here the crystal structure of the N-terminal domain of the Thermus thermophilus RNA helicase Hera in complex with adenosine monophosphate (AMP). Upon binding of AMP the P-loop adopts a partially collapsed or half-open conformation that is still connected to the DEAD box motif, and the DEAD box in turn is linked to the SAT motif via hydrogen bonds. This network of interactions communicates changes in the P-loop conformation to distant parts of the helicase. The affinity of AMP is comparable to that of ADP and ATP, substantiating that the binding energy from additional phosphate moieties is directly converted into conformational changes of the entire helicase. Importantly, the N-terminal Hera domain forms a dimer in the crystal similar to that seen in another thermophilic prokaryote. It is possible that this mode of dimerization represents the prototypic architecture in RNA helicases of thermophilic origin.  相似文献   

14.
Analyses of interactions of the Escherichia coli replicative helicase, PriA protein, with a single-stranded (ss) DNA have been performed, using the quantitative fluorescence titration technique. The stoichiometry of the PriA helicase.ssDNA complex has been examined in binding experiments with a series of ssDNA oligomers. The total site-size of the PriA.ssDNA complex, i.e. the maximum number of nucleotide residues occluded by the PriA helicase in the complex, is 20 +/- 3 residues per protein monomer. However, the protein can efficiently form a complex with a minimum of 8 nucleotides. Thus, the enzyme has a strong ssDNA-binding site that engages in direct interactions with a significantly smaller number of nucleotides than the total site-size. The ssDNA-binding site is located in the center of the enzyme molecule, with the protein matrix protruding over a distance of approximately 6 nucleotides on both sides of the binding site. The analysis of the binding of two PriA molecules to long oligomers was performed using statistical thermodynamic models that take into account the overlap of potential binding sites, cooperative interactions, and the protein.ssDNA complexes with different stoichiometries. The intrinsic affinity depends little upon the length of the ssDNA. Moreover, the binding is accompanied by weak cooperative interactions.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Galletto R  Rajendran S  Bujalowski W 《Biochemistry》2000,39(42):12959-12969
Quantitative analyses of the interactions of nucleotide cofactors with the Escherichia coli replicative factor DnaC protein have been performed using thermodynamically rigorous fluorescence titration techniques. This approach allowed us to obtain stoichiometries of the formed complexes and interaction parameters, without any assumptions about the relationship between the observed signal and the degree of binding. The stoichiometry of the DnaC-nucleotide complex has been determined in direct binding experiments with fluorescent nucleotide analogues, MANT-ATP and MANT-ADP. The stoichiometry of the DnaC complexes with unmodified ATP and ADP has been determined using the macromolecular competition titration method (MCT). The obtained results established that at saturation the DnaC protein binds a single nucleotide molecule per protein monomer. Analyses of the binding of fluorescent analogues and unmodified nucleotides to the DnaC protein show that ATP and ADP have the same affinities for the nucleotide-binding site, albeit the corresponding complexes have different structures, specifically affected by the presence of magnesium cations in solution. Although the presence of the gamma-phosphate does not affect the affinity, the structure of the triphosphate group is critical. While the affinity of ATP-gamma-S is the same as the affinity of ATP, the affinities of AMP-PNP and AMP-PCP are approximately 2 and approximately 4 orders lower than that of ATP, respectively. Moreover, the ribose plays a significant role in forming a stable complex. The binding constants of dATP and dADP are approximately 2 orders of magnitude lower than those for ribose nucleotides. The nucleotide-binding site of the DnaC protein is highly base specific. The intrinsic affinity of adenosine triphosphates and diphosphates is at least 3-4 orders of magnitude higher than for any of the other examined nucleotides. The obtained data indicate that the recognition mechanism of the nucleotide by the structural elements of the binding site is complex with the base providing the specificity and the ribose, as well as the second phosphate group contributing to the affinity. The significance of the results for the functioning of the DnaC protein is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
18.
BACKGROUND: DnaB is the primary replicative helicase in Escherichia coli. Native DnaB is a hexamer of identical subunits, each consisting of a larger C-terminal domain and a smaller N-terminal domain. Electron-microscopy data show hexamers with C6 or C3 symmetry, indicating large domain movements and reversible pairwise association. RESULTS: The three-dimensional structure of the N-terminal domain of E. coli DnaB was determined by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Structural similarity was found with the primary dimerisation domain of a topoisomerase, the gyrase A subunit from E. coli. A monomer-dimer equilibrium was observed for the isolated N-terminal domain of DnaB. A dimer model with C2 symmetry was derived from intermolecular nuclear Overhauser effects, which is consistent with all available NMR data. CONCLUSIONS: The monomer-dimer equilibrium observed for the N-terminal domain of DnaB is likely to be of functional significance for helicase activity, by participating in the switch between C6 and C3 symmetry of the helicase hexamer.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Some kinetic studies of the interactions between Escherichia coli phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (orthophosphate:oxaloacetate carboxylase (phosphorylating) EC 4.1.1.31) acetyl coenzyme A, fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, and aspartate were performed. Activation of the enzyme by fructose 1,6-bisphosphate is anomalous by comparison with acetyl coenzyme A in that it confers hysteretic properties on the enzyme. In the presence of both activators and aspartate, hysteresis is observed also, but the approach to optimum catalytic activity can be fit to an equation for a second-order reaction with respect to enzyme concentration. Since, however, hysteresis is not a result of any apparent association-dissociation reaction, the apparent fit to a second-order kinetic equation is probably not real but is the result of a multistep activation mechanism. Hysteresis is not eliminated by preincubation of the enzyme with fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, acetyl coenzyme A, or phosphoenolpyruvate singly or in any pair of combinations. Hysteresis is associated, therefore, with the slow conformation change from the inactive species to the active species under the influence of all three of those reactants. The enzyme complex resulting from the binding of each activator, including phosphoenolpyruvate, has an increased affinity for the other activators. A kinetic method for estimating the relative changes in affinity of these complexes for some of the other reactants is presented. At concentrations of the activators below their Ka, synergistic effects are evident, particularly in their ability to relieve aspartate inhibition. Aspartate inhibition is competitive with acetyl coenzyme A both in the absence and in the presence of low concentrations of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate. Increasing the concentrations of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate results in an increase in the apparent Kl for aspartate, suggesting that synergistic activation by fructose 1,6-bisphosphate is a result of the increased affinity of the fructose 1,6-bisphosphate-enzyme complex for acetyl coenzyme A, and a shift in the concentration of enzyme species away from the one(s) to which aspartate can bind most easily. In the presence of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate alone optimal activation can be achieved, but the concentrations required in vitro are high and suggest that fructose 1,6-bisphosphate alone does not function in that capacity physiologically, but primes the enzyme for more effective activation by acetyl coenzyme A and/or phosphoenolpyruvate.  相似文献   

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