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2.
The integrase of the temperate bacteriophage mv4 catalyzes site-specific recombination between the phage attP site and the attB site of the host during lysogenization of Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus. The mv4 integrase also functions in a wide variety of gram-positive bacteria and in Escherichia coli. In this report, in vitro and in vivo recombination assays were developed and the integrase was purified in order to study in greater detail the mv4 attP?×?attB recombination event. In a cell-free extract of E. coli at 42°?C, the mv4 integrase promotes efficient in vitro recombination between a supercoiled attP-containing plasmid and a linear attB fragment. The integrase, which was purified to apparent homogeneity, showed no absolute requirement for accessory factors, unlike the majority of the lambda Int family of recombinases. Deletion derivatives of the attP site were constructed and tested for recombination with the attB site in vitro. A 234-bp DNA fragment containing five scattered putative mv4 Int-binding sites was sufficient for function of the attP site. In contrast to the right arm of attP, most of the left arm could be deleted without drastically reducing the recombination efficiency. In vivo in E. coli, mv4 Int catalyzed recombination in trans between attP and attB sites present on two separate plasmids. This property was used to confirm in vivo the results of the deletion analysis of the attP site performed in vitro.  相似文献   

3.
The integrase of the temperate bacteriophage mv4 catalyzes site-specific recombination between the phage attP site and the attB site of the host during lysogenization of Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus. The mv4 integrase also functions in a wide variety of gram-positive bacteria and in Escherichia coli. In this report, in vitro and in vivo recombination assays were developed and the integrase was purified in order to study in greater detail the mv4 attP × attB recombination event. In a cell-free extract of E. coli at 42° C, the mv4 integrase promotes efficient in vitro recombination between a supercoiled attP-containing plasmid and a linear attB fragment. The integrase, which was purified to apparent homogeneity, showed no absolute requirement for accessory factors, unlike the majority of the lambda Int family of recombinases. Deletion derivatives of the attP site were constructed and tested for recombination with the attB site in vitro. A 234-bp DNA fragment containing five scattered putative mv4 Int-binding sites was sufficient for function of the attP site. In contrast to the right arm of attP, most of the left arm could be deleted without drastically reducing the recombination efficiency. In vivo in E. coli, mv4 Int catalyzed recombination in trans between attP and attB sites present on two separate plasmids. This property was used to confirm in vivo the results of the deletion analysis of the attP site performed in vitro. Received: 22 July 1998 / Accepted: 4 June 1999  相似文献   

4.
Integration of the bacteriophage P2 genome into the Escherichia coli host chromosome occurs by site-specific recombination between the phage attP and E. coli attB sites. The phage-encoded 38-kDa protein, integrase, is known to be necessary for both phage integration as well as excision. In order to begin the molecular characterization of this recombination event, we have cloned the int gene and overproduced and partially purified the Int protein and an N-terminal truncated form of Int. Both the wild-type Int protein and the integration host factor (IHF) of E. coli were required to mediate integrative recombination in vitro between a supercoiled attP plasmid and a linear attB substrate. Footprint experiments revealed one Int-protected region on both of the attP arms, each containing direct repeats of the consensus sequence TGTGGACA. The common core sequences at attP and attB were also protected by Int from nuclease digestion, and these contained a different consensus sequence, AA T/A T/A C/A T/G CCC, arranged as inverted repeats at each core. A single IHF-protected site was located on the P (left) arm, placed between the core- and P arm-binding site for Int. Cooperative binding by Int and IHF to the attP region was demonstrated with band-shift assays and footprinting studies. Our data support the existence of two DNA-binding domains on Int, having unrelated sequence specificities. We propose that P2 Int, IHF, attP, and attB assemble in a higher-order complex, or intasome, prior to site-specific integrative recombination analogous to that formed during lambda integration.  相似文献   

5.
Three mutations previously mapped to the common core region of the bacteriophage lambda att site have been sequenced. All were found to be due to the deletion of a T residue from a string of six T residues within the 15 base-pair core, the region of homology between the recombining sites. As judged by DNAase I protection experiments, binding of the Int protein is the same in the mutant and wild-type core sites. However, a difference in the Int binding to mutant cores is observed when the small neocarzinostatin molecule is used as a nuclease probe. The differences between mutant and wild type lead to the suggestion that Int is interacting with sequences at the core-arm junctions. Accordingly, the mutants are proposed to be defective in the spacing of Int monomers bound at two recognition sequences spanning the core-arm junctions. The anomalous electrophoretic mobility of wild-type att fragments and, more specifically, the effect of the single base core deletion on electrophoretic mobility are discussed in the text and in the Appendix. The mutant att2501, defective in both att and int functions, was sequenced and found to be a 335 base-pair deletion removing the coding region for 25 amino acids from the carboxy-terminal end of Int, as well as the entire att site. The postulated origin of the 501 mutation is also consistent with the model of two juxtaposed Int recognition sites.  相似文献   

6.
Bacteriophage mv4 is a temperate phage infecting Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus. During lysogenization, the phage integrates its genome into the host chromosome at the 3' end of a tRNA(Ser) gene through a site-specific recombination process (L. Dupont et al., J. Bacteriol., 177:586-595, 1995). A nonreplicative vector (pMC1) based on the mv4 integrative elements (attP site and integrase-coding int gene) is able to integrate into the chromosome of a wide range of bacterial hosts, including Lactobacillus plantarum, Lactobacillus casei (two strains), Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris, Enterococcus faecalis, and Streptococcus pneumoniae. Integrative recombination of pMC1 into the chromosomes of all of these species is dependent on the int gene product and occurs specifically at the pMC1 attP site. The isolation and sequencing of pMC1 integration sites from these bacteria showed that in lactobacilli, pMC1 integrated into the conserved tRNA(Ser) gene. In the other bacterial species where this tRNA gene is less or not conserved; secondary integration sites either in potential protein-coding regions or in intergenic DNA were used. A consensus sequence was deduced from the analysis of the different integration sites. The comparison of these sequences demonstrated the flexibility of the integrase for the bacterial integration site and suggested the importance of the trinucleotide CCT at the 5' end of the core in the strand exchange reaction.  相似文献   

7.
The temperate phage mv4 integrates its genome into the chromosome of Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus by site-specific recombination within the 3' end of a tRNA(Ser) gene. Recombination is catalyzed by the phage-encoded integrase and occurs between the phage attP site and the bacterial attB site. In this study, we show that the mv4 integrase functions in vivo in Escherichia coli and we characterize the bacterial attB site with a site-specific recombination test involving compatible plasmids carrying the recombination sites. The importance of particular nucleotides within the attB sequence was determined by site-directed mutagenesis. The structure of the attB site was found to be simple but rather unusual. A 16-bp DNA fragment was sufficient for function. Unlike most genetic elements that integrate their DNA into tRNA genes, none of the dyad symmetry elements of the tRNA(Ser) gene were present within the minimal attB site. No inverted repeats were detected within this site either, in contrast to the lambda site-specific recombination model.  相似文献   

8.
Temperate phage mv4 integrates its DNA into the chromosome of Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus strains via site-specific recombination. Nucleotide sequencing of a 2.2-kb attP-containing phage fragment revealed the presence of four open reading frames. The larger open reading frame, close to the attP site, encoded a 427-amino-acid polypeptide with similarity in its C-terminal domain to site-specific recombinases of the integrase family. Comparison of the sequences of attP, bacterial attachment site attB, and host-phage junctions attL and attR identified a 17-bp common core sequence, where strand exchange occurs during recombination. Analysis of the attB sequence indicated that the core region overlaps the 3' end of a tRNA(Ser) gene. Phage mv4 DNA integration into the tRNA(Ser) gene preserved an intact tRNA(Ser) gene at the attL site. An integration vector based on the mv4 attP site and int gene was constructed. This vector transforms a heterologous host, L. plantarum, through site-specific integration into the tRNA(Ser) gene of the genome and will be useful for development of an efficient integration system for a number of additional bacterial species in which an identical tRNA gene is present.  相似文献   

9.
Bacteriophage lambda site-specific recombination requires the formation of higher-order protein-DNA complexes to accomplish synapsis of the partner attachment (att) sites as well as for the regulation of the integration and excision reactions. The att sites are composed of a core region, the actual site of strand exchange, and flanking arm regions. The attL site consists of two core sites (C and C'), an integration host factor (IHF) binding site (H'), and three contiguous Int binding arm sites (P'1, P'2, and P'3). In this study, we employed bacteriophage P22 challenge phages to determine which protein binding sites participate in attL complex formation in vivo. The C', H', and P'1 sites were critical, because mutations in these sites severely disrupted formation of the attL complex. Mutations in the C and P'2 sites were less severe, and alteration of the P'3 site had no effect on complex formation. These results support a model in which IHF, bound to the H' site, bends the attL DNA so that the Int molecule bound to P'1 also interacts with the C' core site. This bridged complex, along with a second Int molecule bound to P'2, helps to stabilize the interaction of a third Int with the C core site. The results also indicate that nonspecific DNA binding is a significant component of the Int-core interactions and that the cooperativity of Int binding can overcome the effects of mutations in the individual arm sites and core sites.  相似文献   

10.
Interaction of int protein with specific sites on lambda att DNA.   总被引:21,自引:0,他引:21  
W Ross  A Landy  Y Kikuchi  H Nash 《Cell》1979,18(2):297-307
We have studied the interaction of highly purified Int protein with DNA restriction fragments from the lambda phage attachment site (attP) region. Two different DNA sequences are protected by bound Int protein against partial digestion by either pancreatic DNAase or neocarzinostatin. One Int binding site includes the 15 bp common core sequence (the crossover region for site-specific recombination) plus several bases of sequence adjoining the core in both the P and P' arms. The second Int-protected site occurs 70 bp to the right of the common core in the P' arm, just at the distal end of the sequence encoding Int protein. The two Int binding sites are of comparable size, 30-35 bp, but do not share any extensive sequence homology. The interaction of Int with the two sites is distinctly different, as defined by the observation that only the site in the P' arm and not the site at the common core region is protected by Int in the face of challenge by the polyanion heparin. Restriction fragments containing DNA from the bacterial attachment site (attB) region exhibit a different pattern of interaction with Int. In the absence of heparin, a smaller (15 bp) sequence, which includes the left half of the common core region and the common core-B arm juncture, is protected against nuclease digestion by Int protein. No sequences from this region are protected by Int in the presence of heparin.  相似文献   

11.
The Bacteroides conjugative transposon CTnDOT encodes an integrase, IntDOT, which is a member of the tyrosine recombinase family. Other members of this group share a strict requirement for sequence identity within the region of strand exchange, called the overlap region. Tyrosine recombinases catalyze recombination by making an initial cleavage, strand exchange and ligation, followed by strand swapping isomerization requiring sequence identity in the overlap region, followed by the second cleavage, strand exchange and ligation. IntDOT is of particular interest because it has been shown to utilize a three-step mechanism: a sequence identity-dependent initial strand exchange that requires two base pairs of complementary DNA at the site of cleavage; a sequence identity-independent strand swapping isomerization, followed by a sequence identity-independent cleavage, strand exchange and ligation. In addition to the sequence identity requirement in the overlap region, Lambda Int interactions with arm-type sites dictate the order of strand exchange regardless of the orientation of the overlap region. Although IntDOT has an arm-binding domain, we show here that the location of sequence identity within the overlap region dictates where the initial cleavage takes place and that IntDOT can recombine substrates containing mismatches in the overlap region so long as a single base of sequence identity exists at the site of initial cleavage.  相似文献   

12.
Rat myelin vacuolation mutation at the Attractin locus (Atrn(mv)) is a genomic deletion including the whole exon 1 of the Atrn gene. The precise size and location of the deleted region has not yet been identified because of poor information on genomic organization of the rat Atrn gene. Here, we identified the breakpoints of the Atrn(mv) mutation, using a draft sequence of the rat genome. In the Atrn(mv/mv) rat, a 6,914-bp genomic region was deleted. Primers flanked 5'- and 3'- breakpoints amplified the Atrn(mv) allele but not the wild-type allele. This primer set enables us to distinguish Atrn(mv/+) heterozygous rats from Atrn(+/+) rats, and will contribute to the efficient production of Atrn(mv/mv) rats.  相似文献   

13.
Photoaffinity labeling with [32P] 8-azidoadenosine 5-triphosphate (8-N3ATP) was used to identify putative binding sites on tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. and N. rustica L.) leaf ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBPCase, EC 4.1.1.39). Incorporation of 32P was observed in polypeptides corresponding to both RuBPCase subunits when desalted leaf and chloroplast extracts, and purified RuBPCase were irradiated with ultraviolet light in the presence of [32P] 8-N3ATP. 32P-labeling was dependent upon ultraviolet irradiation and occurred with [32P] 8-N3ATP labeled in the -position, indicating covalent incorporation of the photoprobe. Both [32P] 8-N3ATP and [32P] 8-N3GTP were incorporated to a similar extent into the 53-kilodalton (kDa) large subunit (LSu), but incorporation of [32P] 8-N3GTP into the 14-kDa small subunit (SSu) of RuBPCase was <5% of that measured with [32P] 8-N3ATP. Distinct binding sites for 8-N3ATP on the two subunits were indicated by different apparent K D values, 3 and 18 M for the SSu and LSu, respectively, and differences in the response of photoaffinity labeling to Mg2+, anions and enzyme activation. Active-site-directed compounds, including the non-gaseous substrate ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate, the reaction intermediate analog 2-carboxyarabinitol-1,5-bisphosphate and several phosphorylated effectors afforded protection to the LSu site against photoincorporation but provided almost no protection to the SSu. These results indicate that 8-N3ATP binds to the active-site region of the LSu and a distinct site on the SSu of RuBPCase. Experiments conducted with intact pea (Pisum sativum L.) and tobacco chloroplasts showed that the SSu was not photolabeled with [32P] 8-N3ATP in organello or in undesalted chloroplast lysates but was photolabeled when lysates were ultrafiltered or desalted. These results indicate that 8-N3ATP binds to a site on the SSu that has physiological significance.Abbreviations kDa kilodalton - LSu large subunit - 8-N3ATP 8-azidoadenosine 5-triphosphate - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate - RuBPCase ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - SSu small subunit Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station Journal Article No. 89-3-150The authors acknowledge the technical assistance of J.C. Anderson. This work was supported in part by National Institute of Health grant GM 35766 to B.E.H.  相似文献   

14.
The positions of the endonucleolytic cleavages promoted by the integrase protein (Int) of coliphage HK022 within its attB site were determined. The protein catalyses a staggered cut, which defines an overlap sequence of 7 by within the core site. The overlap region is at the center of symmetry of a palindromic sequence which appears in all four putative att core binding sites for Int. We confirm that the order of strand exchange is similar to that in phage .  相似文献   

15.
The phage attachment site, attP, and the integrase-encoding gene, int, are sufficient to promote site-specific integration of the temperate phage mv4 genome into the chromosome of the Lactobacillus delbrueckii host (L. Dupont, B. Boizet-Bonhoure, M. Coddeville, F. Auvray, and P. Ritzenthaler, J. Bacteriol. 177:586--595, 1995). The mv4 genome region containing these elements was compared at the nucleotide and amino acid levels with that of the closely related virulent phage LL-H. Complex DNA rearrangements were identified; a truncated integrase gene and two sites homologous to the mv4 attP site were detected in the genome of the virulent phage LL-H. These observations suggest that the two phages derive from a common temperate ancestor.  相似文献   

16.
Bacteriophage lambda integrase (Int) catalyzes site-specific recombination between pairs of attachment (att) sites. The att sites contain weak Int-binding sites called core-type sites that are separated by a 7-bp overlap region, where cleavage and strand exchange occur. We have characterized a number of mutant Int proteins with substitutions at positions S282 (S282A, S282F, and S282T), S286 (S286A, S286L, and S286T), and R293 (R293E, R293K, and R293Q). We investigated the core- and arm-binding properties and cooperativity of the mutant proteins, their ability to catalyze cleavage, and their ability to form and resolve Holliday junctions. Our kinetic analyses have identified synapsis as the rate-limiting step in excisive recombination. The IntS282 and IntS286 mutants show defects in synapsis in the bent-L and excisive pathways, respectively, while the IntR293 mutants exhibit synapsis defects in both the excision and bent-L pathways. The results of our study support earlier findings that the catalytic domain also serves a role in binding to core-type sites, that the core contacts made by this domain are important for both synapsis and catalysis, and that Int contacts core-type sites differently among the four recombination pathways. We speculate that these residues are important for the proper positioning of the catalytic residues involved in the recombination reaction and that their positions differ in the distinct nucleoprotein architectures formed during each pathway. Finally, we found that not all catalytic events in excision follow synapsis: the attL site probably undergoes several rounds of cleavage and ligation before it synapses and exchanges DNA with attR.  相似文献   

17.
The recombination-activating protein, RAG1, a key component of the V(D)J recombinase, binds multiple Zn2+ ions in its catalytically required core region. However, the role of zinc in the DNA cleavage activity of RAG1 is not well resolved. To address this issue, we determined the stoichiometry of Zn2+ ions bound to the catalytically active core region of RAG1 under various conditions. Using metal quantitation methods, we determined that core RAG1 can bind up to four Zn2+ ions. Stripping the full complement of bound Zn2+ ions to produce apoprotein abrogated DNA cleavage activity. Moreover, even partial removal of zinc-binding equivalents resulted in a significant diminishment of DNA cleavage activity, as compared to holo-Zn2+ core RAG1. Mutants of the intact core RAG1 and the isolated core RAG1 domains were studied to identify the location of zinc-binding sites. Significantly, the C-terminal domain in core RAG1 binds at least two Zn2+ ions, with one zinc-binding site containing C902 and C907 as ligands (termed the CC zinc site) and H937 and H942 coordinating a Zn2+ ion in a separate site (HH zinc site). The latter zinc-binding site is essential for DNA cleavage activity, given that the H937A and H942A mutants were defective in both in vitro DNA cleavage assays and cellular recombination assays. Furthermore, as mutation of the active-site residue E962 reduces Zn2+ coordination, we propose that the HH zinc site is located in close proximity to the DDE active site. Overall, these results demonstrate that Zn2+ serves an important auxiliary role for RAG1 DNA cleavage activity. Furthermore, we propose that one of the zinc-binding sites is linked to the active site of core RAG1 directly or indirectly by E962.  相似文献   

18.
IntDOT is a tyrosine recombinase encoded by the conjugative transposon CTnDOT. The core binding (CB) and catalytic (CAT) domains of IntDOT interact with core-type sites adjacent to the regions of strand exchange, while the N-terminal arm binding (N) domain interacts with arm-type sites distal to the core. Previous footprinting experiments identified five arm-type sites, but how the arm-type sites participate in the integration and excision of CTnDOT was not known. In vitro integration assays with substrates containing arm-type site mutants demonstrated that attDOT sequences containing mutations in the L1 arm-type site or in the R1 and R2 or R1 and R2′ arm-type sites were dramatically defective in integration. Substrates containing mutations in the L1 and R1 arm-type sites showed a 10- to 20-fold decrease in detectable in vitro excision, but introduction of multiple arm-type site mutations in attR did not have an effect on the excision frequency. A sixth arm-type site, the R1′ site, was also identified and shown to be required for integration and important for efficient excision. These results suggest that intramolecular IntDOT interactions are required for integration, while the actions of accessory factors are more important for excision. Gel shift assays performed in the presence of core- and arm-type site DNAs showed that IntDOT affinity for the attDOT core was enhanced when IntDOT was simultaneously bound to arm-type site DNA.Conjugative transposons (CTns), also known as integrative and conjugative elements (ICEs), are mobile genetic elements that are widespread in Bacteroides spp. and are implicated in the spread of antibiotic resistance. These elements are normally integrated into the host chromosome but can excise, replicate, and transfer to a recipient cell by conjugation (34). Since CTns commonly carry antibiotic resistance genes, it is likely that the increase in antibiotic-resistant Bacteroides strains has been mediated through the lateral transfer of these elements (36). One of the best-studied ICEs in Bacteroides is the conjugative transposon CTnDOT. CTnDOT is 65 kb in size and carries genes encoding resistance to tetracycline and erythromycin. Over the past 30 years, the incidence of tetracycline resistance has increased to 80% of Bacteroides isolates due to the presence of CTnDOT-type elements (36).Integration and excision of CTnDOT results from site-specific recombination between regions of DNA known as attachment (att) sites. During integration, the joined ends of the closed circular intermediate (attDOT) recombine with the bacterial target sequence (attB) to form the recombinant sites (attL and attR). The integration reaction requires IntDOT, a CTnDOT-encoded protein that has been identified as a member of the tyrosine recombinase family, as well as a host factor encoded by Bacteroides (8, 21). Site-specific recombination between the attL and attR attachment sites results in excision of CTnDOT from the host chromosome. IntDOT is also required for excision, as are three element-encoded proteins: Orf2c, Orf2d, and Exc, as well a Bacteroides host factor (8, 38). The roles of these accessory proteins are not well understood, although Orf2c and Orf2d have been shown to bind DNA (unpublished results).One of the best-studied tyrosine recombinases is the integrase (Int) of the lambda system. The C terminus of Int includes the core binding (CB) and catalytic (CAT) domains that bind to core-type sites, which flank the sites of cleavage and strand exchange (2, 24). The N-terminal arm-binding (N) domain binds to arm-type sites that are distal to the core-type sites. In the presence of the appropriate host and accessory factors, Int binding to arm-type sites is required for the formation of higher-order protein/DNA complexes known as intasomes, which are required for integration and excision (15, 18, 22). Int is capable of making intramolecular interactions (interactions between Int monomers on the same attachment site) and intermolecular interactions (interactions between Int monomers on different attachment sites) during recombination (15, 16). In the lambda system, the directionality of the reaction is regulated by Int interactions with arm-type sites in conjunction with the integration host factor (IHF) during the formation of an integrative intasome, or IHF, Xis, and FIS during the formation of the two excisive intasomes (1, 4, 42).Presumably, IntDOT occupancy of specific arm-type sites in conjunction with interactions of accessory factors with att sites leads to the assembly of integrative or excisive intasomes and thus contributes to the directionality of IntDOT-mediated recombination. Previous DNase I footprinting experiments identified five arm-type binding sites on attDOT (11). In this study, mutations were constructed in the five sites to determine their roles in the integration and excision of CTnDOT. In addition, a sixth arm-type site was discovered that is important for both integrative and excisive recombination. The results of gel shift assays also show that the interaction of IntDOT with core-type sites and arm-type sites involves cooperative interactions.  相似文献   

19.
The site-specific recombinase (Int) of bacteriophage lambda is a heterobivalent DNA-binding protein that binds two different classes of DNA-binding sites within its recombination target sites. The several functions of Int are apportioned between a large carboxy-terminal domain that cleaves and ligates DNA at each of its four "core-type" DNA-binding sites and a small amino-terminal domain, whose primary function is binding to each of its five "arm-type" DNA sites, which are distant from the core region. Int bridges between the two classes of binding sites are facilitated by accessory DNA-bending proteins that along with Int comprise higher-order recombinogenic complexes. We show here that although the 64 amino-terminal residues of Int bind efficiently to a single arm site, this protein cannot form doubly bound complexes on adjacent arm sites. However, 1-70 Int does show the same cooperative binding to adjacent arm sites as the full length protein. We also found that 1-70 Int specifies cooperative interactions with the accessory protein Xis when the two are bound to their adjacent cognate sites P2 and X1, respectively. To complement the finding that these two amino-terminal domain functions (along with arm DNA binding) are all specified by residues 1-70, we determined that Thr75 is the first residue of the minimal carboxy-terminal domain, thereby identifying a specific interdomain linker region. We have measured the affinity constants for Int binding to each of the five arm sites and the cooperativity factors for Int binding to the two pairs of adjacent arm sites, and we have identified several DNA structural features that contribute to the observed patterns of Int binding to arm sites. Taken together, the results highlight several interesting features of arm DNA binding that invite speculation about additional levels of complexity in the regulation of lambda site-specific recombination.  相似文献   

20.
We have used three approaches to studying the interaction of lambda Int protein with bacteriophage attachment site DNA, POP': location of binding sites by retention of DNA fragments in a filter binding assay, reconstruction of a binding site by DNA synthesis and protection of a binding site from an exonuclease. Retention of restriction fragments on nitrocellulose filters in the presence of Int protein was used to locate binding sites. A high affinity binding site lies in P' between base pairs -6 and +173 from the center of the common core sequence, and low affinity sites are found in the 200 base pair region left of position -6. Reconstruction of the high affinity binding site region from the right using primed DNA synthesis and testing for filter binding in the presence of Int protein shows that sequences sufficient for tight binding of Int protein lie to the right of position +66. When attachment site DNA is protected by bound Int protein against digestion by exonuclease III, four Int dependent protection bands are seen in positions +58, +68, +79 and +88. This can be interpreted either as showing that four Int protein monomers bind to the high affinity region in series, or as evidence for wrapping of the DNA around Int protein, leading to structural changes resembling those occurring to DNA in nucleosomes.  相似文献   

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