667 research outputs found

    Rationalising sequence selection by ligand assemblies in the DNA minor groove : the case for thiazotropsin A

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    DNA-sequence and structure dependence on the formation of minor groove complexes at 5′-XCTAGY-3′ by the short lexitropsin thiazotropsin A are explored based on NMR spectroscopy, isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), circular dichroism (CD) and qualitative molecular modeling. The structure and solution behaviour of the complexes are similar whether X = A, T, C or G and Z = T, A, I or C, CCTAGI being thermodynamically the most favoured (ΔG = -11.1 ± 0.1 kcal.mol-1). Binding site selectivity observed by NMR for ACTAGT in the presence of TCTAGA when both accessible sequences are concatenated in a 15-mer DNA duplex construct is consistent with thermodynamic parameters (ΙΔGΙACTAGT > ΙΔGΙTCTAGA) measured separately for the binding sites and with predictions from modeling studies. Steric bulk in the minor groove for Y = G causes unfavourable ligand-DNA interactions reflected in lower Gibbs free energy of binding (ΔG = -8.5 ± 0.01 kcal.mol-1). ITC and CD data establish that thiazotropsin A binds the ODNs with binding constants between 106 and 108 M-1 and reveal that binding is driven enthalpically through hydrogen bond formation and van der Waals interactions. The consequences of these findings are considered with respect to ligand self-association and the energetics responsible for driving DNA recognition by small molecule DNA minor groove binder

    Specificity of Atonal and Scute bHLH factors: analysis of cognate E box binding sites and the influence of Senseless

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    The question of how proneural bHLH transcription factors recognise and regulate their target genes is still relatively poorly understood. We previously showed that Scute and Atonal target genes have different E box motifs, suggesting that specific DNA interactions contribute to differences in their target gene specificity. Here we show that Scute and Atonal proteins (in combination with Daughterless) can activate reporter gene expression via their cognate E boxes in a non-neuronal cell culture system, suggesting that the proteins have strong intrinsic abilities to recognise different E box motifs in the absence of specialised cofactors. Functional comparison of E boxes from several target genes and site-directed mutagenesis of E box motifs suggests that specificity and activity require further sequence elements flanking both sides of the previously identified E box motifs. Moreover, the proneural cofactor, Senseless, can augment the function of Scute and Atonal on their cognate E boxes and therefore may contribute to proneural specificity

    Impact of War

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    Impact of War Podcasts: Impact of War Impact of War: The Cost of War Impact of War: Fina

    A flexible integrative approach based on random forest improves prediction of transcription factor binding sites

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    Transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs) are DNA sequences of 6-15 base pairs. Interaction of these TFBSs with transcription factors (TFs) is largely responsible for most spatiotemporal gene expression patterns. Here, we evaluate to what extent sequence-based prediction of TFBSs can be improved by taking into account the positional dependencies of nucleotides (NPDs) and the nucleotide sequence-dependent structure of DNA. We make use of the random forest algorithm to flexibly exploit both types of information. Results in this study show that both the structural method and the NPD method can be valuable for the prediction of TFBSs. Moreover, their predictive values seem to be complementary, even to the widely used position weight matrix (PWM) method. This led us to combine all three methods. Results obtained for five eukaryotic TFs with different DNA-binding domains show that our method improves classification accuracy for all five eukaryotic TFs compared with other approaches. Additionally, we contrast the results of seven smaller prokaryotic sets with high-quality data and show that with the use of high-quality data we can significantly improve prediction performance. Models developed in this study can be of great use for gaining insight into the mechanisms of TF binding

    Two distinct DNA sequences recognized by transcription factors represent enthalpy and entropy optima

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    Most transcription factors (TFs) can bind to a population of sequences closely related to a single optimal site. However, some TFs can bind to two distinct sequences that represent two local optima in the Gibbs free energy of binding (Delta G). To determine the molecular mechanism behind this effect, we solved the structures of human HOXB13 and CDX2 bound to their two optimal DNA sequences, CAATAAA and TCGTAAA. Thermodynamic analyses by isothermal titration calorimetry revealed that both sites were bound with similar Delta G. However, the interaction with the CAA sequence was driven by change in enthalpy (Delta H), whereas the TCG site was bound with similar affinity due to smaller loss of entropy (Delta S). This thermodynamic mechanism that leads to at least two local optima likely affects many macromolecular interactions, as Delta G depends on two partially independent variables Delta H and Delta S according to the central equation of thermodynamics, Delta G = Delta H - T Delta S.Peer reviewe

    Mapping the internal recognition surface of an octanuclear coordination cage using guest libraries

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    Size and shape criteria for guest binding inside the cavity of an octanuclear cubic coordination cage in water have been established using a new fluorescence displacement assay to quantify guest binding. For aliphatic cyclic ketones of increasing size (from C5 to C11), there is a linear relationship between ΔG for guest binding and the guest’s surface area: the change in ΔG for binding is 0.3 kJ mol–1 Å–2, corresponding to 5 kJ mol–1 for each additional CH2 group in the guest, in good agreement with expectations based on hydrophobic desolvation. The highest association constant is K = 1.2 × 106 M–1 for cycloundecanone, whose volume is approximately 50% of the cavity volume; for larger C12 and C13 cyclic ketones, the association constant progressively decreases as the guests become too large. For a series of C10 aliphatic ketones differing in shape but not size, ΔG for guest binding showed no correlation with surface area. These guests are close to the volume limit of the cavity (cf. Rebek’s 55% rule), so the association constant is sensitive to shape complementarity, with small changes in guest structure resulting in large changes in binding affinity. The most flexible members of this series (linear aliphatic ketones) did not bind, whereas the more preorganized cyclic ketones all have association constants of 104–105 M–1. A crystal structure of the cage·cycloundecanone complex shows that the guest carbonyl oxygen is directed into a binding pocket defined by a convergent set of CH groups, which act as weak hydrogen-bond donors, and also shows close contacts between the exterior surface of the disc-shaped guest and the interior surface of the pseudospherical cage cavity despite the slight mismatch in shape

    Temperature Dependence of Backbone Dynamics in Human Ileal Bile Acid-Binding Protein: Implications for the Mechanism of Ligand Binding

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    Human ileal bile acid-binding protein (I-BABP), a member of the family of intracellular lipid binding proteins plays a key role in the cellular trafficking and metabolic regulation of bile salts. The protein has two internal and, according to a recent study, an additional superficial binding site and binds di- and trihydroxy bile salts with positive cooperativity and a high degree of site-selectivity. Previously, in the apo form, we have identified an extensive network of conformational fluctuations on the millisecond time scale, which cease upon ligation. Additionally, ligand binding at room temperature was found to be accompanied by a slight rigidification of picosecond-nanosecond (ps-ns) backbone flexibility. In the current study, temperature-dependent N-15 NMR spin relaxation measurements were used to gain more insight into the role of dynamics in human I-BABP-bile salt recognition. According to our analysis, residues sensing a conformational exchange in the apo state can be grouped into two clusters with slightly different exchange rates. The entropy-enthalpy compensation observed for both clusters suggests a disorder-order transition between a ground and a sparsely populated higher energy state in the absence of ligands. Analysis of the faster, ps-ns motion of N-15-H-1 bond vectors indicates an unusual nonlinear temperature-dependence for both ligation states. Intriguingly, while bile salt binding results in a more uniform response to temperature change throughout the protein, the temperature derivative of the generalized order parameter shows different responses to temperature increase for the two forms of the protein in the investigated temperature range. Analysis of both slow and fast motions in human I-BABP indicates largely different energy landscapes for the apo and halo states suggesting that optimization of binding interactions might be achieved by altering the dynamic behavior of specific segments in the protein

    Protein–DNA electrostatics

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    Gene expression and regulation rely on an apparently finely tuned set of reactions between some proteins and DNA. Such DNA-binding proteins have to find specific sequences on very long DNA molecules and they mostly do so in the absence of any active process. It has been rapidly recognized that, to achieve this task, these proteins should be efficient at both searching (i.e., sampling fast relevant parts of DNA) and finding (i.e., recognizing the specific site). A two-mode search and variants of it have been suggested since the 1970s to explain either a fast search or an efficient recognition. Combining these two properties at a phenomenological level is, however, more difficult as they appear to have antagonist roles. To overcome this difficulty, one may simply need to drop the dichotomic view inherent to the two-mode search and look more thoroughly at the set of interactions between DNA-binding proteins and a given DNA segment either specific or nonspecific. This chapter demonstrates that, in doing so in a very generic way, one may indeed find a potential reconciliation between a fast search and an efficient recognition. Although a lot remains to be done, this could be the time for a change of paradigm

    Microcalorimetry and spectroscopic studies on the binding of dye janus green blue to deoxyribonucleic acid

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    The interaction of the phenazinium dye janus green blue (JGB) with deoxyribonucleic acid was investigated using isothermal titration calorimetry and thermal melting experiments. The calorimetric data were supplemented by spectroscopic studies. Calorimetry results suggested the binding affinity of the dye to DNA to be of the order of 105 M-1. The binding was predominantly entropy driven with a small negative favorable enthalpy contribution to the standard molar Gibbs energy change.The binding became weaker as the temperature and salt concentration was raised. The temperature dependence of the standard molar enthalpy changes yielded negative values of standard molar heat capacity change for the complexation revealing substantial hydrophobic contribution in the DNA binding. An enthalpy–entropy compensation behavior was also observed in the system. The salt dependence of the binding yielded the release of 0.69 number of cations on binding of each dye molecule. The non-polyelectrolytic contribution was found to be the predominant force in the binding interaction. Thermal melting studies revealed that the DNA helix was stabilized against denaturation by the dye. The binding was also characterized by absorbance, resonance light scattering and circular dichroism spectral measurements. The binding constants from the spectral results were close to those obtained from the calorimetric data. The energetic aspects of the interaction of the dye JGB to double stranded DNA are supported by strong binding revealed from the spectral data
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