Structural analysis of DNA–protein complexes regulating the restriction–modification system Esp 1396I
Author(s) -
Martin Richard N. A.,
McGeehan John E.,
Ball Neil J.,
Streeter Simon D.,
Thresh SarahJane,
Kneale G. G.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
acta crystallographica section f
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1744-3091
DOI - 10.1107/s174430911302126x
Subject(s) - protein–dna interaction , dna , cooperativity , restriction enzyme , cooperative binding , operator (biology) , repressor , dimer , crystallography , biology , biophysics , chemistry , dna binding protein , stereochemistry , gene , biochemistry , binding site , gene expression , transcription factor , organic chemistry
The controller protein of the type II restriction–modification (RM) system Esp 1396I binds to three distinct DNA operator sequences upstream of the methyltransferase and endonuclease genes in order to regulate their expression. Previous biophysical and crystallographic studies have shown molecular details of how the controller protein binds to the operator sites with very different affinities. Here, two protein–DNA co‐crystal structures containing portions of unbound DNA from native operator sites are reported. The DNA in both complexes shows significant distortion in the region between the conserved symmetric sequences, similar to that of a DNA duplex when bound by the controller protein (C‐protein), indicating that the naked DNA has an intrinsic tendency to bend when not bound to the C‐protein. Moreover, the width of the major groove of the DNA adjacent to a bound C‐protein dimer is observed to be significantly increased, supporting the idea that this DNA distortion contributes to the substantial cooperativity found when a second C‐protein dimer binds to the operator to form the tetrameric repression complex.
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