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Structural Basis for DNA Binding Specificity by the Auxin-Dependent ARF Transcription Factors
Author(s) -
D. Roeland Boer,
Alejandra Freire Rios,
W. van den Berg,
Terrens N. V. Saaki,
Iain W. Manfield,
Stefan Kepinski,
Irene López-Vidrieo,
José M. FrancoZorrilla,
Sacco C. de Vries,
Roberto Solano,
Dolf Weijers,
Miquel Coll
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2013.12.027
Subject(s) - biology , auxin , transcription factor , dna , microbiology and biotechnology , arabidopsis , dna binding protein , genetics , binding site , dna binding domain , transcription (linguistics) , function (biology) , gene , biochemistry , mutant , linguistics , philosophy
Auxin regulates numerous plant developmental processes by controlling gene expression via a family of functionally distinct DNA-binding auxin response factors (ARFs), yet the mechanistic basis for generating specificity in auxin response is unknown. Here, we address this question by solving high-resolution crystal structures of the pivotal Arabidopsis developmental regulator ARF5/MONOPTEROS (MP), its divergent paralog ARF1, and a complex of ARF1 and a generic auxin response DNA element (AuxRE). We show that ARF DNA-binding domains also homodimerize to generate cooperative DNA binding, which is critical for in vivo ARF5/MP function. Strikingly, DNA-contacting residues are conserved between ARFs, and we discover that monomers have the same intrinsic specificity. ARF1 and ARF5 homodimers, however, differ in spacing tolerated between binding sites. Our data identify the DNA-binding domain as an ARF dimerization domain, suggest that ARF dimers bind complex sites as molecular calipers with ARF-specific spacing preference, and provide an atomic-scale mechanistic model for specificity in auxin response.

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