scholarly journals Thermodynamic Model for B-Z Transition of DNA Induced by Z-DNA Binding Proteins

Molecules ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (11) ◽  
pp. 2748 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ae-Ree Lee ◽  
Na-Hyun Kim ◽  
Yeo-Jin Seo ◽  
Seo-Ree Choi ◽  
Joon-Hwa Lee

Z-DNA is stabilized by various Z-DNA binding proteins (ZBPs) that play important roles in RNA editing, innate immune response, and viral infection. In this review, the structural and dynamics of various ZBPs complexed with Z-DNA are summarized to better understand the mechanisms by which ZBPs selectively recognize d(CG)-repeat DNA sequences in genomic DNA and efficiently convert them to left-handed Z-DNA to achieve their biological function. The intermolecular interaction of ZBPs with Z-DNA strands is mediated through a single continuous recognition surface which consists of an α3 helix and a β-hairpin. In the ZBP-Z-DNA complexes, three identical, conserved residues (N173, Y177, and W195 in the Zα domain of human ADAR1) play central roles in the interaction with Z-DNA. ZBPs convert a 6-base DNA pair to a Z-form helix via the B-Z transition mechanism in which the ZBP first binds to B-DNA and then shifts the equilibrium from B-DNA to Z-DNA, a conformation that is then selectively stabilized by the additional binding of a second ZBP molecule. During B-Z transition, ZBPs selectively recognize the alternating d(CG)n sequence and convert it to a Z-form helix in long genomic DNA through multiple sequence discrimination steps. In addition, the intermediate complex formed by ZBPs and B-DNA, which is modulated by varying conditions, determines the degree of B-Z transition.

2010 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 335-344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Doyoun Kim ◽  
Young -Ho Lee ◽  
Hye-Yeon Hwang ◽  
Kyeong Kim ◽  
Hyun-Ju Park

BIOPHYSICS ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 53 (6) ◽  
pp. 663-664 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. K. Vlasov ◽  
A. V. Budzko ◽  
M. A. Rubin ◽  
V. G. Tumanyan ◽  
A. A. Makarov ◽  
...  

1990 ◽  
Vol 56 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 115-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susumu Ohno

SummaryRegardless of their origins, functions, and base compositions, all DNAs are scriptures written following the same grammatical rule. At the level of syllables, two, CG and TA are seldom used, while three, TG, CT and CA are utilized with abundance. Accordingly, at the level of three-letter words, two complementary base trimers, CTG and CAG, invariably enjoy frequent usage. Inasmuch as two of the three frequently used syllables, TG and CA are complementary to each other, while two seldom used syllables, CG and TA, are both palindromes, two complementary strands of DNA are inherently symmetrical with each other. Consequently, palindromic sequences as favourite targets of DNA-binding proteins occur at unsuspectedly high frequencies, if they contain TG and CA or CTG and CAG. Nevertheless, there are grammatical rules operating among these high frequency palindromes as well; e.g. the palindromic tetramer TGCA occurs nearly two times more often than its reciprocal; CATG. Thus, DNA-binding proteins are provided with a wealth of abundant targets whose densities are influenced by a regional difference in GC/AT ratios to variable degrees. One palindromic heptamer CAGNCTG is an ideal target of one DNA-binding protein engaged in chromosome packaging and in generation of banding patterns. This heptamer occurs once every 1000 bases in moderately GC-rich sequences, while its incidence is reduced to once every 3000 bases in extremely AT-rich sequences. The above must be the very reason that a solitary human X-chromosome DNA coated with mouse DNA-binding proteins in mouse-man somatic hybrids still maintains the original banding pattern and that the inactive X remains inactive, while the active X remains active.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zheming Cao ◽  
Weidong Ding ◽  
Xuwen Bing ◽  
Jun Qiang ◽  
Pao Xu

AbstractGenomic DNA of zebrafish was first digested incompletely with Msp I, and then the fragments were joined to form rearranged genomic DNA. This rearranged genomic DNA was incompletely digested with EcoR I, and the fragments were linked with a long adaptor. Two primers (Gmprimer1 and Gmprimer2) were designed according to the adaptor sequence for two-step amplification. The Gmprimer1-amplified products were microinjected into fertilized zebrafish eggs after purification and a red flesh mutant was observed among 42 surviving zebrafish. We obtained several introduced sequences by two-step amplification. The second set of Gmprimer2-amplified products were purified and microinjected into fertilized zebrafish eggs; all 37 surviving fish were red flesh mutants. We found that the largest amplified band from the mutant from the first microinjection was also present in the amplified pattern from six mutants from the second microinjection. The length of the sequence was 2,565 bp, but it did not encode any proteins. Microinjecting this sequence into fertilized zebrafish eggs produced the red flesh mutant. The sequences differed slightly among different individuals from the second microinjection. Most regions of these sequences were the same, with the exception of a hypervariable region. We mixed 10 such sequences equally and microinjected them into zebrafish zygotes; the findings showed that most zygotes died and the surviving zebrafish were almost all mutants. By genome walking, we found that the site of insertion of the fragment was the same, beginning at position 41,365,003 of the eighth chromosome, and that downstream of the introduced fragment is a conservative sequence of 6,536 bp (named Cao-sequence), starting from a small reverse repeat sequence, not encoding any gene, nor similar to any known regulatory sequence. It has 322 homologous sequences in the zebrafish genome, which are distributed in all chromosomes. We designed two primers within Cao-sequence and several primers specific for different locations upstream of it. Compared with normal zebrafish, we found that the amplified patterns of all mutants in Cao-sequence regions changed to varying degrees. To further understand the effect of the introduced sequence on the zebrafish genomes, we selected six mutants for whole-genome resequencing. The results showed that numerous Cao-sequences from these six mutants were partially deleted and the lengths of the deletions was mostly approximately 6,100 bp, being located at the 5′ end of Cao-sequences. Among them, 43 Cao-sequence loci were commonly deleted from the six mutants (with slightly different locations), and the other deletion sites were not identical. We think that different deletion combinations of Cao-sequence may show different mutation characteristics. The tail part from four red flesh mutants and three individuals of wild type were collected for transcriptome sequencing. TopGO analysis showed that the 4 most significant enrichment nodes were sequence specific DNA binding proteins, sequence specific transcription factors, chromatin proteins and zinc binding proteins. The results of KEGG enrichment analysis showed that the top four affected KEGG-pathways were metabolic pathways, oxidative phosphorylation, citrate cycle and 2-oxocarboxylic acid metabolism.We conclude that deletion of Cao-sequence can affect the expression of a series of transcription regulators and specific DNA binding proteins, then many basic metabolic processes were disturbed which led to mutations.


Genetics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 214 (3) ◽  
pp. 623-634
Author(s):  
Elnaz Ghotbi ◽  
Kristina Lackey ◽  
Vicki Wong ◽  
Katie T. Thompson ◽  
Evan G. Caston ◽  
...  

Polycomb-group (PcG) proteins are evolutionarily conserved epigenetic regulators whose primary function is to maintain the transcriptional repression of target genes. Recruitment of Drosophila melanogaster PcG proteins to target genes requires the presence of one or more Polycomb Response Elements (PREs). The functions or necessity for more than one PRE at a gene are not clear and individual PREs at some loci may have distinct regulatory roles. Various combinations of sequence-specific DNA-binding proteins are present at a given PRE, but only Pleiohomeotic (Pho) is present at all strong PREs. The giant (gt) locus has two PREs, a proximal PRE1 and a distal PRE2. During early embryonic development, Pho binds to PRE1 ∼30-min prior to stable binding to PRE2. This observation indicated a possible dependence of PRE2 on PRE1 for PcG recruitment; however, we find here that PRE2 recruits PcG proteins and maintains transcriptional repression independently of Pho binding to PRE1. Pho-like (Phol) is partially redundant with Pho during larval development and binds to the same DNA sequences in vitro. Although binding of Pho to PRE1 is dependent on the presence of consensus Pho-Phol-binding sites, Phol binding is less so and appears to play a minimal role in recruiting other PcG proteins to gt. Another PRE-binding protein, Sp1/Kruppel-like factor, is dependent on the presence of Pho for PRE1 binding. Further, we show that, in addition to silencing gene expression, PcG proteins dampen transcription of an active gene.


2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (21) ◽  
pp. 11103-11113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maoxuan Lin ◽  
Jun-tao Guo

Abstract Knowledge of protein–DNA binding specificity has important implications in understanding DNA metabolism, transcriptional regulation and developing therapeutic drugs. Previous studies demonstrated hydrogen bonds between amino acid side chains and DNA bases play major roles in specific protein–DNA interactions. In this paper, we investigated the roles of individual DNA strands and protein secondary structure types in specific protein–DNA recognition based on side chain-base hydrogen bonds. By comparing the contribution of each DNA strand to the overall binding specificity between DNA-binding proteins with different degrees of binding specificity, we found that highly specific DNA-binding proteins show balanced hydrogen bonding with each of the two DNA strands while multi-specific DNA binding proteins are generally biased towards one strand. Protein-base pair hydrogen bonds, in which both bases of a base pair are involved in forming hydrogen bonds with amino acid side chains, are more prevalent in the highly specific protein–DNA complexes than those in the multi-specific group. Amino acids involved in side chain-base hydrogen bonds favor strand and coil secondary structure types in highly specific DNA-binding proteins while multi-specific DNA-binding proteins prefer helices.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. e30446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chien-Yu Chen ◽  
Ting-Ying Chien ◽  
Chih-Kang Lin ◽  
Chih-Wei Lin ◽  
Yi-Zhong Weng ◽  
...  

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