A code controlling specific binding of regulatory proteins to DNA
β Scribed by A. V. Gursky; V. G. Tumanyan; A. S. Zasedatelev; A. L. Zhuze; S. L. Grokhovsky; B. P. Gottikh
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1976
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 835 KB
- Volume
- 2
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0301-4851
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A possible code is suggested that describes a correspondence between amino acid sequences in stereospecific sites of regulatory proteins and nucleotide sequences at the control sites on DNA. Stereospecific sites of regulatory proteins are assumed to contain pairs of antiparallel polypeptide chain segments which form a right-hand twisted antiparallel ~-sheet with single-stranded regions at the ends of the/3-structure. The binding reaction between regulatory protein and double-helical DNA is accompanied by significant structural alterations at stereospecific sites of the protein and DNA. Half of the hydrogen bonds normally existing in/3structure are broken upon complex formation with DNA and a new set of hydrogen bonds is formed between polypeptide amide groups and DNA base pairs. The code states a correspondence between four amino acid residues at a stereospecific site of the regulatory protein and an AT (GC) base pair at the control site. It predicts that there are six fundamental amino acid residues (serine, threonine, histidine, asparagine, glutamine and cysteine) whose arrangement in the stereospecific site determines the base pair sequence to which a given regulatory protein would bind preferentially.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
We describe a rapid analytical assay for identification of proteins binding to specific DNA sequences. The DAPSTER assay (DNA affinity preincubation specificity test of recognition assay) is a DNA affinity chromatography-based microassay that can discriminate between specific and nonspecific protein
An affinity matrix was constructed by synthesis of a DNA oligonucleotide on a Teflon fiber support followed by deblocking and hybridization of the complementary strand. It was used to purify a sequence-specific binding protein at least 100-fold to near homogeneity. This matrix is easily fabricated o
## Abstract A peptide corresponding to the three zinc finger domains of the human transcription factor Sp1 has been expressed and found to bind a consensus Sp1 binding site with the sequence 5β²βGGGGCGGGGβ3β². Examination of the amino acid distributions within a large zinc finger sequence data base a
This study examines matrix and nonmatrix nuclear proteins of the rabbit lens epithelial cells. The nuclear matrix proteins were isolated by modified Penman technique, which requires presence of detergents and nucleases, whereas nonmatrix nuclear proteins were obtained by high salt extraction. The da