The energies and fine structures of some doubly excited resonances of lithiumlike beryllium are calculated using the saddle-point variational method. A restricted variational method is used to extrapolate a better nonrelativistic energy. Relativistic and mass polarization corrections are included. O
Protein—DNA recognition complexes: Conservation of structure and binding energy in the transition state
✍ Scribed by Linda Jen-Jacobson
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 665 KB
- Volume
- 44
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3525
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✦ Synopsis
This paper considers how enzymes that catalyze reactions at specific DNA sites have been engineered to overcome the problem of competitive inhibition by excess nonspecific binding sites on DNA. The formation of a specific protein-DNA recognition complex is discussed from both structural and thermodynamic perspectives, and contrasted with formation of nonspecific complexes. Evidence (from EcoRI and BamHI endonucleases) is presented that a wide variety of perturbations of the DNA substrate alter binding free energy but do not affect the free energy of activation for the chemical step; that is, many energetic factors contribute equally to the recognition complex and the transition-state complex. This implies that the specific recognition complex bears a close resemblance to the transition-state complex, such that very tight binding to the recognition site on the DNA substrate does not inhibit catalysis, but instead provides energy that is efficiently utilized along the path to the transition state. It is suggested that this view can be usefully extended to ''noncatalytic'' site-specific DNAbinding proteins like transcriptional activators and general transcription factors.
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