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1.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 35(13): 4409-19, 2007.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17576671

RESUMO

TBP recognizes its target sites, TATA boxes, by recognizing their sequence-dependent structure and flexibility. Studying this mode of TATA-box recognition, termed 'indirect readout', is important for elucidating the binding mechanism in this system, as well as for developing methods to locate new binding sites in genomic DNA. We determined the binding stability and TBP-induced TATA-box bending for consensus-like TATA boxes. In addition, we calculated the individual information score of all studied sequences. We show that various non-additive effects exist in TATA boxes, dependent on their structural properties. By several criterions, we divide TATA boxes to two main groups. The first group contains sequences with 3-4 consecutive adenines. Sequences in this group have a rigid context-independent cooperative structure, best described by a nearest-neighbor non-additive model. Sequences in the second group have a flexible, context-dependent conformation, which cannot be described by an additive model or by a nearest-neighbor non-additive model. Classifying TATA boxes by these and other structural rules clarifies the different recognition pathways and binding mechanisms used by TBP upon binding to different TATA boxes. We discuss the structural and evolutionary sources of the difficulties in predicting new binding sites by probabilistic weight-matrix methods for proteins in which indirect readout is dominant.


Assuntos
TATA Box , Proteína de Ligação a TATA-Box/metabolismo , Sequência de Bases , Sítios de Ligação , Sequência Consenso , DNA/química , DNA/metabolismo , Evolução Molecular , Cinética , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico , Ligação Proteica
2.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 34(1): 104-19, 2006.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16407329

RESUMO

We carried out in vitro selection experiments to systematically probe the effects of TATA-box flanking sequences on its interaction with the TATA-box binding protein (TBP). This study validates our previous hypothesis that the effect of the flanking sequences on TBP/TATA-box interactions is much more significant when the TATA box has a context-dependent DNA structure. Several interesting observations, with implications for protein-DNA interactions in general, came out of this study. (i) Selected sequences are selection-method specific and TATA-box dependent. (ii) The variability in binding stability as a function of the flanking sequences for (T-A)4 boxes is as large as the variability in binding stability as a function of the core TATA box itself. Thus, for (T-A)4 boxes the flanking sequences completely dominate and determine the binding interaction. (iii) Binding stabilities of all but one of the individual selected sequences of the (T-A)4 form is significantly higher than that of their mononucleotide-based consensus sequence. (iv) Even though the (T-A)4 sequence is symmetric the flanking sequence pattern is asymmetric. We propose that the plasticity of (T-A)n sequences increases the number of conformationally distinct TATA boxes without the need to extent the TBP contact region beyond the eight-base-pair long TATA box.


Assuntos
TATA Box , Proteína de Ligação a TATA-Box/metabolismo , Pareamento de Bases , Sequência de Bases , Sítios de Ligação , Sequência Consenso , DNA/química , DNA/metabolismo , Cinética , Ligação Proteica , Análise de Sequência de DNA
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