Distinctive cognate sequence discrimination, bound DNA conformation, and binding modes in the E2 C-terminal domains from prototype human and bovine papillomaviruses

被引:36
作者
Ferreiro, DU
Lima, LMTR
Nadra, AD
Alonso, LG
Goldbaum, FA
de Prat-Gay, G
机构
[1] Univ Fed Rio de Janeiro, Fac Farm, BR-21941590 Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
[2] Univ Buenos Aires, Fac Ciencias Exactas & Nat, RA-1405 Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina
[3] Univ Buenos Aires, Inst Invest Bioquim Fdn Campomar, RA-1405 Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina
关键词
D O I
10.1021/bi001694r
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 [生物化学与分子生物学]; 081704 [应用化学];
摘要
The C-terminal DNA binding domain of the E2 protein is involved in transcriptional regulation and DNA replication in papillomaviruses. At low ionic strength, the domain has a tendency to form aggregates, a process readily reversible by the addition of salt. While fluorescence anisotropy measurements show a 1:1 stoichiometry at pH 5.5, we observed that a second HPV-16 E2 C-terminal dimer can bind per DNA site at pH 7.0. This was confirmed by displacement of bis-ANS binding, tryptophan fluorescence, native electrophoresis, and circular dichroism. The two binding events are nonequivalent, with a high-affinity binding involving one E2C dimer per DNA molecule with a K-D of 0.18 +/- 0.02 nM and a lower affinity binding mode of 2.0 +/- 0.2 nM. The bovine (BPV-1) E2 C-terminal domain binds to an HPV-16 E2 site with 350-fold lower affinity than the human cognate domain and binds 7-fold less tightly even to a bovine-derived DNA site. The ability to discriminate between cognate and noncognate sequences is 50-fold higher for the human domain, and the latter is 180-fold better than the bovine at discriminating specific from nonspecific DNA. A substantial conformational change in bound DNA is observed by near-UV circular dichroism. The bovine domain imposes a different DNA conformation than that caused by the human counterpart, which could be explained by a more pronounced bent. Structure-function differences and biochemical properties of the complexes depend on the protein domain rather than on the DNA, in line with crystallographic evidence. Despite the strong sequence homology and overall folding topology, the differences observed may explain the distinctive transcriptional regulation in bovine and human viruses.
引用
收藏
页码:14692 / 14701
页数:10
相关论文
共 40 条
[1]
A fluorescence anisotrophy study of DNA binding by HPV-11 E2C protein: A hierarchy of E2-binding sites [J].
Alexander, KA ;
Phelps, WC .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1996, 35 (30) :9864-9872
[2]
AUSBEL F, 1997, SHORT PROTOCOLS MOL
[3]
Crystal structure of the DNA-Binding domain of the Epstein-Barr virus origin-binding protein, EBNA1, bound to DNA [J].
Bochkarev, A ;
Barwell, JA ;
Pfuetzner, RA ;
Bochkareva, E ;
Frappier, L ;
Edwards, AM .
CELL, 1996, 84 (05) :791-800
[4]
Subunit affinities and stoichiometries of the human papillomavirus type 11 E1:E2:DNA complex [J].
Chao, SF ;
Rocque, WJ ;
Daniel, S ;
Czyzyk, LE ;
Phelps, WC ;
Alexander, KA .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1999, 38 (14) :4586-4594
[5]
CLACKSON T, 1991, PCR PRACTICAL APPROA, P202
[6]
CZERNIK PJ, 1994, J BIOL CHEM, V269, P27869
[7]
Multimerization of the adenovirus DNA-binding protein is the driving force for ATP-independent DNA unwinding during strand displacement synthesis [J].
Dekker, J ;
Kanellopoulos, PN ;
Loonstra, AK ;
vanOosterhout, JAWM ;
Leonard, K ;
Tucker, PA ;
vanderVliet, PC .
EMBO JOURNAL, 1997, 16 (06) :1455-1463
[8]
Origin DNA-binding proteins [J].
Edwards, AM ;
Bochkarev, A ;
Frappier, L .
CURRENT OPINION IN STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY, 1998, 8 (01) :49-53
[9]
Characterization of a partially folded monomer of the DNA-binding domain of human papillomavirus E2 protein obtained at high pressure [J].
Foguel, D ;
Silva, JL ;
de Prat-Gay, G .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 1998, 273 (15) :9050-9057
[10]
STRUCTURAL-ANALYSIS OF THE HUMAN PAPILLOMAVIRUS TYPE-16-E2 TRANSACTIVATOR WITH ANTIPEPTIDE ANTIBODIES REVEALS A HIGH MOBILITY REGION LINKING THE TRANSACTIVATION AND THE DNA-BINDING DOMAINS [J].
GAUTHIER, JM ;
DILLNER, J ;
YANIV, M .
NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 1991, 19 (25) :7073-7079