| Literature DB >> 26831565 |
Walter F Mangel1, William J McGrath1, Kan Xiong2,3, Vito Graziano1, Paul C Blainey2,3.
Abstract
Recently, we showed the adenovirus proteinase interacts productively with its protein substrates in vitro and in vivo in nascent virus particles via one-dimensional diffusion along the viral DNA. The mechanism by which this occurs has heretofore been unknown. We show sliding of these proteins along DNA occurs on a new vehicle in molecular biology, a 'molecular sled' named pVIc. This 11-amino acid viral peptide binds to DNA independent of sequence. pVIc slides on DNA, exhibiting the fastest one-dimensional diffusion constant, 26±1.8 × 10(6) (bp)(2) s(-1). pVIc is a 'molecular sled,' because it can slide heterologous cargos along DNA, for example, a streptavidin tetramer. Similar peptides, for example, from the C terminus of β-actin or NLSIII of the p53 protein, slide along DNA. Characteristics of the 'molecular sled' in its milieu (virion, nucleus) have implications for how proteins in the nucleus of cells interact and imply a new form of biochemistry, one-dimensional biochemistry.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26831565 PMCID: PMC4740752 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms10202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Binding of pVIc to DNA.
(a) The equilibrium dissociation constant, Kd(app.) for the binding of pVIc to DNA was determined by incubating 10 nM Cy3B-pVIc with increasing amounts of 12-mer dsDNA and measuring the change in anisotropy. The experiment was repeated five times. The line through the closed circles represents the nonlinear regression fit of the experimental data to a 1:1 ligand–receptor model. The Kd(app.) was 264±25 nM (ref. 14). (b) The stoichiometry of binding of pVIc to DNA was determined by incubating 10 nM Cy3B-pVIc and 10 μM pVIc with increasing amounts of 36-mer dsDNA and measuring the change in anisotropy. The two straight lines were drawn using the data in the filled-in circles. The point with the open circle was not included in the fits for the lines. The intersection point of the two lines is the minimal concentration of DNA required to saturate 10 μM pVIc; it indicates six molecules of pVIc saturate one molecule of 36-mer dsDNA. (c) The number of base pairs of DNA occluded by the binding of one pVIc to DNA. The experiment in b was repeated but with 12-mer and with 18-mer dsDNA, and the stoichiometries of binding plotted versus the DNA length in base pairs. The line indicates that one molecule of pVIc occupies 6.6 bp of dsDNA. (d) Amino-acid sequences of pVIcs from various adenoviruses, the last eight amino acids of β-actin and NLSIII from the p53 protein. Basic amino acids are coloured in bright red, hydrophobic in blue, polar in light green, cysteine in light yellow, and glycine and proline in light grey.
One-dimensional diffusion constants (D 1), equilibrium dissociation constants (K d) and size of binding site on DNA.
| pVIc (12) 1,350 (11) | ND | ND | 693±84 (pH 8) | 7 | 1, 2, 3 |
| pVIc(low salt) | 26.0±1.8 | 11 | 264±25 (pH 7) | 7 | 1, 4, 5 |
| pVIc(high salt) | 17.9±3.5 | 10.7 | ND | ND | 1, 4 |
| AVP (12) 23,087 (204) | (0.02±0.07) | 63.1±5.8 (pH 7) | ND | 1, 3, 6, 7 | |
| AVP–pVIc (36) 24,435 (215) | 21.0±1.9 | 15.6 | 4.6±2.2 (pH 7.5) | 6 | 1, 3, 5, 8 |
| AVP–pVIc (high salt) | 17.1±3.5 | 16.2 | ND | ND | 1, 4, 5 |
| (pVIc-biotin: streptavidin) (18) ∼70,000 (651) | 2.21±0.21 | 1.99 | 35±5.0 (pH 7.5) | ND | 1, 8 |
| pVI (33) 27,014 (250) | 1.45±0.13 | 1.61 | 46±1.6 (pH 8) | 8 | 1, 2, 7, 9 |
| Protein VI (33) 22,118 (206) | ND | ND | 307±38 (pH 8) | ND | 1, 2, 9 |
| 8-Actin-C (12) 988 (8) | 5.45 | 3.63 | 5.0±0.8 (pH 7) | ND | 1 |
| 11-Actin-C (12) 1,230 (11) | 6.40 | 3.29 | ND | ND | 1 |
| 13-p53-C (30) 1,593 (13) | 11.2±0.8 | 3.5 | 780±96 (pH 7.4) | ND | 1, 10 |
AVP, Adenovirus proteinase; ND, not determined; pVIc, peptide derived from C terminus of pVI, the precursor to protein VI; pVI, Precursor to adenovirus protein VI; Protein VI, Adenovirus protein VI.
Notes: (1) to convert from bp to nm: 106 (bp)2 s−1=102,400 (nm)2 s−1. For Kd(app.) determinations, at pH 7.5 or 8, the dye was fluorescein, and the label was on the DNA; at pH 7 the dye was Cy3B and the label was on the protein. For pVIc-biotin: streptavidin experiments at pH 7.5, the dye used was Alexa Fluor 546, and there were two dye molecules per streptavidin. pVIc was labelled with Cy3B at Cys10′. AVP and AVP–pVIc were labelled with Cy3B at Cys199. The actin C-terminal peptides were labelled on their cysteine residue with Cy3B. pVI was labelled at Cys249 with Cy3B. The p53 CTD segment (aa 376–388) was labelled at its N terminus with tetramethyl rhodamine; (2) assay buffer was 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8, 0.025% DDM, 0.1 mM DTT; (3) ref. 10; (4) Binding assay buffer was 20 mM HEPES, pH 7, 0.025% DDM, 10 mM NaCl and 0.1 mM DTT. The NaCl concentration in the sliding assay buffer was 2–6 mM NaCl; in the high salt-sliding assay buffer, 20–25 mM NaCl was present (see Supplementary Text); (5) ref. 14; (6) whole population-mean D1 calculated from one population (99–96% of the molecules bound to DNA) having a D1 of zero and another population (1–4% of the molecules bound to DNA) having a D1 of 1.7 × 106 (bp)2 s−1, with s.d. of 1.9 × 106 (bp)2 s−1; (7) ref. 11; (8) assay buffer was 20 mM Na phosphate, pH 7.5, 0.05% DDM; (9) ref. 12, (10) Assay in 10 mM sodium phosphate buffered at pH 6.5 or 7.4.
Figure 2One-dimensional diffusion of pVIc along DNA.
(a) Rapid motion of a pVIc molecule along flow-stretched dsDNA recorded at 50 frames per second. The kymograph was generated from raw images showing motion along DNA (each vertical strip of pixels is taken from one movie frame) as a function of time (horizontal axis). The red line represents the position estimate in each frame determined using Gaussian centroid determination. (b) Diffusion of pVIc along flow-stretched dsDNA. The 11-amino acid peptide pVIc diffuses rapidly along DNA (x(t), left axis, 35 trajectories). (c) MSD of the trajectories shown in b along the DNA (<Δx(τ)2>, left axis). (d) Histogram of the diffusion constants for pVIc diffusing along dsDNA. The initial slopes of the MSD of each of the 35 trajectories from pVIc molecules sliding on DNA plotted in c were used to calculate one-dimensional diffusion constants (D1) according to D1=<Δx2>/2Δτ. The results are displayed in the histogram; the mean was equal to 26.0 × 106 (bp)2 s−1 (ref. 14). In b and c motion transverse to the DNA (y(t) and <Δy(τ)2>, respectively, right axes) is represented on the same scale, as a control.
Figure 3Model for the binding of pVIc and AVP–pVIc complexes to DNA.
(a) The structure of a B-form DNA dodecamer (PDB ID: 1HQ7) is displayed with four of its phosphate groups coloured in red. (b) The structure of pVIc obtained from the crystal structure of the AVP–pVIc complex (PDB ID: 1NLN) is shown docked to the DNA. The four basic residues of pVIc, the one lysine residue and the three arginine residues, are coloured in light blue and dark blue, respectively. (c) The DNA-pVIc complex was rotated ∼90° on its x axis to show the contacts of the peptide with the major groove. (d) The AVP–pVIc structure is displayed, showing that DNA binding is dominated by the pVIc moiety. The majority of the binding enthalpy between the protein–peptide complex and DNA is likely to originate through electrostatic interactions between the four, contiguous, basic residues of pVIc (KRRR, in blue) in the AVP–pVIc complex and phosphate groups (in red) in the backbone of the dsDNA. The active site of AVP is coloured pink, showing that the proteinase active site is sterically unhindered by DNA binding, consistent with the proteinase being able to bind to and cleave substrates while bound to and sliding on DNA. The figure was rendered using PyMol (The PyMOL Molecular Graphics System, Version 1.2r.3pre, Schrödinger, LLC).
Figure 4Sliding of heterologous proteins and peptides.
(a) The equilibrium dissociation constant for the binding of (pVIc-biotin)-streptavidin to 18-mer dsDNA was determined by fluorescence resonance energy transfer. The quenching of the fluorescence intensity of the donor molecule, fluorescein-labelled 18-bp dsDNA, as a function of the concentration of the acceptor molecule (pVIc-biotin)-streptavidin Alexa Fluor 546 is shown by the closed circles. The relative fluorescence intensity is the fluorescence intensity at a specific concentration of acceptor divided by the initial fluorescence intensity of the donor in the absence of acceptor. The line through the closed circles represents the nonlinear regression fit of the experimental data to a 1:1 ligand–receptor model. The open circles represent data from the titration of 10 nM fluorescein-labelled 18-mer dsDNA with streptavidin Alexa Fluor 546. These data indicated that streptavidin Alex Fluor 546 did not bind to DNA. (b) (pVIc-biotin)-streptavidin complexes diffuse rapidly along DNA (x(t), left axis, 106 trajectories). Motion transverse to the DNA (y(t), right axis, is represented on the same scale, as a control. (c) A peptide (SIVHRKCF) with the last 8 amino acids of β-actin diffuses rapidly (69 trajectories) along DNA x(t). (d) The 13-amino acid peptide of NLSIII of the p53 protein (STSRHKKLMFKTE) diffuses rapidly along DNA at pH 6.5 (45 trajectories).