| Literature DB >> 31325439 |
Federica Battistini1, Adam Hospital1, Diana Buitrago1, Diego Gallego1, Pablo D Dans1, Josep Lluis Gelpí2, Modesto Orozco3.
Abstract
The rules governing sequence-specific DNA-protein recognition are under a long-standing debate regarding the prevalence of base versus shape readout mechanisms to explain sequence specificity and of the conformational selection versus induced fit binding paradigms to explain binding-related conformational changes in DNA. Using a combination of atomistic simulations on a subset of representative sequences and mesoscopic simulations at the protein-DNA interactome level, we demonstrate the prevalence of the shape readout model in determining sequence-specificity and of the conformational selection paradigm in defining the general mechanism for binding-related conformational changes in DNA. Our results suggest that the DNA uses a double mechanism to adapt its structure to the protein: it moves along the easiest deformation modes to approach the bioactive conformation, while final adjustments require localized rearrangements at the base-pair step and backbone level. Our study highlights the large impact of B-DNA dynamics in modulating DNA-protein binding.Keywords: DNA–protein recognition; PDB data mining; molecular dynamics; principal component analysis; structural analysis
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31325439 DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2019.07.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Biol ISSN: 0022-2836 Impact factor: 5.469