Literature DB >> 6315732

Coordinate ion pair formation between EcoRI endonuclease and DNA.

L Jen-Jacobson, M Kurpiewski, D Lesser, J Grable, H W Boyer, J M Rosenberg, P J Greene.   

Abstract

The free energy of the binding reaction between EcoRI restriction endonuclease and a specific cognate dodecadeoxynucleotide (d(CGCGAATTCGCG)) has contributions from both electrostatic and nonelectrostatic components. These contributions were dissected by measuring the effects of varying salt concentration on the equilibrium binding constant and applying the thermodynamic analyses of Record et al. (Record, M. T., Jr., Lohman, T. M., and deHaseth, P. L. (1976) J. Mol. Biol. 107, 145-158). Endonuclease mutation S187 (Arg 187 to Ser) (Greene, P. J., Gupta, M., Boyer, H. W., Brown, W. E., and Rosenberg, J. M. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 2143-2153) did not significantly affect the nonelectrostatic component but did perturb the electrostatic contribution to the binding energy (we are numbering the amino acid residues according to the DNA sequence). The former was determined by extrapolating the linear portion of the salt dependence curve (0.125 to 0.25 M KCl) to 1 M ionic strength, with the same result for both wild type and S187 endonucleases at both pH 6.0 and 7.4 (-8.5 +/- 1.5 kcal/mol or greater than 50% of the total binding free energy). The slopes of these same curves yield estimates of eight ionic interactions between wild type endonuclease and the DNA at both pH values. By contrast, binding of EcoRI-S187 to dodecanucleotide involves six charge-charge interactions at pH 6.0. Only two ionic interactions are observed at pH 7.4. This was unexpected since gel permeation chromatography demonstrated that the recognition complex for both wild type and S187 proteins contains an enzyme dimer and a DNA duplex. EcoRI-S187 endonuclease retains wild type DNA sequence specificity, and the rate of the phosphodiester hydrolysis step is also unchanged. Thus, electrostatic interactions are functionally separable from sequence recognition and strand cleavage. Our results also establish that arginine 187 plays a key role in the electrostatic function and suggest that it might be located at the DNA-protein interface. The disproportionate loss of ion pairs at pH 7.4 can be rationalized by a model which suggests that six conformationally mobile ionic groups on the protein act in a coordinated manner during the interaction with DNA.

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6315732

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  26 in total

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