Title of article
Linkage of EcoRI dissociation from its specific DNA recognition site to water activity, salt concentration, and pH: separating their roles in specific and non-specific binding
Author/Authors
Nina Y. Sidorova، نويسنده , , Donald C. Rau، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
16
From page
801
To page
816
Abstract
We have measured the dependencies of both the dissociation rate of specifically bound EcoRI endonuclease and the ratio of non-specific and specific association constants on water activity, salt concentration, and pH in order to distinguish the contributions of these solution components to specific and non-specific binding. For proteins such as EcoRI that locate their specific recognition site efficiently by diffusing along non-specific DNA, the specific site dissociation rate can be separated into two steps: an equilibrium between non-specific and specific binding of the enzyme to DNA, and the dissociation of non-specifically bound protein. We demonstrated previously that the osmotic dependence of the dissociation rate is dominated by the equilibrium between specific and non-specific binding that is independent of the osmolyte nature. The remaining osmotic sensitivity linked to the dissociation of non-specifically bound protein depends significantly on the particular osmolyte used, indicating a change in solute-accessible surface area. In contrast, the dissociation of non-specifically bound enzyme accounts for almost all the pH and salt-dependencies. We observed virtually no pH-dependence of the equilibrium between specific and non-specific binding measured by the competition assay. The observed weak salt-sensitivity of the ratio of specific and non-specific association constants is consistent with an osmotic, rather than electrostatic, action. The seeming lack of a dependence on viscosity suggests the rate-limiting step in dissociation of non-specifically bound protein is a discrete conformational change rather than a general diffusion of the protein away from the DNA.
Keywords
Osmotic stress , EcoRI restriction endonuclease , dissociation rate , bound water , protein-DNA interactions
Journal title
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number
1240931
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