Title of article :
Protein–DNA Hydrophobic Recognition in the Minor Groove is Facilitated by Sugar Switching
Author/Authors :
Michael Y. Tolstorukov، نويسنده , , Andrzej Kloczkowski and Robert L. Jernigan، نويسنده , , Victor B. Zhurkin، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Information readout in the DNA minor groove is accompanied by substantial DNA deformations, such as sugar switching between the two conformational domains, B-like C2′-endo and A-like C3′-endo. The effect of sugar puckering on the sequence-dependent protein–DNA interactions has not been studied systematically, however. Here, we analyzed the structural role of A-like nucleotides in 156 protein–DNA complexes solved by X-ray crystallography and NMR. To this end, a new algorithm was developed to distinguish interactions in the minor groove from those in the major groove, and to calculate the solvent-accessible surface areas in each groove separately. Based on this approach, we found a striking difference between the sets of amino acids interacting with B-like and A-like nucleotides in the minor groove. Polar amino acids mostly interact with B-nucleotides, while hydrophobic amino acids interact extensively with A-nucleotides (a hydrophobicity–structure correlation). This tendency is consistent with the larger exposure of hydrophobic surfaces in the case of A-like sugars. Overall, the A-like nucleotides aid in achieving protein-induced fit in two major ways. First, hydrophobic clusters formed by several consecutive A-like sugars interact cooperatively with the non-polar surfaces in proteins. Second, the sugar switching occurs in large kinks promoted by direct protein contact, predominantly at the pyrimidine–purine dimeric steps. The sequence preference for the B-to-A sugar repuckering, observed for pyrimidines, suggests that the described DNA deformations contribute to specificity of the protein–DNA recognition in the minor groove.
Keywords :
sugar pucker , DNA accessible surface , protein–DNA recognition , DNA deformability , hydrophobic interactions
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology