Title of article :
Correlations between Scaffold/Matrix Attachment Region (S/MAR) Binding Activity and DNA Duplex Destabilization Energy
Author/Authors :
Jürgen Bode، نويسنده , , Silke Winkelmann، نويسنده , , Sandra G?tze، نويسنده , , Steven Spiker، نويسنده , , Ken Tsutsui، نويسنده , , Chengpeng Bi، نويسنده , , Prashanth A.K. Acharya، نويسنده , , Craig Benham، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Scaffold or matrix-attachment regions (S/MARs) are thought to be involved in the organization of eukaryotic chromosomes and in the regulation of several DNA functions. Their characteristics are conserved between plants and humans, and a variety of biological activities have been associated with them. The identification of S/MARs within genomic sequences has proved to be unexpectedly difficult, as they do not appear to have consensus sequences or sequence motifs associated with them. We have shown that S/MARs do share a characteristic structural property, they have a markedly high predicted propensity to undergo strand separation when placed under negative superhelical tension. This result agrees with experimental observations, that S/MARs contain base-unpairing regions (BURs). Here, we perform a quantitative evaluation of the association between the ease of stress-induced DNA duplex destabilization (SIDD) and S/MAR binding activity. We first use synthetic oligomers to investigate how the arrangement of localized unpairing elements within a base-unpairing region affects S/MAR binding. The organizational properties found in this way are applied to the investigation of correlations between specific measures of stress-induced duplex destabilization and the binding properties of naturally occurring S/MARs. For this purpose, we analyze S/MAR and non-S/MAR elements that have been derived from the human genome or from the tobacco genome. We find that S/MARs exhibit long regions of extensive destabilization. Moreover, quantitative measures of the SIDD attributes of these fragments calculated under uniform conditions are found to correlate very highly (r2>0.8) with their experimentally measured S/MAR-binding strengths. These results suggest that duplex destabilization may be involved in the mechanisms by which S/MARs function. They suggest also that SIDD properties may be incorporated into an improved computational strategy to search genomic DNA sequences for sites having the necessary attributes to function as S/MARs, and even to estimate their relative binding strengths.
Keywords :
nuclear matrix , DNA Structure , scaffold-matrix attachment regions (S/MARs) , stress-induced duplex destabilization (SIDD) , nuclear architecture
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology