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DNA looping by two-site restriction endonucleases: heterogeneous probability distributions for loop size and unbinding force

Proteins interacting at multiple sites on DNA via looping play an important role in many fundamental biochemical processes. Restriction endonucleases that must bind at two recognition sites for efficient activity are a useful model system for studying such interactions. Here we used single DNA manip...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gemmen, Gregory J., Millin, Rachel, Smith, Douglas E.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1474071/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16723432
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl382
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author Gemmen, Gregory J.
Millin, Rachel
Smith, Douglas E.
author_facet Gemmen, Gregory J.
Millin, Rachel
Smith, Douglas E.
author_sort Gemmen, Gregory J.
collection PubMed
description Proteins interacting at multiple sites on DNA via looping play an important role in many fundamental biochemical processes. Restriction endonucleases that must bind at two recognition sites for efficient activity are a useful model system for studying such interactions. Here we used single DNA manipulation to study sixteen known or suspected two-site endonucleases. In eleven cases (BpmI, BsgI, BspMI, Cfr10I, Eco57I, EcoRII, FokI, HpaII, NarI, Sau3AI and SgrAI) we found that substitution of Ca(2+) for Mg(2+) blocked cleavage and enabled us to observe stable DNA looping. Forced disruption of these loops allowed us to measure the frequency of looping and probability distributions for loop size and unbinding force for each enzyme. In four cases we observed bimodal unbinding force distributions, indicating conformational heterogeneity and/or complex binding energy landscapes. Measured unlooping events ranged in size from 7 to 7500 bp and the most probable size ranged from less than 75 bp to nearly 500 bp, depending on the enzyme. In most cases the size distributions were in much closer agreement with theoretical models that postulate sharp DNA kinking than with classical models of DNA elasticity. Our findings indicate that DNA looping is highly variable depending on the specific protein and does not depend solely on the mechanical properties of DNA.
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spelling pubmed-14740712006-06-12 DNA looping by two-site restriction endonucleases: heterogeneous probability distributions for loop size and unbinding force Gemmen, Gregory J. Millin, Rachel Smith, Douglas E. Nucleic Acids Res Article Proteins interacting at multiple sites on DNA via looping play an important role in many fundamental biochemical processes. Restriction endonucleases that must bind at two recognition sites for efficient activity are a useful model system for studying such interactions. Here we used single DNA manipulation to study sixteen known or suspected two-site endonucleases. In eleven cases (BpmI, BsgI, BspMI, Cfr10I, Eco57I, EcoRII, FokI, HpaII, NarI, Sau3AI and SgrAI) we found that substitution of Ca(2+) for Mg(2+) blocked cleavage and enabled us to observe stable DNA looping. Forced disruption of these loops allowed us to measure the frequency of looping and probability distributions for loop size and unbinding force for each enzyme. In four cases we observed bimodal unbinding force distributions, indicating conformational heterogeneity and/or complex binding energy landscapes. Measured unlooping events ranged in size from 7 to 7500 bp and the most probable size ranged from less than 75 bp to nearly 500 bp, depending on the enzyme. In most cases the size distributions were in much closer agreement with theoretical models that postulate sharp DNA kinking than with classical models of DNA elasticity. Our findings indicate that DNA looping is highly variable depending on the specific protein and does not depend solely on the mechanical properties of DNA. Oxford University Press 2006 2006-05-24 /pmc/articles/PMC1474071/ /pubmed/16723432 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl382 Text en © 2006 The Author(s)
spellingShingle Article
Gemmen, Gregory J.
Millin, Rachel
Smith, Douglas E.
DNA looping by two-site restriction endonucleases: heterogeneous probability distributions for loop size and unbinding force
title DNA looping by two-site restriction endonucleases: heterogeneous probability distributions for loop size and unbinding force
title_full DNA looping by two-site restriction endonucleases: heterogeneous probability distributions for loop size and unbinding force
title_fullStr DNA looping by two-site restriction endonucleases: heterogeneous probability distributions for loop size and unbinding force
title_full_unstemmed DNA looping by two-site restriction endonucleases: heterogeneous probability distributions for loop size and unbinding force
title_short DNA looping by two-site restriction endonucleases: heterogeneous probability distributions for loop size and unbinding force
title_sort dna looping by two-site restriction endonucleases: heterogeneous probability distributions for loop size and unbinding force
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1474071/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16723432
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl382
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