101. Design of artificial transcriptional activators with rigid poly-L-proline linkers.
- Author
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Arora PS, Ansari AZ, Best TP, Ptashne M, and Dervan PB
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Base Sequence, Biomimetic Materials chemical synthesis, Cross-Linking Reagents chemistry, DNA-Binding Proteins chemistry, Models, Molecular, Molecular Sequence Data, Protein Conformation, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Structure-Activity Relationship, Transcription Factors chemical synthesis, Transcriptional Activation, Biomimetic Materials chemistry, Peptides chemistry, Transcription Factors chemistry
- Abstract
Typical eukaryotic transcriptional activators are composed of distinct functional domains, including a DNA binding domain and an activating domain. Artificial transcription factors have been designed wherein the DNA binding domain is a minor groove DNA binding hairpin polyamide linked by a flexible tether to short activating peptides, typically 16-20 residues in size. In this study, the linker between the polyamide and the peptide was altered in an incremental fashion using rigid oligoproline "molecular rulers" in the 18-45 A length range. We find that there is an optimal linker length which separates the DNA and the activation region for transcription activation.
- Published
- 2002
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