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The energetics of the interaction of BamHI endonuclease with its recognition site GGATCC.

Authors :
Engler LE
Sapienza P
Dorner LF
Kucera R
Schildkraut I
Jen-Jacobson L
Source :
Journal of molecular biology [J Mol Biol] 2001 Mar 23; Vol. 307 (2), pp. 619-36.
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

The interaction of BamHI endonuclease with DNA has been studied crystallographically, but has not been characterized rigorously in solution. The enzyme binds in solution as a homodimer to its recognition site GGATCC. Only six base-pairs are directly recognized, but binding affinity (in the absence of the catalytic cofactor Mg(2+)) increases 5400-fold as oligonucleotide length increases from 10 to 14 bp. Binding is modulated by sequence context outside the recognition site, varying about 30-fold from the bes t (GTG or TAT) to the worst (CGG) flanking triplets. BamHI, EcoRI and EcoRV endonucleases all have different context preferences, suggesting that context affects binding by influencing the free energy levels of the complexes rather than that of the free DNA. Ethylation interference footprinting in the absence of divalent metal shows a localized and symmetrical pattern of phosphate contacts, with strong contacts at NpNpNpGGApTCC. In the presence of Mg(2+), first-order cleavage rate constants are identical in the two GGA half-sites, are the same for the two nicked intermediates and are unaffected by substrate length in the range 10-24 bp. DNA binding is strongly enhanced by mutations D94N, E111A or E113K, by binding of Ca(2+) at the active site, or by deletion of the scissile phosphate GpGATCC, indicating that a cluster of negative charges at the catalytic site contributes at least 3-4 kcal/mol of unfavorable binding free energy. This electrostatic repulsion destabilizes the enzyme-DNA complex and favors metal ion binding and progression to the transition state for cleavage.<br /> (Copyright 2001 Academic Press.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0022-2836
Volume :
307
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of molecular biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
11254386
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1006/jmbi.2000.4428