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Formation of a wrapped DNA-protein interface: experimental characterization and analysis of the large contributions of ions and water to the thermodynamics of binding IHF to H' DNA.
- Source :
-
Journal of molecular biology [J Mol Biol] 2008 Mar 14; Vol. 377 (1), pp. 9-27. Date of Electronic Publication: 2007 Dec 07. - Publication Year :
- 2008
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Abstract
- To characterize driving forces and driven processes in formation of a large-interface, wrapped protein-DNA complex analogous to the nucleosome, we have investigated the thermodynamics of binding the 34-base pair (bp) H' DNA sequence to the Escherichia coli DNA-remodeling protein integration host factor (IHF). Isothermal titration calorimetry and fluorescence resonance energy transfer are applied to determine effects of salt concentration [KCl, KF, K glutamate (KGlu)] and of the excluded solute glycine betaine (GB) on the binding thermodynamics at 20 degrees C. Both the binding constant K(obs) and enthalpy Delta H degrees (obs) depend strongly on [salt] and anion identity. Formation of the wrapped complex is enthalpy driven, especially at low [salt] (e.g., Delta H(o)(obs)=-20.2 kcal x mol(-1) in 0.04 M KCl). Delta H degrees (obs) increases linearly with [salt] with a slope (d Delta H degrees (obs)/d[salt]), which is much larger in KCl (38+/-3 kcal x mol(-1) M(-1)) than in KF or KGlu (11+/-2 kcal x mol(-1) M(-1)). At 0.33 M [salt], K(obs) is approximately 30-fold larger in KGlu or KF than in KCl, and the [salt] derivative SK(obs)=dlnK(obs)/dln[salt] is almost twice as large in magnitude in KCl (-8.8+/-0.7) as in KF or KGlu (-4.7+/-0.6). A novel analysis of the large effects of anion identity on K(obs), SK(obs) and on Delta H degrees (obs) dissects coulombic, Hofmeister, and osmotic contributions to these quantities. This analysis attributes anion-specific differences in K(obs), SK(obs), and Delta H degrees (obs) to (i) displacement of a large number of water molecules of hydration [estimated to be 1.0(+/-0.2)x10(3)] from the 5340 A(2) of IHF and H' DNA surface buried in complex formation, and (ii) significant local exclusion of F(-) and Glu(-) from this hydration water, relative to the situation with Cl(-), which we propose is randomly distributed. To quantify net water release from anionic surface (22% of the surface buried in complexation, mostly from DNA phosphates), we determined the stabilizing effect of GB on K(obs): dlnK(obs)/d[GB]=2.7+/-0.4 at constant KCl activity, indicating the net release of ca. 150 H(2)O molecules from anionic surface.
- Subjects :
- Betaine pharmacology
Calorimetry
Escherichia coli drug effects
Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer
Ions
Kinetics
Models, Molecular
Protein Binding drug effects
Salts pharmacology
Thermodynamics
Titrimetry
DNA, Bacterial chemistry
DNA, Bacterial metabolism
Escherichia coli metabolism
Integration Host Factors chemistry
Integration Host Factors metabolism
Nucleic Acid Conformation drug effects
Water metabolism
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1089-8638
- Volume :
- 377
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Journal of molecular biology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 18237740
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2007.11.104