"Antiparallel" DNA loop in gal repressosome visualized by atomic force microscopy.

J Mol Biol

Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.

Published: November 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • DNA looping regulates gene transcription in prokaryotes and eukaryotes, exemplified by the negative regulation of the gal operon in E. coli by Gal repressosome assembly involving GalR proteins and DNA looping.
  • The formation of a 113 bp DNA loop is influenced by negatively supercoiled DNA and the histone-like protein HU, supporting a hypothesis of mutual antiparallel orientation of the gal operators.
  • Atomic force microscopy confirmed this loop formation and indicated similarities to lac operator loops, while revealing that GalR can still repress the gal operon even in the absence of HU, prompting considerations of DNA structural organization in bacterial nucleoid.

Article Abstract

DNA looping is often involved in positive and negative regulation of gene transcription in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. The transcription of the gal operon of Escherichia coli from two overlapping promoters P1 and P2 is negatively regulated via Gal repressosome assembly. It involves binding of two dimeric Gal repressor proteins (GalR) to two operators, O(E) and O(I), flanking the two promoters, and formation of 113 bp DNA loop due to tetramerization of the two bound GalR dimers. The process requires negatively supercoiled DNA and the presence of the histone-like protein HU. Previous modeling of the repressosome based on evaluation of DNA elastic energy suggested a mutual antiparallel, rather than parallel, orientation of the two gal operators in an under-twisted DNA loop. To visualize the Gal loop by atomic force microscopy (AFM), plasmid DNA molecules were constructed with increased distance between the two operators. The AFM results demonstrated the formation of an antiparallel DNA loop in the Gal repressosome consistent with our earlier hypothesis. Importantly, the overall shape of the GalR mediated loop proved to be indistinguishable from that in the chimerical loop of the same size containing two lac operators (instead of two gal operators) and formed by LacI. In addition, a possibility of the gal operon repression mediated by GalR in the absence of HU was shown in the new DNA constructs. Implications of these findings for the DNA structural organization in bacterial nucleoid are discussed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2003.09.030DOI Listing

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