Water-mediated contacts are known as an important recognition tool in trp-repressor operator systems. One of these contacts involves two conserved base pairs (G(6).C(-6) and A(5). T(-5)) and three amino acids (Lys 72, Ile 79, and Ala 80). To investigate the nature of these contacts, we analyzed the X-ray structure (PDB code: 1TRO) of the trp-repressor operator complex by means of molecular dynamics simulations. This X-ray structure contains two dimers that exhibit structural differences. From these two different starting structures, two 10 ns molecular dynamics simulations have been performed. Both of our simulations show an increase of water molecules in the major groove at one side of the dimer, while the other side remains unchanged compared to the X-ray structure. Though the maximum residence time of the concerned water molecules decreases with an increase of solvent at the interface, these water molecules continue to play an important role in mediating DNA-protein contacts. This is shown by new stable amino acids-DNA distances and a long water residence time compared to free DNA simulation. To maintain stability of the new contacts, the preferential water binding site on O6(G6) is extended. This extension agrees with mutation experiment data on A5 and G6, which shows different relative affinity due to mutation on these bases [A. Joachimiak, T. E. Haran, P. B. Sigler, EMBO Journal 1994, Vol. 13, No. (2) pp. 367-372]. Due to the rearrangements in the system, the phosphate of the base G6 is able to interconvert to the B(II) substate, which is not observed on the other half side of the complex. The decrease of the number of hydrogen bonds between protein and DNA backbone could be the initial step of the dissociation process of the complex, or in other words an intermediate complex conformation of the association process. Thus, we surmise that these features show the importance of water-mediated contacts in the trp-repressor operator recognition process.
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ACS Synth Biol
June 2022
School of Chemical, Materials and Biomedical Engineering, College of Engineering, The University of Georgia, 302 East Campus Road, Athens, Georgia 30602, United States.
Transcriptional factors play a crucial role in regulating cellular functions. Understanding and altering the dynamic behavior of the transcriptional factor-based biosensors will expand our knowledge in investigating biomolecular interactions and facilitating biosynthetic applications. In this study, we characterized and engineered a TrpR-based tryptophan repressor system in .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
February 2021
National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Shizuoka, 411-8540, Japan.
Several DNA-binding proteins show the affinities for their specific DNA sites that positively depend on the length of DNA harboring the sites, i. e. antenna effect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
September 2020
National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, 411-8540, Japan.
We scrutinize the length dependency of the binding affinity of bacterial repressor TrpR protein to trpO (specific site) on DNA. A footprinting experiment shows that the longer the DNA length, the larger the affinity of TrpR to the specific site on DNA. This effect termed "antenna effect" might be interpreted as follows: longer DNA provides higher probability for TrpR to access to the specific site aided by one-dimensional diffusion along the nonspecific sites of DNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Chem Biol
April 2018
Department of Molecular Biosciences, Center for Systems and Synthetic Biology, Austin, TX, USA.
As synthetic regulatory programs expand in sophistication, an ever increasing number of biological components with predictable phenotypes is required. Regulators are often 'part mined' from a diverse, but uncharacterized, array of genomic sequences, often leading to idiosyncratic behavior. Here, we generate an entire synthetic phylogeny from the canonical allosteric transcription factor TrpR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Mol Biol Educ
November 2010
Department of Medical Biology, Medical School, University of Pécs, Pécs H-7624, Hungary.
Terms to be familiar with before you start to solve the test: tryptophan, transcription unit, operon, trp repressor, corepressor, operator, promoter, palindrome, initiation, elongation, and termination of transcription, open reading frame, coupled transcription/translation, chromosome-polysome complex.
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