2q79 Citations

Increased stability and DNA site discrimination of "single chain" variants of the dimeric beta-barrel DNA binding domain of the human papillomavirus E2 transcriptional regulator.

Biochemistry 46 12441-50 (2007)
Cited: 10 times
EuropePMC logo PMID: 17915949

Abstract

Human papillomavirus infects millions of people worldwide and is a causal agent of cervical cancer in women. The HPV E2 protein controls the expression of all viral genes through binding of its dimeric C-terminal domain (E2C) to its target DNA site. We engineered monomeric versions of the HPV16 E2C, in order to probe the link of the dimeric beta-barrel fold to stability, dimerization, and DNA binding. Two single-chain variants, with 6 and 12 residue linkers (scE2C-6 and scE2C-12), were purified and characterized. Spectroscopy and crystallography show that the native structure is unperturbed in scE2C-12. The single chain variants are stabilized with respect to E2C, with effective concentrations of 0.6 to 6 mM. The early folding events of the E2C dimer and scE2C-12 are very similar and include formation of a compact species in the submillisecond time scale and a non-native monomeric intermediate with a half-life of 25 ms. However, monomerization changes the unfolding mechanism of the linked species from two-state to three-state, with a high-energy intermediate. Binding to the specific target site is up to 5-fold tighter in the single chain variants. Nonspecific DNA binding is up to 7-fold weaker in the single chain variants, leading to an overall 10-fold increased site discrimination capacity, the largest described so far for linked DNA binding domains. Titration calorimetric binding analysis, however, shows almost identical behavior for dimer and single-chain species, suggesting very subtle changes behind the increased specificity. Global analysis of the mechanisms probed suggests that the dynamics of the E2C domain, rather than the structure, are responsible for the differential properties. Thus, the plastic and dimeric nature of the domain did not evolve for a maximum affinity, specificity, and stability of the quaternary structure, likely because of regulatory reasons and for roles other than DNA binding played by partly folded dimeric or monomeric conformers.

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  1. The critical protein interactions and structures that elicit growth deregulation in cancer and viral replication. Ou HD, May AP, O'Shea CC. Wiley Interdiscip Rev Syst Biol Med 3 48-73 (2011)

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  1. Human papillomavirus E2 protein with single activation domain initiates HPV18 genome replication, but is not sufficient for long-term maintenance of virus genome. Kurg R, Uusen P, Võsa L, Ustav M. Virology 408 159-166 (2010)
  2. Indirect DNA readout on the protein side: coupling between histidine protonation, global structural cooperativity, dynamics, and DNA binding of the human papillomavirus type 16 E2C domain. Eliseo T, Sánchez IE, Nadra AD, Dellarole M, Paci M, de Prat Gay G, Cicero DO. J Mol Biol 388 327-344 (2009)
  3. Bovine papillomavirus type 1 E2 protein heterodimer is functional in papillomavirus DNA replication in vivo. Kurg R, Uusen P, Sepp T, Sepp M, Abroi A, Ustav M. Virology 386 353-359 (2009)
  4. Protein flexibility directs DNA recognition by the papillomavirus E2 proteins. Brown C, Campos-León K, Strickland M, Williams C, Fairweather V, Brady RL, Crump MP, Gaston K. Nucleic Acids Res 39 2969-2980 (2011)
  5. A strained DNA binding helix is conserved for site recognition, folding nucleation, and conformational modulation. Wetzler DE, Gallo M, Melis R, Eliseo T, Nadra AD, Ferreiro DU, Paci M, Sánchez IE, Cicero DO, de Prat Gay G. Biopolymers 91 432-443 (2009)
  6. Thermodynamics of cooperative DNA recognition at a replication origin and transcription regulatory site. Dellarole M, Sánchez IE, de Prat Gay G. Biochemistry 49 10277-10286 (2010)
  7. New human papilloma virus E2 transcription factor mimics: a tripyrrole-peptide conjugate with tight and specific DNA-recognition. Wetzler DE, Comin MJ, Krajewski K, Gallo M. PLoS One 6 e22409 (2011)