Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Center for Cancer Research National Cancer Institute Bethesda Maryland USA
2. Center for Molecular Microscopy Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research Frederick Maryland USA
Abstract
AbstractThe histone‐like protein HU plays a diverse role in bacterial physiology from the maintenance of chromosome structure to the regulation of gene transcription. HU binds DNA in a sequence‐non‐specific manner via two distinct binding modes: (i) random binding to any DNA through ionic bonds between surface‐exposed lysine residues (K3, K18, and K83) and phosphate backbone (non‐specific); (ii) preferential binding to contorted DNA of given structures containing a pair of kinks (structure‐specific) through conserved proline residues (P63) that induce and/or stabilize the kinks. First, we show here that the P63‐mediated structure‐specific binding also requires the three lysine residues, which are needed for a non‐specific binding. Second, we demonstrate that substituting P63 to alanine in HU had no impact on non‐specific binding but caused differential transcription of diverse genes previously shown to be regulated by HU, such as those associated with the organonitrogen compound biosynthetic process, galactose metabolism, ribosome biogenesis, and cell adhesion. The structure‐specific binding also helps create DNA supercoiling, which, in turn, may influence directly or indirectly the transcription of other genes. Our previous and current studies show that non‐specific and structure‐specific HU binding appear to have separate functions‐ nucleoid architecture and transcription regulation‐ which may be true in other DNA‐binding proteins.
Funder
National Cancer Institute
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
10 articles.
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