Decoding complexity in biomolecular recognition of DNA i-motifs with microarrays

Author:

Yazdani Kamyar1,Seshadri Srinath1,Tillo Desiree2ORCID,Yang Mo1,Sibley Christopher D1,Vinson Charles3,Schneekloth John S1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Chemical Biology Laboratory, National Cancer Institute , 1050 Boyle St., Frederick , MD 21702, USA

2. Genome Analysis Unit, National Cancer Institute , 37 Convent Dr., Bethesda , MD 20892, USA

3. Laboratory of Metabolism, National Cancer Institute , 37 Convent Dr., Bethesda , MD 20892, USA

Abstract

Abstract DNA i-motifs (iMs) are non-canonical C-rich secondary structures implicated in numerous cellular processes. Though iMs exist throughout the genome, our understanding of iM recognition by proteins or small molecules is limited to a few examples. We designed a DNA microarray containing 10976 genomic iM sequences to examine the binding profiles of four iM-binding proteins, mitoxantrone and the iMab antibody. iMab microarray screens demonstrated that pH 6.5, 5% BSA buffer was optimal, and fluorescence was correlated with iM C-tract length. hnRNP K broadly recognizes diverse iM sequences, favoring 3–5 cytosine repeats flanked by thymine-rich loops of 1–3 nucleotides. Array binding mirrored public ChIP-Seq datasets, in which 35% of well-bound array iMs are enriched in hnRNP K peaks. In contrast, other reported iM-binding proteins had weaker binding or preferred G-quadruplex (G4) sequences instead. Mitoxantrone broadly binds both shorter iMs and G4s, consistent with an intercalation mechanism. These results suggest that hnRNP K may play a role in iM-mediated regulation of gene expression in vivo, whereas hnRNP A1 and ASF/SF2 are possibly more selective in their binding preferences. This powerful approach represents the most comprehensive investigation of how biomolecules selectively recognize genomic iMs to date.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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