Libraries of alpha-helical peptides may prove to be useful sources of DNA-binding ligands and provide insight into the requirements for selective DNA recognition. Knowledge of protein structure-function relationships and their impact on protein-DNA interactions can be augmented by concentrating on the basic region/leucine zipper (bZIP) motif, in which a pair of short, basic alpha-helices recognizes the DNA major groove with sequence-specificity and high affinity. This proposal targets the aryl hydrocarbon receptor/nuclear translocator heterodimeric system, suspected of mediating the deleterious health effects of environmental pollutants and interfering with endocrine disruptor pathways. Based on sequence homology, the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) and the aryl hydrocarbon nuclear translocator (Arnt) are believed to be basic region/helix-loop-helix proteins (bHLH), an alpha-helical DNA-binding motif similar to the bZIP. The goal is to explore the universality of the protein alpha-helix as a scaffold for design of sequence-specific DNA-binding proteins by reducing Nature's constructs to a minimal, ~60 amino-acid helix that serves as an ideal a molecular recognition scaffold (structure). Quantitative examination of how these proteins recognize specific DNA sequences will contribute to our understanding of the determinants of binding specificity in protein-DNA interactions (function). Designed proteins are bacterially expressed and extensively purified. Structure is characterized by circular dichroism; DNA-binding function is characterized by DNase I footprinting. Thermodynamics of cocomplexation is dissected by fluorescence anisotropy and calorimetry, and structural information is obtained by X-ray crystallography and molecular modeling.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01GM069041-03
Application #
6945214
Study Section
Bio-Organic and Natural Products Chemistry Study Section (BNP)
Program Officer
Basavappa, Ravi
Project Start
2003-09-12
Project End
2007-08-31
Budget Start
2005-09-01
Budget End
2006-08-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2005
Total Cost
$162,000
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Toronto
Department
Chemistry
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
259999779
City
Toronto
State
ON
Country
Canada
Zip Code
M5 1-S8
Chen, Gang; De Jong, Antonia T; Shin, Jumi A (2012) Forced homodimerization of the c-Fos leucine zipper in designed bHLHZ-like hybrid proteins MaxbHLH-Fos and ArntbHLH-Fos. Mol Biosyst 8:1286-96
Chan, I-San; Al-Sarraj, Taufik; Shahravan, S Hesam et al. (2012) The bZIP dimer localizes at DNA full-sites where each basic region can alternately translocate and bind to subsites at the half-site. Biochemistry 51:6632-43
Xu, Jing; De Jong, Antonia T; Chen, Gang et al. (2010) Reengineering natural design by rational design and in vivo library selection: the HLH subdomain in bHLHZ proteins is a unique requirement for DNA-binding function. Protein Eng Des Sel 23:337-46
Xu, Jing; Chen, Gang; De Jong, Antonia T et al. (2009) Max-E47, a designed minimalist protein that targets the E-box DNA site in vivo and in vitro. J Am Chem Soc 131:7839-48
Chen, Gang; DenBoer, Lisa; Shin, Jumi (2008) Design of a single plasmid-based modified yeast one-hybrid system for investigation of in vivo protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions. Biotechniques 45:295-304
Chow, Hiu-Kwan; Xu, Jing; Shahravan, S Hesam et al. (2008) Hybrids of the bHLH and bZIP protein motifs display different DNA-binding activities in vivo vs. in vitro. PLoS One 3:e3514
Chen, Gang; Shin, Jumi A (2008) AhR/Arnt:XRE interaction: turning false negatives into true positives in the modified yeast one-hybrid assay. Anal Biochem 382:101-6
Chan, I-San; Shahravan, S Hesam; Fedorova, Anna V et al. (2008) The bZIP targets overlapping DNA subsites within a half-site, resulting in increased binding affinities. Biochemistry 47:9646-52
Shahravan, S Hesam; Qu, Xuanlu; Chan, I-San et al. (2008) Enhancing the specificity of the enterokinase cleavage reaction to promote efficient cleavage of a fusion tag. Protein Expr Purif 59:314-9
Chan, I-San; Fedorova, Anna V; Shin, Jumi A (2007) The GCN4 bZIP targets noncognate gene regulatory sequences: quantitative investigation of binding at full and half sites. Biochemistry 46:1663-71

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