873 resultados para Motif Discovery
Resumo:
Nucleosomes, the basic structural elements of chromosomes, consist of 146 bp of DNA coiled around an octamer of histone proteins, and their presence can strongly influence gene expression. Considerations of the anisotropic flexibility of nucleotide triplets containing 3 cytosines or guanines suggested that a [5'(G/C)3 NN3']n motif might resist wrapping around a histone octamer. To test this, DNAs were constructed containing a 5'-CCGNN-3' pentanucleotide repeat with the Ns varied. Using in vitro nucleosome reconstitution and electron microscopy, a plasmid with 48 contiguous CCGNN repeats strongly excluded nucleosomes in the repeat region. Competitive reconstitution gel retardation experiments using DNA fragments containing 12, 24, or 48 CCGNN repeats showed that the propensity to exclude nucleosomes increased with the length of the repeat. Analysis showed that a 268-bp DNA containing a (CCGNN)48 block is 4.9 +/- 0.6-fold less efficient in nucleosome assembly than a similar length pUC19 fragment and approximately 78-fold less efficient than a similar length (CTG)n sequence, based on results from previous studies. Computer searches against the GenBank database for matches with a [(G/C)3NN]48 sequence revealed numerous examples that frequently were present in the control regions of "TATA-less" genes, including the human ETS-2 and human dihydrofolate reductase genes. In both cases the (G/C)3NN repeat, present in the promoter region, co-maps with loci previously shown to be nuclease hypersensitive sites.
Resumo:
The search for novel leads is a critical step in the drug discovery process. Computational approaches to identify new lead molecules have focused on discovering complete ligands by evaluating the binding affinity of a large number of candidates, a task of considerable complexity. A new computational method is introduced in this work based on the premise that the primary molecular recognition event in the protein binding site may be accomplished by small core fragments that serve as molecular anchors, providing a structurally stable platform that can be subsequently tailored into complete ligands. To fulfill its role, we show that an effective molecular anchor must meet both the thermodynamic requirement of relative energetic stability of a single binding mode and its consistent kinetic accessibility, which may be measured by the structural consensus of multiple docking simulations. From a large number of candidates, this technique is able to identify known core fragments responsible for primary recognition by the FK506 binding protein (FKBP-12), along with a diverse repertoire of novel molecular cores. By contrast, absolute energetic criteria for selecting molecular anchors are found to be promiscuous. A relationship between a minimum frustration principle of binding energy landscapes and receptor-specific molecular anchors in their role as "recognition nuclei" is established, thereby unraveling a mechanism of lead discovery and providing a practical route to receptor-biased computational combinatorial chemistry.
Resumo:
Polyamides containing N-methylimidazole (Im) and N-methylpyrrole (Py) amino acids can be combined in antiparallel side-by-side dimeric complexes for sequence-specific recognition in the minor groove of DNA. Six polyamides containing three to eight rings bind DNA sites 5-10 bp in length, respectively. Quantitative DNase I footprint titration experiments demonstrate that affinity maximizes and is similar at ring sizes of five, six, and seven. Sequence specificity decreases as the length of the polyamides increases beyond five rings. These results provide useful guidelines for the design of new polyamides that bind longer DNA sites with enhanced affinity and specificity.