scholarly journals Protein . Nucleic-Acid Reaction Kinetics. Theoretical Analysis of the Binding Reaction between DNA and RNA Polymerase

1979 ◽  
Vol 98 (2) ◽  
pp. 557-566 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paolo U. GIACOMONI
Author(s):  
Mauro Villas-Boas ◽  
Ana Sepulveda De Rezende

High pressure has provided us with new insights into two complex DNA-protein systems: nucleosomes and RNA polymerase. In spite of their complexity, we can derive new and useful information about them by coupling high pressure with a variety of other physical techniques and functional assays. These studies have shown clearly that multiple conformations of these large–molecular weight DNA-protein assemblies are present simultaneously in solution, although both molecular assemblies are generally considered to be single structures in most in vitro experiments. Considering the variety of different cellular situations encountered by nucleosomes and RNA polymerases, it is perhaps to be expected that evolution would select structures with flexible and multifarious conformations that possesses sufficient stability, rather than static, rigid, singular, and highly stable structures. The molecular organization in the nucleus of a biological cell is extensive and involves intricate protein-protein and protein–nucleic acid interactions that are changing continually during the cell cycle. These dynamic activities in the nucleus are tightly coordinated with many extranuclear events throughout the cell. Highly organized molecular complexes involving multisubunit proteins (and higher order protein assemblies) interacting with the nucleic acid components are the rule rather than the exception in the nucleus (Alberts et al., 1983; Darnell et al., 1990; Lewin, 1994). For instance, chromosomes are organized in a structural hierarchy culminating in the metaphase state in which they are packed tightly together with proteins in a highly specific and economical manner that still largely eludes our understanding; the DNA of a eukaryotic cell is replicated with the help of a complex assembly of proteins; and information coded within the DNA sequence is transcribed with the assistance of multisubunit DNA-binding proteins, some acting as enzymes and others serving mainly as organizational and structural assistants to the catalytic process. Many important features of protein-nucleic acid (DNA and RNA) interactions have been elucidated in the last decade (Pabo & Sauer, 1992; Steitz, 1990), and exciting results have been obtained for singleprotein molecules and dimers binding to DNA. Although we are a long way from understanding these interactions completely, enough aspects are known so that structural predictions are sometimes possible simply from the amino acid sequence.


Author(s):  
Stephen D. Jett

The electrophoresis gel mobility shift assay is a popular method for the study of protein-nucleic acid interactions. The binding of proteins to DNA is characterized by a reduction in the electrophoretic mobility of the nucleic acid. Binding affinity, stoichiometry, and kinetics can be obtained from such assays; however, it is often desirable to image the various species in the gel bands using TEM. Present methods for isolation of nucleoproteins from gel bands are inefficient and often destroy the native structure of the complexes. We have developed a technique, called “snapshot blotting,” by which nucleic acids and nucleoprotein complexes in electrophoresis gels can be electrophoretically transferred directly onto carbon-coated grids for TEM imaging.


Author(s):  
B.A. Hamkalo ◽  
S. Narayanswami ◽  
A.P. Kausch

The availability of nonradioactive methods to label nucleic acids an the resultant rapid and greater sensitivity of detection has catapulted the technique of in situ hybridization to become the method of choice to locate of specific DNA and RNA sequences on chromosomes and in whole cells in cytological preparations in many areas of biology. It is being applied to problems of fundamental interest to basic cell and molecular biologists such as the organization of the interphase nucleus in the context of putative functional domains; it is making major contributions to genome mapping efforts; and it is being applied to the analysis of clinical specimens. Although fluorescence detection of nucleic acid hybrids is routinely used, certain questions require greater resolution. For example, very closely linked sequences may not be separable using fluorescence; the precise location of sequences with respect to chromosome structures may be below the resolution of light microscopy(LM); and the relative positions of sequences on very small chromosomes may not be feasible.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ya Ying Zheng ◽  
Ying Wu ◽  
Thomas Begley ◽  
Jia Sheng

Sulfur modifications have been discovered on both DNA and RNA. Sulfur substitution of oxygen atoms at nucleobase or backbone locations in the nucleic acid framework led to a wide variety...


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 2647
Author(s):  
M. Quadir Siddiqui ◽  
Maulik D. Badmalia ◽  
Trushar R. Patel

Members of the human Zyxin family are LIM domain-containing proteins that perform critical cellular functions and are indispensable for cellular integrity. Despite their importance, not much is known about their structure, functions, interactions and dynamics. To provide insights into these, we used a set of in-silico tools and databases and analyzed their amino acid sequence, phylogeny, post-translational modifications, structure-dynamics, molecular interactions, and functions. Our analysis revealed that zyxin members are ohnologs. Presence of a conserved nuclear export signal composed of LxxLxL/LxxxLxL consensus sequence, as well as a possible nuclear localization signal, suggesting that Zyxin family members may have nuclear and cytoplasmic roles. The molecular modeling and structural analysis indicated that Zyxin family LIM domains share similarities with transcriptional regulators and have positively charged electrostatic patches, which may indicate that they have previously unanticipated nucleic acid binding properties. Intrinsic dynamics analysis of Lim domains suggest that only Lim1 has similar internal dynamics properties, unlike Lim2/3. Furthermore, we analyzed protein expression and mutational frequency in various malignancies, as well as mapped protein-protein interaction networks they are involved in. Overall, our comprehensive bioinformatic analysis suggests that these proteins may play important roles in mediating protein-protein and protein-nucleic acid interactions.


2002 ◽  
Vol 296 (5) ◽  
pp. 1228-1237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew G Stephen ◽  
Karen M Worthy ◽  
Eric Towler ◽  
Judy A Mikovits ◽  
Shizuko Sei ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Wenbo Fu ◽  
Qiushi Li ◽  
Yongshun Song ◽  
Yaogen Shu ◽  
Zhongcan Ouyang ◽  
...  

Abstract The fidelity of DNA transcription catalyzed by RNA polymerase (RNAP) has long been an important issue in biology. Experiments have revealed that RNAP can incorporate matched nucleotides selectively and proofread the incorporated mismatched nucleotides. However, systematic theoretical researches on RNAP fidelity are still lacking. In the last decade, several theories on RNA transcription have been proposed, but they only handled highly simplified models without considering the high-order neighbor effects and the oligonucleotides cleavage both of which are critical for the overall fidelity. In this paper, we regard RNA transcription as a binary copolymerization process and calculate the transcription fidelity by the steady-state copolymerization theory recently proposed by us for DNA replication. With this theory, the more realistic models considering higher-order neighbor effects, oligonucleotides cleavage, multi-step incorporation and multi-step cleavage can be rigorously handled.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document