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Protein Complex Assembly02:41

Protein Complex Assembly

Proteins can form homomeric complexes with another unit of the same protein or heteromeric complexes with different types.  Most protein complexes self-assemble spontaneously via ordered pathways, while some proteins need assembly factors that guide their proper assembly. Despite the crowded intracellular environment, proteins usually interact with their correct partners and form functional complexes.
Many viruses self-assemble into a fully functional unit using the infected host cell to...

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Assembling the human IFN-beta enhanceosome in solution.

A I Dragan1, R Carrillo, T I Gerasimova

  • 1Department of Biology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.

Journal of Molecular Biology
|October 1, 2008
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study investigates how specific proteins assemble on DNA to activate the interferon-beta gene. By using biophysical techniques in solution, researchers mapped how different protein complexes bind to specific DNA sites and influence each other's stability and orientation.

Keywords:
transcription factorsDNA bindingbiophysicsprotein-protein interactions

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Area of Science:

  • Molecular biology of interferon-beta enhanceosome assembly
  • Biophysical chemistry of protein-DNA interactions

Background:

No prior work had resolved the precise solution-state assembly dynamics of the interferon-beta enhanceosome. Researchers previously relied on static crystal structures to infer how these complex protein-DNA architectures form. That uncertainty drove a need for solution-based biophysical characterization. Prior research has shown that multiple transcription factors must coordinate to trigger gene expression. However, the specific energetic and structural contributions of individual components remained unclear. This gap motivated a detailed examination of how these factors interact in a fluid environment. Understanding these interactions is necessary to clarify how genetic switches function. The current investigation addresses this by analyzing binding behavior without the constraints of a crystal lattice.

Purpose Of The Study:

The aim of this study is to elucidate the assembly process of the human interferon-beta enhanceosome in solution. Researchers sought to determine how individual protein components and enhancer DNA organize into a functional complex. The study addresses the limitations of previous structural models derived from crystalline samples. Investigators aimed to quantify the binding interactions and orientations of key transcription factors. This work explores whether cooperativity exists between the various protein dimers. The motivation stems from the need to understand how these factors coordinate to regulate gene expression. By examining the system in a fluid environment, the authors provide a more accurate representation of biological conditions. This research clarifies the roles of specific DNA sites in directing protein orientation and stability.

Main Methods:

Review approach involved a multi-faceted biophysical strategy to probe protein-DNA complexes in fluid. Investigators utilized fluorescence anisotropy to monitor binding events between transcription factors and DNA. Microcalorimetry provided thermodynamic data regarding the stability of these macromolecular assemblies. CD titration served to assess conformational changes occurring upon protein binding. The team systematically assembled the complex from purified individual components. This approach allowed for the isolation of specific protein-DNA interactions. By avoiding solid-state constraints, the researchers maintained physiological relevance. The experimental design focused on characterizing the binding stoichiometry and orientation of each factor.

Main Results:

Key findings from the literature indicate that the enhancer binds exactly one full-length phosphomimetic IRF-3 dimer at the PRDIII-PRDI sites. The data show that this binding event lacks cooperativity with the bZIP heterodimer at the PRDIV site. The orientation of the bZIP pair is determined by the asymmetry of the PRDIV site rather than the IRF-3 dimer. Conversely, the IRF-3 dimer interacts strongly with the NF-kappaB heterodimer bound at the PRDII site. The orientation of the NF-kappaB heterodimer is also dictated by the asymmetry of the PRDII site. This specific orientation is the opposite of that observed in previous crystal structure studies. The HMG-I/Y protein binds the PRDII site by inserting AT hooks into the minor groove. This binding results in a significant increase in NF-kappaB affinity for the major groove.

Conclusions:

The authors propose that the interferon-beta enhanceosome assembly is governed by specific protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions. Synthesis and implications suggest that the orientation of the bZIP heterodimer is dictated by the inherent asymmetry of its target DNA site. The researchers indicate that the IRF-3 dimer does not cooperatively influence the binding of the bZIP pair. Instead, the IRF-3 dimer demonstrates a strong interaction with the NF-kappaB heterodimer at the adjacent site. The study concludes that the HMG-I/Y protein enhances NF-kappaB binding affinity through specific minor groove interactions. These findings imply that the spatial arrangement of these factors is largely predetermined by DNA sequence features. The authors suggest that the observed NF-kappaB orientation differs from previous crystalline models. This work provides a refined model for how these regulatory proteins organize in a physiological solution environment.

The researchers propose that the IRF-3 dimer interacts strongly with the NF-kappaB heterodimer at the PRDII site. This interaction contrasts with the bZIP heterodimer, which shows no cooperative binding behavior with the IRF-3 dimer at the PRDIII-PRDI sites.

The study utilizes HMG-I/Y, a protein that inserts its AT hook segments into the DNA minor groove. This action significantly increases the binding affinity of the NF-kappaB heterodimer for the major groove at the PRDII site.

The researchers state that the PRDIV site's inherent asymmetry is necessary to determine the orientation of the bZIP heterodimer. This structural feature ensures the correct positioning of the protein pair regardless of the presence of the IRF-3 dimer.

The authors employ fluorescence anisotropy, microcalorimetry, and CD titration to quantify binding. These techniques allow for the observation of protein-DNA complex formation in a solution state rather than a solid crystal phase.

The researchers measured the binding of a full-length phosphomimetic IRF-3 dimer to the PRDIII-PRDI sites. They observed that only one such dimer binds to this specific region of the enhancer DNA.

The authors suggest that the orientation of the NF-kappaB heterodimer is determined by the PRDII site's asymmetry. This finding implies that the configuration in solution is the opposite of what was previously reported in crystal structures.