Predicting the mechanism and rate of H-NS binding to AT-rich DNA
| Publication date | 03-10-2019 |
|---|---|
| Description |
Bacteria contain several nucleoid-associated proteins that organize their genomic DNA
into the nucleoid by bending, wrapping or bridging DNA. The Histone-like Nucleoid
Structuring protein H-NS is a DNA bridging protein and can structure DNA by binding
to two separate DNA duplexes or to adjacent sites on the same duplex, depending on
external conditions. H-NS occurs in enterobacteria and influences the expression of
genes. Several nucleotide sequences have been identified to which H-NS binds with high
affinity, indicating H-NS prefers AT-rich DNA. To date, highly detailed structural
information of the H-NS DNA complex remains elusive. Molecular simulation can
complement experiments by modelling structures and their time evolution in atomistic
detail. In this paper we report an exploration of the different binding modes of H-NS to
a high affinity nucleotide sequence and an estimate of the associated rate constant. By
means of molecular dynamics simulations, we identified three types of binding for H-NS
to AT-rich DNA. To further sample the transitions between these binding modes, we
performed Replica Exchange Transition Interface Sampling, providing predictions of the
mechanism and rate constant of H-NS binding to DNA. H-NS interacts with the DNA
through a conserved QGR motif, aided by a conserved arginine at position 93. The
QGR motif interacts first with phosphate groups, followed by the formation of hydrogen
bonds between acceptors in the DNA minor groove and the sidechains of either Q112 or
R114. After R114 inserts into the minor groove, the rest of the QGR motif follows. Full
insertion of the QGR motif in the minor groove is stable over several tens of
nanoseconds, and involves hydrogen bonds between the bases and both backbone and
sidechains of the QGR motif. The rate constant for the process of H-NS binding to
AT-rich DNA resulting in full insertion of the QGR motif is in the order of 106 M−1s−1,
which is rate limiting compared to the non-specific association of H-NS to the DNA
backbone.
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| Publisher | Universiteit van Amsterdam |
| Organisations |
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| Document type | Dataset |
| Related publication | Predicting the mechanism and rate of H-NS binding to AT-rich DNA |
| DOI | https://doi.org/10.21942/uva.6960098 |
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