Title of article :
Diffusion of the Restriction Nuclease EcoRI along DNA
Author/Authors :
Donald C. Rau، نويسنده , , Nina Y. Sidorova، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
Many specific sequence DNA binding proteins locate their target sequence by first binding to DNA nonspecifically, then by linearly diffusing or hopping along DNA until either the protein dissociates from the DNA or it finds the recognition sequence. We have devised a method for measuring one-dimensional diffusion along DNA based on the ratio of the dissociation rate of protein from DNA fragments containing one specific binding site to the dissociation rate from DNA fragments containing two specific binding sites. Our extensive measurements of dissociation rates and specific–nonspecific relative binding constants of the restriction nuclease EcoRI enable us to determine the diffusion rate of nonspecifically bound protein along the DNA. By varying the distance between the two binding sites, we confirm a linear diffusion mechanism. The sliding rate is relatively insensitive to salt concentration and osmotic pressure, indicating that the protein moves smoothly along the DNA probably following the helical phosphate-sugar backbone of DNA. We calculate a diffusion coefficient for EcoRI of 3 × 104 bp2 s− 1 EcoRI is able to diffuse ∼ 150 bp, on average, along the DNA in 1 s. This diffusion rate is about 2000-fold slower than the diffusion of free protein in solution. A factor of 40–50 can be accounted for by rotational friction resulting from following the helical path of the DNA backbone. Two possibilities could account for the remaining activation energy: salt bridges between the DNA and the protein are transiently broken, or the water structure at the protein–DNA interface is disrupted as the two surfaces move past each other.
Keywords :
dissociation rate , DNA–protein complex , one-dimensional diffusion , EcoRI , nonspecific , Binding
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology