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Biophysical Analysis of the AP1-DNA Interaction

Jun and Fos are components of the AP1 family of transcription factors that bind to the promoters of a diverse multitude of genes involved in critical cellular responses such as cell growth and proliferation, cell cycle regulation, embryonic development and cancer. The specific protein-DNA interactions are driven by the binding of basic zipper (bZIP) domains of Jun and Fos to TPA response element (TRE) and cAMP response element (CRE) within the promoters of target genes. Here, using a diverse array of biophysical techniques, including in particular isothermal titration calorimetry in conjunction with molecular modeling and semi-empirical analysis, I characterize AP1-DNA interactions in thermodynamic and structural terms. My data show that the binding of bZIP domains of Jun-Fos heterodimer to TRE and CRE are under enthalpic control accompanied by entropic penalty at physiological temperatures. This is in agreement with the notion that protein-DNA interactions are largely driven by electrostatic interactions and intermolecular hydrogen bonding. A larger than expected heat capacity change suggests that the basic regions within the bZIP domains are unstructured in the absence of DNA and interact in a coupled folding and binding manner. Further analysis demonstrates that Jun-Fos heterodimer can tolerate single nucleotide variants of the TRE consensus sequence and binds in the biologically relevant micromolar to submicromolar range. Of particular interest is the observation that the Jun-Fos heterodimer binds to specific variants in a preferred orientation. 3D atomic models reveal that such preference in orientation results from asymmetric binding and may in part be attributable to chemically distinct but structurally equivalent residues within the basic regions of Jun and Fos. I further demonstrate that binding of the biologically relevant Jun-Jun homodimer to TRE and CRE occurs with favorable enthalpic contributions accompanied by entropic penalty at physiological temperatures in a manner akin to the binding of Jun-Fos heterodimer. However, anomalously large negative heat capacity changes provoke a model whereby Jun loads onto DNA as unfolded monomers coupled with subsequent folding and homodimerization upon association. The data also reveal that the heterodimerization of leucine zippers is modulated by the basic regions and these regions may undergo at least partial folding upon heterodimerization. Large negative heat capacity changes accompanying the heterodimerization of leucine zippers are consistent with the view that leucine zippers do not retain a-helical conformation in isolation and the formation of the native coiled coil a-helical dimer is attained through a coupled folding-dimerization mechanism. Taken together, this dissertation marks the first comprehensive thermodynamic analysis of an otherwise well-studied and vitally important transcription factor. My studies shed new light on the forces driving the AP1-DNA interaction in thermodynamic and structural terms. The implications of these novel findings on the development of novel therapies for the treatment of disease with greater efficacy coupled with low toxicity cannot be overemphasized.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:UMIAMI/oai:scholarlyrepository.miami.edu:oa_dissertations-1258
Date16 June 2009
CreatorsSeldeen, Kenneth Ladd
PublisherScholarly Repository
Source SetsUniversity of Miami
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
SourceOpen Access Dissertations

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