2xro
From Proteopedia
Crystal structure of TtgV in complex with its DNA operator
Structural highlights
FunctionTTGV_PSEPT Represses the expression of the ttgGHI and ttgVW operons. Binds to the ttgGHI / ttgVW intergenic region, probably preventing binding of RNA polymerase; ttgV dissociates from this region in the presence of 1-hexanol. Publication Abstract from PubMedThe majority of bacterial gene regulators bind as symmetric dimers to palindromic DNA operators of 12-20 base pairs (bp). Multimeric forms of proteins, including tetramers, are able to recognize longer operator sequences in a cooperative manner, although how this is achieved is not well understood due to the lack of complete structural information. Models, instead of structures, of complete tetrameric assembly on DNA exist in literature. Here we present the crystal structures of the multidrug-binding protein TtgV, a gene repressor that controls efflux pumps, alone and in complex with a 42-bp DNA operator containing two TtgV recognition sites at 2.9 A and 3.4 A resolution. These structures represent the first full-length functional tetrameric protein in complex with its intact DNA operator containing two continuous recognition sites. TtgV binds to its DNA operator as a highly asymmetric tetramer and induces considerable distortions in the DNA, resulting in a 60 degrees bend. Upon binding to its operator, TtgV undergoes large conformational changes at the monomeric, dimeric, and tetrameric levels. The structures here reveal a general model for cooperative DNA binding of tetrameric gene regulators and provide a structural basis for a large body of biochemical data and a reinterpretation of previous models for tetrameric gene regulators derived from partial structural data. Crystal structure of TtgV in complex with its DNA operator reveals a general model for cooperative DNA binding of tetrameric gene regulators.,Lu D, Fillet S, Meng C, Alguel Y, Kloppsteck P, Bergeron J, Krell T, Gallegos MT, Ramos J, Zhang X Genes Dev. 2010 Nov 15;24(22):2556-65. PMID:21078819[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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Categories: Large Structures | Pseudomonas putida | Alguel Y | Bergeron J | Fillet S | Gallegos M-T | Kloppsteck P | Krell T | Lu D | Meng C | Ramos J | Zhang X