Summary information and primary citation
- PDB-id
-
3zhm;
DSSR-derived features in text and
JSON formats
- Class
- transcription
- Method
- X-ray (2.6 Å)
- Summary
- N-terminal domain of the ci repressor from
bacteriophage tp901-1 in complex with the ol2 operator
half-site
- Reference
-
Frandsen KH, Rasmussen KK, Jensen MR, Hammer K, Pedersen
M, Poulsen JN, Arleth L, Lo Leggio L (2013): "Binding of
the N-Terminal Domain of the Lactococcal Bacteriophage
Tp901-1 Ci Repressor to its Target DNA: A
Crystallography, Small Angle Scattering, and Nuclear
Magnetic Resonance Study." Biochemistry,
52, 6892. doi: 10.1021/BI400439Y.
- Abstract
- In most temperate bacteriophages, regulation of the
choice of lysogenic or lytic life cycle is controlled by a
CI repressor protein. Inhibition of transcription is
dependent on a helix-turn-helix motif, often located in the
N-terminal domain (NTD), which binds to specific DNA
sequences (operator sites). Here the crystal structure of
the NTD of the CI repressor from phage TP901-1 has been
determined at 1.6 Å resolution, and at 2.6 Å resolution in
complex with a 9 bp double-stranded DNA fragment that
constitutes a half-site of the OL operator. This N-terminal
construct, comprising residues 2-74 of the CI repressor, is
monomeric in solution as shown by nuclear magnetic
resonance (NMR), small angle X-ray scattering, and gel
filtration and is monomeric in the crystal structures. The
binding interface between the NTD and the half-site in the
crystal is very similar to the interface that can be mapped
by NMR in solution with a full palindromic site. The
interactions seen in the complexes (in the crystal and in
solution) explain the observed affinity for the OR site
that is lower than that for the OL site and the specificity
for the recognized DNA sequence in comparison to that for
other repressors. Compared with many well-studied phage
repressor systems, the NTD from TP901-1 CI has a longer
extended scaffolding helix that, interestingly, is strongly
conserved in putative repressors of Gram-positive
pathogens. On the basis of sequence comparisons, we suggest
that these bacteria also possess repressor/antirepressor
systems similar to that found in phage TP901-1.