Summary information and primary citation
- PDB-id
-
4rve;
DSSR-derived features in text and
JSON formats
- Class
- hydrolase-DNA
- Method
- X-ray (3.0 Å)
- Summary
- The crystal structure of ecorv endonuclease and of its
complexes with cognate and non-cognate DNA segments
- Reference
-
Winkler FK, Banner DW, Oefner C, Tsernoglou D, Brown RS,
Heathman SP, Bryan RK, Martin PD, Petratos K, Wilson KS
(1993): "The crystal
structure of EcoRV endonuclease and of its complexes with
cognate and non-cognate DNA fragments." EMBO
J., 12, 1781-1795.
- Abstract
- The crystal structure of EcoRV endonuclease has been
determined at 2.5 A resolution and that of its complexes
with the cognate DNA decamer GGGATATCCC (recognition
sequence underlined) and the non-cognate DNA octamer
CGAGCTCG at 3.0 A resolution. Two octamer duplexes of the
non-cognate DNA, stacked end-to-end, are bound to the
dimeric enzyme in B-DNA-like conformations. The
protein--DNA interactions of this complex are prototypic
for non-specific DNA binding. In contrast, only one cognate
decamer duplex is bound and deviates considerably from
canonical B-form DNA. Most notably, a kink of approximately
50 degrees is observed at the central TA step with a
concomitant compression of the major groove. Base-specific
hydrogen bonds between the enzyme and the recognition base
pairs occur exclusively in the major groove. These
interactions appear highly co-operative as they are all
made through one short surface loop comprising residues
182-186. Numerous contacts with the sugar phosphate
backbone extending beyond the recognition sequence are
observed in both types of complex. However, the total
surface area buried on complex formation is > 1800 A2
larger in the case of cognate DNA binding. Two acidic side
chains, Asp74 and Asp90, are close to the reactive
phosphodiester group in the cognate complex and most
probably provide oxygen ligands for binding the essential
cofactor Mg2+. An important role is also indicated for
Lys92, which together with the two acidic functions appears
to be conserved in the otherwise unrelated structure of
EcoRI endonuclease. The structural results give new insight
into the physical basis of the remarkable sequence
specificity of this enzyme.