2L93 image
Deposition Date 2011-01-29
Release Date 2011-06-15
Last Version Date 2024-05-01
Entry Detail
PDB ID:
2L93
Title:
Solution structure of the C-terminal domain of Salmonella H-NS
Biological Source:
Source Organism:
Host Organism:
Method Details:
Experimental Method:
Conformers Calculated:
200
Conformers Submitted:
20
Selection Criteria:
structures with the lowest energy
Macromolecular Entities
Structures with similar UniProt ID
Protein Blast
Polymer Type:polypeptide(L)
Molecule:DNA-binding protein H-NS
Gene (Uniprot):hns
Chain IDs:A
Chain Length:55
Number of Molecules:1
Biological Source:Salmonella typhimurium
Ligand Molecules
Primary Citation
Structural basis for recognition of AT-rich DNA by unrelated xenogeneic silencing proteins
Proc.Natl.Acad.Sci.USA 108 10690 10695 (2011)
PMID: 21673140 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1102544108

Abstact

H-NS and Lsr2 are nucleoid-associated proteins from Gram-negative bacteria and Mycobacteria, respectively, that play an important role in the silencing of horizontally acquired foreign DNA that is more AT-rich than the resident genome. Despite the fact that Lsr2 and H-NS proteins are dissimilar in sequence and structure, they serve apparently similar functions and can functionally complement one another. The mechanism by which these xenogeneic silencers selectively target AT-rich DNA has been enigmatic. We performed high-resolution protein binding microarray analysis to simultaneously assess the binding preference of H-NS and Lsr2 for all possible 8-base sequences. Concurrently, we performed a detailed structure-function relationship analysis of their C-terminal DNA binding domains by NMR. Unexpectedly, we found that H-NS and Lsr2 use a common DNA binding mechanism where a short loop containing a "Q/RGR" motif selectively interacts with the DNA minor groove, where the highest affinity is for AT-rich sequences that lack A-tracts. Mutations of the Q/RGR motif abolished DNA binding activity. Netropsin, a DNA minor groove-binding molecule effectively outcompeted H-NS and Lsr2 for binding to AT-rich sequences. These results provide a unified molecular mechanism to explain findings related to xenogeneic silencing proteins, including their lack of apparent sequence specificity but preference for AT-rich sequences. Our findings also suggest that structural information contained within the DNA minor groove is deciphered by xenogeneic silencing proteins to distinguish genetic material that is self from nonself.

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Primary Citation of related structures