INVESTIGADORES
FREIRE ESPELETA Eleonora
artículos
Título:
Mechanism of DNA Recognition at a Viral Replication Origin*
Autor/es:
CRISTIAN ODDO; ELEONORA FREIRE; LORI FRAPPIER; GONZALO DE PRAT-GAY
Revista:
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Referencias:
Año: 2006 vol. 281 p. 26893 - 26903
ISSN:
0021-9258
Resumen:
Recognition of the DNA origin by the Epstein-Barr nuclear antigen 1 (EBNA1) protein is the primary event in latentphase genome replication of the Epstein-Barr virus, a model for replication initiation in eukaryotes. We carried out an extensive thermodynamic and kinetic characterization of the binding mechanism of the DNA binding domain of EBNA1, EBNA1452–641, to a DNA fragment containing a single specific origin site. The interaction displays a binding energy of 12.7 kcal mol_1, with 11.9 kcal mol_1 coming from the enthalpic change with a minimal entropic contribution. Formation of the EBNA1452–641_DNA complex is accompanied by a heat capacity change of _1.22 kcal mol_1 K_1, a very large value considering the surface area buried, which we assign to an unusually apolar protein-DNA interface. Kinetic dissociation experiments, including fluorescence anisotropy and a continuous native electrophoretic mobility shift assay, confirmed that two EBNA1_DNA complex conformers are in slow equilibrium; one dissociates slowly (t1/2 _ 41 min) through an undissociated intermediate species and the other corresponds to a fast twostep dissociation route (t1/2 _ 0.8 min). In line with this, at least two parallel association events from two populations of protein conformers are observed, with on-rates of 0.25–1.6 _ 108 M_1 s_1, which occur differentially either in excess protein or DNA molecules. Both parallel complexes undergo subsequent firstorder rearrangements of _2.0 s_1 to yield two consolidated complexes. These parallel association and dissociation routes likely allow additional flexible regulatory events for site recognition depending on site availability according to nucleus environmental conditions, which may lock a final recognition event, dissociate and re-bind, or slide along the DNA.