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. 2004 Jun 18;339(5):1059-75.
doi: 10.1016/j.jmb.2004.03.083.

A biophysical characterisation of factors controlling dimerisation and selectivity in the NF-kappaB and NFAT families

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A biophysical characterisation of factors controlling dimerisation and selectivity in the NF-kappaB and NFAT families

Marie de Lumley et al. J Mol Biol. .

Abstract

The Rel/NF-kappaB family of eukaryotic transcription factors bind DNA with high specificity and affinity as homo- or heterodimers to mediate a diverse range of biological processes. By comparison, the nuclear factor of activated T-cells (NFAT) family has been recognised as Rel homologues due to structural similarities between the DNA-binding domains, yet they bind DNA as lower-affinity monomers. The structural and functional overlap between the NF-kappaB and NFAT families suggests that they may be evolutionarily divergent from a common, monomeric ancestor but have evolved different mechanisms to achieve high-affinity binding to their target DNA sequences. In order to understand the origin of these mechanistic differences, we constructed two chimeric proteins, based on molecular modelling, comprising the DNA-binding domain of NFAT and the dimerisation domain of NF-kappaB p50, differing only in the position of the splice site. Biophysical characterisation of the wild-type and chimeric proteins revealed that one of the chimeras bound DNA as a high-affinity, NF-kappaB-like cooperative dimer, whilst the other bound as a lower-affinity, NFAT-like monomer, demonstrating the importance of the interdomain linker in controlling the intrinsic ability of NFATc to form dimers. In addition, we have studied the rate of exchange of monomers between preformed NF-kappaB dimers and have determined, for the first time, the intrinsic homodimerisation constant for NF-kappaB p50. These data support a model in which NF-kappaB proteins bind DNA both in vitro and in vivo as high-affinity preformed homo- or heterodimers, which in an unbound form can still exchange monomer units on a physiologically relevant timescale in vivo.

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