Crystal structure of the MATa1/MAT alpha 2 homeodomain heterodimer bound to DNA
- PMID: 7569974
- DOI: 10.1126/science.270.5234.262
Crystal structure of the MATa1/MAT alpha 2 homeodomain heterodimer bound to DNA
Erratum in
- Science 1995 Nov 17;270(5239):1105
Abstract
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae MATa1 and MAT alpha 2 homeodomain proteins, which play a role in determining yeast cell type, form a heterodimer that binds DNA and represses transcription in a cell type-specific manner. Whereas the alpha 2 and a1 proteins on their own have only modest affinity for DNA, the a1/alpha 2 heterodimer binds DNA with high specificity and affinity. The three-dimensional crystal structure of the a1/alpha 2 homeodomain heterodimer bound to DNA was determined at a resolution of 2.5 A. The a1 and alpha 2 homeodomains bind in a head-to-tail orientation, with heterodimer contacts mediated by a 16-residue tail located carboxyl-terminal to the alpha 2 homeodomain. This tail becomes ordered in the presence of a1, part of it forming a short amphipathic helix that packs against the a1 homeodomain between helices 1 and 2. A pronounced 60 degree bend is induced in the DNA, which makes possible protein-protein and protein-DNA contacts that could not take place in a straight DNA fragment. Complex formation mediated by flexible protein-recognition peptides attached to stably folded DNA binding domains may prove to be a general feature of the architecture of other classes of eukaryotic transcriptional regulators.
Comment in
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A heterodimeric transcriptional repressor becomes crystal clear.Science. 1995 Oct 13;270(5234):251-3. doi: 10.1126/science.270.5234.251. Science. 1995. PMID: 7569972 Review. No abstract available.
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