Zif268-like zinc fingers are generally regarded as independent DNA- binding modules that each specify three base pairs in adjacent, but discrete, subsites. However, crystallographic evidence suggests that a contact also can occur from the second helical position of one finger to the subsite of the preceding finger. Here we show for the three-finger DNA-binding domain of the protein Zif268, and a panel of variants, that deleting the putative contact from finger 3 can affect the binding specificity for the 5' base in the adjoining triplet, which forms part of the binding site of finger 2. This finding demonstrates that Zif268-like zinc fingers can specify overlapping 4- bp subsites, and that sequence specificity at the boundary between subsites arises from synergy between adjacent fingers. This has important implications fur the design and selection of zinc fingers with novel DNA binding specificities.
CITATION STYLE
Isalan, M., Choo, Y., & Klug, A. (1997). Synergy between adjacent zinc fingers in sequence-specific DNA recognition. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 94(11), 5617–5621. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.94.11.5617
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