A shared, non-canonical DNA conformation detected at DNA/protein contact sites and bent DNA in the absence of supercoiling or cognate protein binding

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Abstract

A hybrid protein (H144), consisting of Lac repressor and T7 endonuclease I, binds at the lac operator and cleaves relaxed double-stranded DNA at distal but distinct sites. These sites are shown here to coincide with a bacterial promoter, a phage T7 promoter, a site for gyrase and intrinsically bent DNA. The targets do not seem to share a particular DNA sequence, and in bent DNA, cleavage occurs at the physical center rather than at the common A- tracts. These results indicate that protein contact sites and intrinsic bends assume a non-canonical conformation in the absence of supercoiling or cognate protein binding. This feature may serve as a recognition signal or facilitate protein binding to initiate transcription and recombination.

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Economides, A. N., Everdeen, D., & Panayotatos, N. (1996). A shared, non-canonical DNA conformation detected at DNA/protein contact sites and bent DNA in the absence of supercoiling or cognate protein binding. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 271(40), 24836–24841. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.271.40.24836

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