We carried out in vitro selection experiments to systematically probe the effects of TATA-box flanking sequences on its interaction with the TATA-box binding protein (TBP). This study validates our previous hypothesis that the effect of the flanking sequences on TBP/TATA-box interactions is much more significant when the TATA box has a context-dependent DNA structure. Several interesting observations, with implications for protein-DNA interactions in general, came out of this study. Selected sequences are selection-method specific and TATA-box dependent. The variability in binding stability as a function of the flanking sequences for (T-A)4 boxes is as large as the variability in binding stability as a function of the core TATA box itself. Thus, for (T-A)4 boxes the flanking sequences completely dominate and determine the binding interaction. Binding stabilities of all but one of the individual selected sequences of the (T-A)4form is significantly higher than that of their mononucleotide-based consensus sequence. Even though the (T-A)4 sequence is symmetric the flanking sequence pattern is asymmetric. We propose that the plasticity of (T-A)n sequences increases the number of conformationally distinct TATA boxes without the need to extent the TBP contact region beyond the eight-base-pair long TATA box. © The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Faiger, H., Ivanchenko, M., Cohen, I., & Haran, T. E. (2006). TBP flanking sequences: Asymmetry of binding, long-range effects and consensus sequences. Nucleic Acids Research, 34(1), 104–119. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkj414
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