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The transactivation region of the Fis protein that controls site-specific DNA inversion contains extended mobile beta -hairpin arms

Authors :
Sarah E. Cramton
Reid C. Johnson
Leah Corselli
Wei-Zen Yang
Martin K. Safo
Hanna S. Yuan
Source :
The EMBO Journal. 16:6860-6873
Publication Year :
1997
Publisher :
Wiley, 1997.

Abstract

The Fis protein regulates site-specific DNA inversion catalyzed by a family of DNA invertases when bound to a cis-acting recombinational enhancer. As is often found for transactivation domains, previous crystal structures have failed to resolve the conformation of the N-terminal inversion activation region within the Fis dimer. A new crystal form of a mutant Fis protein now reveals that the activation region contains two beta-hairpin arms that protrude over 20 A from the protein core. Saturation mutagenesis identified the regulatory and structurally important amino acids. The most critical activating residues are located near the tips of the beta-arms. Disulfide cross-linking between the beta-arms demonstrated that they are highly flexible in solution and that efficient inversion activation can occur when the beta-arms are covalently linked together. The emerging picture for this regulatory motif is that contacts with the recombinase at the tip of the mobile beta-arms activate the DNA invertase in the context of an invertasome complex.

Details

ISSN :
14602075
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The EMBO Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4b4230c0eb4bede98c3c9e2be454009c