Slutsky Michael, Mirny Leonid A
Department of Physics and Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA.
Biophys J. 2004 Dec;87(6):4021-35. doi: 10.1529/biophysj.104.050765. Epub 2004 Oct 1.
Recognition and binding of specific sites on DNA by proteins is central for many cellular functions such as transcription, replication, and recombination. In the process of recognition, a protein rapidly searches for its specific site on a long DNA molecule and then strongly binds this site. Here we aim to find a mechanism that can provide both a fast search (1-10 s) and high stability of the specific protein-DNA complex (Kd=10(-15)-10(-8) M). Earlier studies have suggested that rapid search involves sliding of the protein along the DNA. Here we consider sliding as a one-dimensional diffusion in a sequence-dependent rough energy landscape. We demonstrate that, despite the landscape's roughness, rapid search can be achieved if one-dimensional sliding is accompanied by three-dimensional diffusion. We estimate the range of the specific and nonspecific DNA-binding energy required for rapid search and suggest experiments that can test our mechanism. We show that optimal search requires a protein to spend half of its time sliding along the DNA and the other half diffusing in three dimensions. We also establish that, paradoxically, realistic energy functions cannot provide both rapid search and strong binding of a rigid protein. To reconcile these two fundamental requirements we propose a search-and-fold mechanism that involves the coupling of protein binding and partial protein folding. The proposed mechanism has several important biological implications for search in the presence of other proteins and nucleosomes, simultaneous search by several proteins, etc. The proposed mechanism also provides a new framework for interpretation of experimental and structural data on protein-DNA interactions.
蛋白质对DNA上特定位点的识别与结合是许多细胞功能(如转录、复制和重组)的核心。在识别过程中,蛋白质会在长DNA分子上快速寻找其特定位点,然后与之紧密结合。我们旨在找到一种机制,既能实现快速搜索(1 - 10秒),又能使特定的蛋白质 - DNA复合物具有高稳定性(解离常数Kd = 10^(-15) - 10^(-8) M)。早期研究表明,快速搜索涉及蛋白质沿DNA滑动。在此,我们将滑动视为在依赖序列的粗糙能量景观中的一维扩散。我们证明,尽管景观粗糙,但如果一维滑动伴随着三维扩散,就能实现快速搜索。我们估计了快速搜索所需的特异性和非特异性DNA结合能量范围,并提出了可测试我们机制的实验。我们表明,最佳搜索要求蛋白质一半时间沿DNA滑动,另一半时间在三维空间扩散。我们还确定,矛盾的是,现实的能量函数无法同时实现刚性蛋白质的快速搜索和强结合。为了协调这两个基本要求,我们提出了一种搜索与折叠机制,该机制涉及蛋白质结合与部分蛋白质折叠的耦合。所提出的机制对于在其他蛋白质和核小体存在的情况下进行搜索、几种蛋白质同时搜索等具有若干重要的生物学意义。所提出的机制还为解释蛋白质 - DNA相互作用的实验和结构数据提供了一个新框架。