Barouki R, Smith H O
J Biol Chem. 1986 Jul 5;261(19):8617-23.
The com10 mutant of Haemophilus influenzae binds donor DNA reversibly, but is deficient in uptake. The DNA binding has all the characteristics of interaction with a protein receptor; it is saturable, reversible, and specific. However, binding specificity is 6-fold weaker in com10 than is uptake specificity in wild-type. The binding of small (120 base pairs) and large (14,400 base pairs) DNA molecules were compared. For small molecules, binding data fitted a straight line by Scatchard analysis (Bmax = 4.8 DNA molecules/cell, Kd = 0.5 X 10(-9) M). In contrast, for large DNA molecules, the Scatchard plot was not linear. A high affinity binding (Kd = 0.4 X 10(-12) M) and a lower affinity binding (Kd = 1.2 X 10(-11) M) were found with a total number of 3 molecules bound per cell. In wild-type cells, 3.2 large molecules were taken up per cell, whereas up to 40 small 120-base pair DNA fragments were taken up per cell. Uptake of small DNA molecules followed a Michaelis-Menten function with a Km of 0.5 X 10(-9) M and a maximal initial velocity of 1.5 molecules/cell/min at room temperature. For large DNA molecules, maximal initial velocity was approximately 2 molecules/cell/min at room temperature. The analysis of the binding and uptake data suggest to us that a receptor or a receptor complex is responsible for the uptake of either a single large DNA molecule or, successively, a number of small DNA molecules.