Zhang P, Tobias I, Olson W K
Department of Chemistry, Wright-Rieman Laboratories, Rutgers, State University of New Jersey, New Bruswick 08903.
J Mol Biol. 1994 Sep 23;242(3):271-90. doi: 10.1006/jmbi.1994.1578.
The effect of protein-induced wrapping on overall DNA folding is studied using Monte Carlo computer simulation techniques. A new modeling scheme is devised to represent configurations of closed circular DNA containing fragments of the double helix partially wrapped around a core of proteins. The DNA consists of two regions, a fragment wrapped in a left-handed superhelical path around a 'phantom' protein core and a free connecting loop. The loop has at least one single-stranded scission so that it can assume a torsionally relaxed state. The configuration of the loop is varied during the course of the computer simulations and the three-dimensional spatial arrangements of lowest total energy are identified. The axis of the DNA loop is represented by a finite three-dimensional Fourier series perturbation of an initial Bézier curve, making it possible to fix the position and orientation of the chain ends as well as the contour length of the free loop. The energy is approximated by elastic terms for the bending and twisting of the DNA and an excluded volume contribution that prevents the self-intersection of sequentially distant chain segments. The proportions of the protein-DNA complex, the number of superhelical turns, the chain length and the imposed linking number difference of the closed DNA are varied in the calculations. The resulting minimum energy structures are consistent with physical models and suggest new ways to think about how proteins add and remove supercoils from DNA. Of special note in this regard is the sudden collapse of three-dimensional structure that accompanies small incremental wrapping of the DNA around the idealized protein core. These observations offer new structural insight into the mechanisms of action of proteins which add or remove supercoils from DNA and provide a first step in thinking about the activity of such systems at the chemical level whereby small fluctuations in local molecular structure are translated into large-scale macromolecular changes. The configurations identified in the simulations can also be examined in the context of the well known "linking number paradox" associated with nucleosome formation on closed circular plasmids. The findings bear relevance to DNA with natural curvature as well as to protein-induced bending and deformations of the double helix.
利用蒙特卡罗计算机模拟技术研究了蛋白质诱导包裹对整体DNA折叠的影响。设计了一种新的建模方案来表示包含部分缠绕在蛋白质核心周围的双螺旋片段的闭环DNA的构型。DNA由两个区域组成,一个片段以左手超螺旋路径缠绕在“虚拟”蛋白质核心周围,以及一个自由连接环。该环至少有一个单链断裂,因此它可以处于扭转松弛状态。在计算机模拟过程中改变环的构型,并确定总能量最低的三维空间排列。DNA环的轴由初始贝塞尔曲线的有限三维傅里叶级数扰动表示,从而可以固定链端的位置和方向以及自由环的轮廓长度。能量通过DNA弯曲和扭转的弹性项以及防止顺序上相距较远的链段自相交的排除体积贡献来近似。在计算中改变蛋白质-DNA复合物的比例、超螺旋匝数、链长和闭环DNA施加的连接数差。所得的最低能量结构与物理模型一致,并提出了思考蛋白质如何在DNA上添加和去除超螺旋的新方法。在这方面特别值得注意的是,随着DNA围绕理想化蛋白质核心的小增量包裹,三维结构会突然坍塌。这些观察结果为从DNA添加或去除超螺旋的蛋白质的作用机制提供了新的结构见解,并为在化学水平上思考此类系统的活性提供了第一步,即局部分子结构的小波动如何转化为大规模的大分子变化。模拟中确定的构型也可以在与闭环质粒上核小体形成相关的著名“连接数悖论”的背景下进行研究。这些发现与具有自然曲率的DNA以及蛋白质诱导的双螺旋弯曲和变形有关。