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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
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630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The three-dimensional reconstruction of the connector of bacteriophage phi 29 has been obtained from tilt series of negatively stained tetragonal ordered aggregates under low-dose conditions and up to a resolution of (1/1.8) nm-1. These connectors are built up as dodecamers of only one structural polypeptide (p10). Two connectors form the crystal unit cell, each one facing in the opposite direction with respect to the plane of the crystal and partially overlapping. The main features of the two connectors that build the unit cell were essentially the same, although they were negatively stained in slightly different ways, probably due to their situations with respect to the carbon-coated support grid. The main features of the phi 29 connector structure revealed by this three-dimensional reconstruction are: the existence of two clearly defined domains, one with a diameter of around 14 nm and the other narrower (diameter approximately equal to 7.5 nm); an inner hole running all along the structure (around 7 to 8 nm in height) with a cylindrical profile and an average diameter of 4 nm; a general 6-fold symmetry along the whole structure and a 12-fold one in the wider domain; a clockwise
twist
of the more contrasted regions of both domains from the narrower towards the wider domain (the direction of DNA encapsidation). These features are compatible with an active role for the connector in the process of DNA packaging.
J
Mol
Biol 1986 Dec 20
PMID:Three-dimensional reconstruction of the connector of bacteriophage phi 29 at 1.8 nm resolution. 358 12
Previous experiments have shown that the locations of the histone octamer on DNA molecules of 140 to 240 base-pairs (bp) are influenced strongly by the nucleotide sequence. Here we have studied the locations of the histone octamer on a relatively long DNA molecule of 860 bp, using two different nucleases, micrococcal and DNAase I. Data were obtained from both the protein--DNA complexes and from the naked DNA at single-bond resolution, and then were analyzed by densitometry to yield plots of differential cleavage, which show clearly the changes in cutting due to the addition of protein. Our results show that the placement of core histones on the 860 bp molecule is definitely non-random. The digestion data provide evidence for five nucleosome cores, the centers of which lie in defined locations. In all but one of these protein--DNA complexes, the DNA adopts a unique, highly preferred rotational setting with respect to the protein surface. Another protein--DNA complex is unusual in that it protects 200 bp from digestion, yet is cut in its very center as if it were split into two parts. The apparent average
twist
of the DNA within all of these protein--DNA complexes is 10.2(+/- 0.1) bp, as measured by the periodicity of DNAase I digestion. This value is in excellent agreement with the
twist
of 10.21(+/- 0.05) bp deduced from the periodicity of sequence content in chicken nucleosome core DNA. In addition, we observe a discontinuity in the periodic cutting by DNAase I of about -1 to -3 bonds in going from any nucleosome core to the next. The most plausible interpretation of this discontinuity is that it reflects the angle by which adjacent protein--DNA complexes are aligned. Thus, any nucleosome may be related to its neighbor by a left-handed rotation in space of -1/10.2 to -3/10.2 helix turns, or -35 degrees to -105 degrees. Repeated many times, this operation would build a long, left-handed helix of nucleosomes similar to that described by many workers for the packing of nucleosomes in chromatin. In order to look for any long-range influences on the positioning of the histone octamer in the 860 bp molecule (as would be expected if the nucleosomes have to fit into some higher-order structure), we have examined the locations of the histone octamer on five different isolated short fragments of the 860-mer, all of nucleosomal length.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
J
Mol
Biol 1987 May 05
PMID:Sequence-specific positioning of core histones on an 860 base-pair DNA. Experiment and theory. 365 8
Structural details of the Rop protein from plasmid ColE1 are presented, with a description of the X-ray crystal structure determination and refinement at a nominal resolution of 1.7 A. The 63 amino acid protein is a dimer. Each monomer consists almost entirely of two alpha helices, the whole molecule forming a highly regular four-alpha-helix bundle. This may be approximated by a four-stranded rope with a radius of 7.0 A, a left-handed helical
twist
and a pitch of 172.5 A. The packing constraints for this novel type of coiled-coil structure are given. The protein acts in the control of plasmid replication via regulation of an RNA-RNA interaction in a manner not yet understood in atomic detail.
J
Mol
Biol 1987 Aug 05
PMID:Structure of the ColE1 rop protein at 1.7 A resolution. 368 71
(GT)n/(CA)n sequences have stimulated much interest because of their frequent occurrence in eukaryotic DNA and their potential for forming the left-handed Z-DNA structure. We here report the X-ray crystal structure of a self-complementary octadeoxynucleotide, d(GTGTACAC), at 2.5 A resolution. The molecule adopts a right-handed double-helical conformation belonging to the A-DNA family. In this alternating purine-pyrimidine DNA minihelix the roll and
twist
angles show alternations qualitatively consistent with Calladine's rules. The average tilt angle of 9.3 degrees is between the values found in A-DNA (19 degrees) and B-DNA (-6 degrees) fibers. It is envisaged that such intermediate conformations may render diversity to genomic DNA. The base-pair tilt angles and the base-pair displacements from the helix axis are found to be correlated for the known A-DNA double-helical fragments.
J
Mol
Biol 1987 Sep 05
PMID:The potentially Z-DNA-forming sequence d(GTGTACAC) crystallizes as A-DNA. 368 91
The T = 3 capsid of southern bean mosaic virus is analyzed in detail. The beta-sheets of the beta-barrel folding motif that form the subunits show a high degree of
twist
, generated by several beta-bulges. Only 34 water molecules were identified in association with the three quasi-equivalent subunits, most of them on the external viral surface. Subunit contacts related by quasi-3-fold axes are similar, are dominated by polar interactions and have almost identical calcium binding sites. There is no metal ion on the quasi-3-fold axis, as previously reported. Subunits related by quasi-2-fold and icosahedral 2-fold axes have different contacts but nevertheless display almost identical interactions between the antiparallel helices alpha A. A dipole-dipole type interaction between these helices may produce an energetically stable hinge that allows two types of dimers in a T = 3 assembly. The temperature factor distribution, the hydrogen-bonding pattern, and the contacts across the icosahedral 2-fold axes suggest that one of the dimer types is present in the intact virion and probably also in solution; the other is produced only during capsid assembly. Interactions along the 5-fold axes are mainly polar and possibly form an ion channel. The beta-sheet structures of the three subunits can be superimposed with considerable precision. Significant relative distortions between quasi-equivalent subunits occur mainly in helices and loops. The two dimeric forms and the subunit distortions are the consequence of the non-equivalent subunit environments in the capsid.
J
Mol
Biol 1987 Sep 05
PMID:Refined structure of southern bean mosaic virus at 2.9 A resolution. 368 93
Crystals of the hexadeoxyoligomer d(5BrC-G-5BrC-G-5BrC-G) were grown at different temperatures (5 degrees C, 18 degrees C and 37 degrees C) in the absence of divalent cations. The crystals grown at 5 degrees C did not diffract X-rays, while those grown at 18 degrees C and 37 degrees C did. The oligomer adopts the left-handed ZI conformation in both crystals. The main difference resides in a more extensive hydration shell in the crystal grown at high temperature than in the crystal grown at low temperature. The high-temperature crystal displays a spine of hydration running deep in the minor groove and linking exocyclic O-2 atoms of the pyrimidine rings. In both crystalline forms, a hydrated sodium ion bound to the N-7 of a guanine ring was found. Strings of water molecules bridging phosphate anionic oxygen atoms are found along the backbone. The absolute values of the propeller-
twist
are also different in both structures although the values of the
twist
are very similar. The results point to the importance of the crystallization conditions when analysing fine structural details like solvation properties of oligomers.
J
Mol
Biol 1986 Apr 20
PMID:Solvation of the left-handed hexamer d(5BrC-G-5BrC-G-5 BrC-G) in crystals grown at two temperatures. 373 33
The geometric quantities
twist
(Tw) and writhe (Wr) are of primary importance for a complete description of the structure of DNA. In the case of a closed circular DNA, the sum of Tw and Wr is constant and equal to the linking number, Lk. In this paper we present a general method for calculation of the
twist
in terms of a pair of curves and a correspondence surface that joins them. The
twist
of any pair of curves (C1 and C2) may take on different values depending upon their ordering, and in general Tw(C1, C2) is not equal to Tw(C2, C1). We describe four models that may be taken to represent the structure of DNA and compute the
twist
for both orderings in each case. The four models examined are: I, a regular helix about a linear axis; II, a toroidal helix about a closed circular axis; III, a superhelix about a regular helical axis; and IV, a superhelix about a closed toroidal helix. In cases II and IV these results are also used to calculate Lk and Wr. Case III is used to analyze the winding of DNA in a nucleosome.
J
Mol
Biol 1986 May 20
PMID:Calculation of the twist and the writhe for representative models of DNA. 374 9
Distributions of the linking number of circular DNA molecules, defined as the sum of
twist
and the writhing number, are obtained by Monte Carlo simulations of small, randomly closed DNA circles. We estimate the relative contributions of fluctuations in
twist
and writhe to the linking number distribution, as functions of DNA size. Published experimental data on topoisomer distributions in circular DNA molecules are interpreted to estimate the torsional rigidity of DNA in solution. We show that ignoring the writhe component of the linking number distribution, even for DNA circles as small as 250 base-pairs, leads to an underestimate for the torsional stiffness of the double helix. The value of the torsional modulus obtained from this analysis, C = 3.4 X 10(-19) erg cm, is from 10 to 40% larger than that estimated by others and more than twice as large as the values obtained from fluorescence depolarization or other time-resolved spectroscopic measurements. We also develop further the theoretical treatment of ring closure probabilities for DNA described in the previous article. It is shown that the torsional part of the ring closure probability, phi 0,1 (tau 0) is a periodic function of DNA length that contributes strongly to the ring closure probability for short chains but makes negligible contributions for chains over 1000 base-pairs in length.
J
Mol
Biol 1986 May 05
PMID:Topological distributions and the torsional rigidity of DNA. A Monte Carlo study of DNA circles. 378 81
X-ray and solution studies have shown that the conformation of a DNA double helix depends strongly on its base sequence. Here we show that certain sequence-dependent modulations in structure appear to determine the rotational positioning of DNA about the nucleosome. Three different experiments are described. First, a piece of DNA of defined sequence (169 base-pairs long) is closed into a circle, and its structure examined by digestion with DNAase I: the helix adopts a highly preferred configuration, with short runs of (A, T) facing in and runs of (G, C) facing out. Secondly, the same sequence is reconstituted with a histone octamer: the angular orientation around the histone core remains conserved, apart from a small uniform increase in helix
twist
. Finally, it is shown that the average sequence content of DNA molecules isolated from chicken nucleosome cores is non-random, as in a reconstituted nucleosome: short runs of (A, T) are preferentially positioned with minor grooves facing in, while runs of (G, C) tend to have their minor grooves facing out. The periodicity of this modulation in sequence content (10.17 base-pairs) corresponds to the helix
twist
in a local frame of reference (a result that bears on the change in linking number upon nucleosome formation). The determinants of translational positioning have not been identified, but one possibility is that long runs of homopolymer (dA) X (dT) or (dG) X (dC) will be excluded from the central region of the supercoil on account of their resistance to curvature.
J
Mol
Biol 1985 Dec 20
PMID:DNA bending and its relation to nucleosome positioning. 391 15
Unstained microtubules embedded in amorphous ice have been studied by cryo-electron microscopy and image reconstruction. The structural integrity is well preserved, judging by the similarity of optical diffraction patterns with X-ray fiber diagrams. Protofilaments are not straight but show a variable right-handed
twist
around the tubule axis with a pitch of several micron. While rapid freezing of warm solutions (about 37 degrees C) leaves microtubules intact, gradual cooling, followed by rapid freezing, allows one to visualize the time-course of microtubule breakdown. Disassembly proceeds both from the ends and from inside, and short protofilament fragments are among the early breakdown products.
J
Mol
Biol 1985 Jan 05
PMID:Unstained microtubules studied by cryo-electron microscopy. Substructure, supertwist and disassembly. 398 31
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