Recognition of T-rich single-stranded DNA by the cold shock protein Bs-CspB in solution
Authors
- M. Zeeb
- K.E.A. Max
- U. Weininger
- C. Loew
- H. Sticht
- J. Balbach
Journal
- Nucleic Acids Research
Citation
- Nucleic Acids Res 34 (16): 4561-4571
Abstract
Cold shock proteins (CSP) belong to the family of single-stranded nucleic acid binding proteins with OB-fold. CSP are believed to function as 'RNA chaperones' and during anti-termination. We determined the solution structure of Bs-CspB bound to the single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) fragment heptathymidine (dT7) by NMR spectroscopy. Bs-CspB reveals an almost invariant conformation when bound to dT7 with only minor reorientations in loop {beta}1-{beta}2 and {beta}3-{beta}4 and of few aromatic side chains involved in base stacking. Binding studies of protein variants and mutated ssDNA demonstrated that Bs-CspB associates with ssDNA at almost diffusion controlled rates and low sequence specificity consistent with its biological function. A variation of the ssDNA affinity is accomplished solely by changes of the dissociation rate. 15N NMR relaxation and H/D exchange experiments revealed that binding of dT7 increases the stability of Bs-CspB and reduces the sub-nanosecond dynamics of the entire protein and especially of loop {beta}3-{beta}4.