Protein–DNA interactions occur when a
protein binds a molecule of
DNA, often to regulate the
biological function of DNA, usually the
expression of a
gene. Among the proteins that bind to DNA are
transcription factors that activate or repress gene expression by binding to DNA motifs and
histones that form part of the structure of DNA and bind to it less specifically. Also proteins that
repair DNA such as
uracil-DNA glycosylase interact closely with it. In general, proteins bind to DNA in the
major groove; however, there are exceptions. Protein–DNA interactions are of mainly two types, either specific interaction, or non-specific interaction. Recent single-molecule experiments showed that DNA binding proteins undergo rapid rebinding in order to bind in correct orientation for recognizing the target site.
Design Designing DNA-binding proteins that have a specified DNA-binding site has been an important goal for biotechnology.
Zinc finger proteins have been designed to bind to specific DNA sequences and this is the basis of
zinc finger nucleases. Recently
transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) have been created which are based on natural
proteins secreted by
Xanthomonas bacteria via their
type III secretion system when they infect various
plant species.
Detection methods There are many
in vitro and
in vivo techniques which are useful in detecting DNA-Protein Interactions. The following lists some methods currently in use:
Electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) is a widespread qualitative technique to study protein–DNA interactions of known DNA binding proteins.
DNA-Protein-Interaction - Enzyme-Linked ImmunoSorbant Assay (DPI-ELISA) allows the qualitative and quantitative analysis of DNA-binding preferences of known proteins
in vitro. This technique allows the analysis of protein complexes that bind to DNA (DPI-Recruitment-ELISA) or is suited for automated screening of several nucleotide probes due to its standard ELISA plate formate.
DNase footprinting assay can be used to identify the specific sites of binding of a protein to DNA at basepair resolution.
Chromatin immunoprecipitation is used to identify the
in vivo DNA target regions of a known transcription factor. This technique when combined with high throughput sequencing is known as
ChIP-Seq and when combined with
microarrays it is known as
ChIP-chip.
Yeast one-hybrid System (Y1H) is used to identify which protein binds to a particular DNA fragment.
Bacterial one-hybrid system (B1H) is used to identify which protein binds to a particular DNA fragment. Structure determination using
X-ray crystallography has been used to give a highly detailed atomic view of protein–DNA interactions. Besides these methods, other techniques such as
SELEX, PBM (protein binding microarrays),
DNA microarray screens,
DamID,
FAIRE or more recently DAP-seq (DNA affinity purification sequencing) are used in the laboratory to investigate DNA-protein interaction
in vivo and
in vitro.
Manipulating the interactions The protein–DNA interactions can be modulated using stimuli like ionic strength of the buffer, macromolecular crowding, == See also ==