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Crystal structure of Sulfolobus Cren7-dsDNA complexCrystal structure of Sulfolobus Cren7-dsDNA complex
Structural highlights
FunctionCREN7_SACS2 A highly abundant probable chromatin protein, it binds double-strand DNA without sequence specificity; there is approximately 1 Cren7 molecule for 12 bp of DNA. Constrains negative DNA supercoils, increases DNA stability against thermal denaturation. Binding does not require protein methylation. Binds single-strand DNA weakly.[1] Evolutionary Conservation![]() Check, as determined by ConSurfDB. You may read the explanation of the method and the full data available from ConSurf. Publication Abstract from PubMedCren7 is a crenarchaeal conserved chromatin protein discovered recently. To explore the mechanism of the DNA packaging in Crenarchaeota, the crystal structure of Cren7-GCGATCGC complex has been determined and refined at 1.6 A resolution. Cren7 kinks the dsDNA sharply similar to Sul7d, another chromatin protein existing only in Sulfolobales, which reveals that the "bending and unwinding" compacting mechanism is conserved in Crenarchaeota. Significant structural differences are revealed by comparing both protein-dsDNA complexes. The kinked sites on the same dsDNA in the complexes with Sul7d and Cren7 show one base pair shift. For Cren7, fewer charged residues in the beta-barrel structural region bind to DNA, and additionally, the flexible loop L(beta3beta4) is also involved in the binding. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays indicate that loop L(beta3beta4) is essential for DNA-binding of Cren7. These differences provide insight into the functional difference of both chromatin proteins, suggesting that Cren7 may be more regulative than Sul7d in the DNA-binding affinity by the methylation in the flexible loop L(beta3beta4) in vivo. Crystal structure of the crenarchaeal conserved chromatin protein Cren7 and double-stranded DNA complex.,Feng Y, Yao H, Wang J Protein Sci. 2010 Jun;19(6):1253-7. PMID:20512977[2] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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