Publication | Open Access
Conservation and diversification in homeodomain-DNA interactions: a comparative genetic analysis.
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Citations
33
References
1996
Year
Structural BioinformaticsComparative GenomicsGeneticsMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsGenomicsGenetic DiversityConservation GeneticsMolecular EcologyMolecular RecognitionProteomicsHomeodomain-dna InteractionsBiochemistryGenome StudyBiomolecular InteractionGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsFunctional GenomicsStructural BiologyAmino Acid DeterminantsNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyTaat SiteMolecular BasisTaat SequenceMedicine
Nearly all metazoan homeodomains (HDs) possess DNA binding targets that are related by the presence of a TAAT sequence. We use an in vitro genetic DNA binding site selection assay to refine our understanding of the amino acid determinants for the recognition of the TAAT site. Superimposed upon the conserved ability of metazoan HDs to recognize a TAAT core is a difference in their preference for the bases that lie immediately 3' to it. Amino acid position 50 of the HD has been shown to discriminate among these base pairs, and structural studies have suggested that water-mediated hydrogen bonds and van der Waals contacts underlie for this ability. Here, we show that each of six amino acids tested at position 50 can confer a distinct DNA binding specificity.
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