Publication | Open Access
Functional specificity of the Antennapedia homeodomain.
88
Citations
18
References
1993
Year
BiologyDevelopmental BiologyIntegrative BiologyMedicineGeneticsNatural SciencesFunctional SpecificityGenomic MechanismHomeotic Selector GenesGene StructureMorphogenesisMolecular GeneticsAnimal DevelopmentGene ExpressionEvolutionary Developmental BiologyFunctional Genomics
The segmental identity in animal development is determined by a set of homeotic selector genes clustered in the invertebrate HOM or vertebrate Hox homeo box complexes. These genes encode proteins with very similar homeodomains and highly diverged N- and C-terminal sequences. The Antennapedia (Antp) homeodomain, for instance, differs at only five amino acid positions from that of Sex combs reduced (Scr) protein. Using a heat shock assay in which chimeric Antp-Scr proteins are expressed ectopically in Drosophila, we have shown that the functional specificity of the Antp protein is determined by the four specific amino acids located in the flexible N-terminal arm of the homeodomain. The three-dimensional structure of the Antp homeodomain-DNA complex shows that this N-terminal arm is located in the minor groove of the DNA, suggesting that the functional specificity is determined either by slight differences in DNA binding and/or by selective interactions with other transcription factor(s).
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