학술논문

DNA-binding affinity and transcriptional activity of the RelA homodimer of nuclear factor κB are not correlated
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Biological Chemistry. 292(46)
Subject
Genetics
Underpinning research
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Generic health relevance
Animals
Base Sequence
Binding Sites
Crystallography
X-Ray
DNA
E-Selectin
Gene Expression Regulation
Mice
Models
Molecular
Promoter Regions
Genetic
Protein Binding
Protein Domains
Protein Multimerization
Transcription Factor RelA
Transcriptional Activation
cooperativity
crystal structure
dimerization
DNA transcription
NF-kB transcription factor
E-selectin
RelA
kB site
Chemical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Language
Abstract
The nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) transcription factor family regulates genes involved in cell proliferation and inflammation. The promoters of these genes often contain NF-κB-binding sites (κB sites) arranged in tandem. How NF-κB activates transcription through these multiple sites is incompletely understood. We report here an X-ray crystal structure of homodimers comprising the RelA DNA-binding domain containing the Rel homology region (RHR) in NF-κB bound to an E-selectin promoter fragment with tandem κB sites. This structure revealed that two dimers bind asymmetrically to the symmetrically arranged κB sites at which multiple cognate contacts between one dimer to the corresponding DNA are broken. Because simultaneous RelA-RHR dimer binding to tandem sites in solution was anti-cooperative, we inferred that asymmetric RelA-RHR binding with fewer contacts likely indicates a dissociative binding mode. We found that both κB sites are essential for reporter gene activation by full-length RelA homodimer, suggesting that dimers facilitate DNA binding to each other even though their stable co-occupation is not promoted. Promoter variants with altered spacing and orientation of tandem κB sites displayed unexpected reporter activities that were not explained by the solution-binding pattern of RelA-RHR. Remarkably, full-length RelA bound all DNAs with a weaker affinity and specificity. Moreover, the transactivation domain played a negative role in DNA binding. These observations suggest that other nuclear factors influence full-length RelA binding to DNA by neutralizing the transactivation domain negative effect. We propose that DNA binding by NF-κB dimers is highly complex and modulated by facilitated association-dissociation processes.