Abstract

The restriction endonuclease EcoRI binds and cleaves DNA containing GAATTC sequences with high specificity. According to the crystal structure, most of the specific contacts of the enzyme to the DNA are formed by the extended chain region and the first turn of alpha-helix alpha 4 (amino acids 137-145). Here, we demonstrate that a dodecapeptide (WDGMAAGNAIER), which is identical in the underlined parts of its sequence to EcoRI amino acids 137-145, specifically binds to GAATTC sequences. The peptide inhibits DNA cleavage by EcoRI but not by BamHI, BclI, EcoRV, HindIII, PacI, and XbaI. DNA cleavage by XbaI is slowed down at sites that partially overlap with EcoRI sites. The peptide inhibits cleavage of GAATTC sites by ApoI, which recognizes the sequence RAATTY. It interferes with DNA methylation by the EcoRI methyltransferase but not by the BamHI methyltransferase. It competes with EcoRI for DNA binding. Based on these results, the DNA binding constant of the peptide to GAATTC sequences was calculated to be 3 x 10(4) M-1. DNA binding is not temperature-dependent, suggesting that binding of the peptide is entropy-driven. As the peptide does not show any nonspecific binding to DNA, its DNA binding specificity is similar to that of EcoRI, in spite of the fact that the affinity is much smaller. These results suggest that contacts to the phosphate groups in EcoRI mainly provide binding affinity, whereas the specificity of EcoRI is based to a large extent on sequence-specific base contacts.

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