Abstract

CpG-binding protein is a transcriptional activator that exhibits a unique DNA binding specificity for unmethylated CpG motifs. CpG-binding protein contains a cysteine-rich CXXC domain that is conserved in DNA methyltransferase 1, methyl binding domain protein 1, and human trithorax. In vitro DNA binding assays reveal that CpG-binding protein contains a single DNA binding domain comprised of the CXXC domain and a short carboxyl extension. Specific mutation to alanine of individual conserved cysteine residues within the CXXC domain abolishes DNA binding activity. Denaturation/renaturation experiments in the presence of various metal cations demonstrate that the CXXC domain requires zinc for efficient DNA binding activity. Ligand selection of high affinity binding sites from a pool of degenerate oligonucleotides reveals that CpG-binding protein interacts with a variety of sequences that contains the CpG dinucleotide with a consensus binding site of (A/C)CpG(A/C). Mutation of the CpG motif(s) present within ligand-selected oligonucleotides ablates the interaction with CpG-binding protein, and mutation to thymine of the nucleotides flanking the CpG motifs reduces the affinity of CpG-binding protein. Hence, a CpG motif is necessary and sufficient to comprise a binding site for CpG-binding protein, although the immediate flanking sequence affects binding affinity.

Highlights

  • CpG-binding protein is a transcriptional activator that exhibits a unique DNA binding specificity for unmethylated CpG motifs

  • Ligand selection of high affinity binding sites from a pool of degenerate oligonucleotides reveals that CpG-binding protein interacts with a variety of sequences that contains the CpG dinucleotide with a consensus binding site of (A/C)CpG(A/C)

  • We have previously described a novel transcriptional activating DNA binding protein termed CpG-binding protein (CGBP) that binds to sequences that contain unmethylated CpG dinucleotides [17]

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Summary

Introduction

CpG-binding protein is a transcriptional activator that exhibits a unique DNA binding specificity for unmethylated CpG motifs. Ligand Selection of the CGBP Consensus Binding Site—A 6ϫHistagged CGBP fragment (amino acids 106 –345) that contains the CXXC domain, adjacent acidic domain, and a portion of a basic domain [17] was partially purified using His-Trap purification columns as described above and used to select binding sequences from a pool of degenerate oligonucleotides.

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