Abstract

Heat shock transcription factor (HSF) mediates the activation of heat shock genes by binding to its cognate sites with high affinity and specificity. The high-affinity binding of HSF is dependent on the formation of an HSF homotrimer, which interacts specifically with the heat shock response element (HSE), comprised of 3 inverted repeats of the 5-bp sequence NGAAN. In order to investigate the thermodynamic basis of the interaction between HSF and HSE, we have overexpressed and purified a polypeptide (dHSF(33-163)) encompassing only the DNA-binding domain of HSF from Drosophila and analyzed its binding to DNA by equilibrium analytical ultracentrifugation using a multiwavelength scan technique. We demonstrate that dHSF(33-163) can bind as a monomer with 1:1 stoichiometry to a synthetic 13-bp DNA containing a single NGAAN sequence. The values of the thermodynamic parameters obtained from the temperature dependence of the equilibrium binding constants indicate that the changes of free energy for the binding of dHSF(33-163) to the wild-type site and a mutant DNA site are predominantly characterized by substantial negative changes of enthalpy. Binding to the wild-type DNA is characterized by a significant positive change of entropy, whereas binding to the mutant DNA is distinguished by a negative change of entropy of comparable magnitude. The binding to the mutant DNA was also highly sensitive to increasing salt concentrations, indicating a dominance of ionic interactions. The sequence-specific, 1:1 binding of dHSF(33-163) to the NGAAN sequence provides a basis for the analysis of higher order interactions between HSF trimers and the HSE.

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