Abstract

Fibroin-modulator-binding protein 1 (FMBP-1) is a factor that binds the transcriptional activation elements of the fibroin gene. It has a novel structure, consisting of four tandem repeats (R1-R4) of 23 amino acids each in the C-terminal half. This region is referred to as the STPR (score and three amino acid peptide repeat) domain and acts as a DNA-binding domain in FMBP-1. Interestingly, the homology among the four repeats is remarkably high. Here, we have determined the three-dimensional structures of the four repeats by NMR. All four repeat units have basically the same structure: a short alpha-helix in the N-terminal half maintained by a salt bridge and an N-capping box. CD studies showed that the full-length STPR domain was 31% helical in solution. This is explained by the connections among the four short helices that were determined separately by NMR. From the thermal-denaturation study, it can be deduced that these four helices in the full-length STPR domain moved flexibly with no interaction among them. However, the specific DNA caused a distinct increase, of up to 76%, in the alpha-helical content of the full-length STPR domain. This finding suggests that the binding of the full-length STPR domain to specific DNA causes an induced-fit conformational change that increases alpha-helicity; the poorly structured regions of the protein may form a regular secondary structure. Furthermore, the mutation analysis showed that the four repeats of the STPR domain raise the possibility of interaction with DNA in different ways.

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