Protein–protein interactions are essential for life but rarely thermodynamically quantified in living cells. In vitro efforts show that protein complex stability is modulated by high concentrations of cosolutes, including synthetic polymers, proteins, and cell lysates via a combination of hard-core repulsions and chemical interactions. We quantified the stability of a model protein complex, the A34F GB1 homodimer, in buffer, Escherichia coli cells and Xenopus laevis oocytes. The complex is more stable in cells than in buffer and more stable in oocytes than E. coli. Studies of several variants show that increasing the negative charge on the homodimer surface increases stability in cells. These data, taken together with the fact that oocytes are less crowded than E. coli cells, lead to the conclusion that chemical interactions are more important than hard-core repulsions under physiological conditions, a conclusion also gleaned from studies of protein stability in cells. Our studies have implications for understanding how promiscuous—and specific—interactions coherently evolve for a protein to properly function in the crowded cellular environment.
Using time-gated fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy, significantly more signals from 3,6-bis(1-methyl-2-vinyl-pyridinium) carbazole diiodide (o-BMVC) foci, characterized by the longer fluorescent decay time of o-BMVC, were detected in six types of cancer cells than in three types of normal cells. Accumulating evidence suggested that the o-BMVC foci are mainly the G-quadruplex foci. The large contrast in the number of o-BMVC foci can be considered as a common signature to distinguish cancer cells from normal cells. Further study of tissue biopsy showed that the o-BMVC test provides a high accuracy for clinical detection of head and neck cancers.
DNA secondary structures and methylation are two well-known mechanisms that regulate gene expression. The catalytic subunit of telomerase, human telomerase reverse transcriptase (), is overexpressed in ∼90% of human cancers to maintain telomere length for cell immortalization. Binding of CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF) to the first exon of the gene can down-regulate its expression. However, DNA methylation in the first exon can prevent CTCF binding in most cancers, but the molecular mechanism is unknown. The NMR analysis showed that a stretch of guanine-rich sequence in the first exon of and located within the CTCF-binding region can form two secondary structures, a hairpin and a quadruplex. A key finding was that the methylation of cytosine at the specific CpG dinucleotides will participate in quartet formation, causing the shift of the equilibrium from the hairpin structure to the quadruplex structure. Of further importance was the finding that the quadruplex formation disrupts CTCF protein binding, which results in an increase in gene expression. Our results not only identify quadruplex formation in the first exon promoted by CpG dinucleotide methylation as a regulator of expression but also provide a possible mechanistic insight into the regulation of gene expression via secondary DNA structures.
We
assessed the ability of two strains of Escherichia coli, BL21 (DE3) and Tuner (DE3), to express a variant of the B1 domain
of protein G, which forms a side-by-side dimer, by using fluorine-labeling
and 19F nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. BL21 cells
express the protein in a binary, all-or-none, manner, where more cells
express the protein at a high level with an increasing inducer concentration.
Tuner cells express the protein in a rheostatic manner, where expression
increases across all cells with an increasing inducer concentration.
G-quadruplex (G4) structures have recently received increasing attention as a potential target for cancer research. We used time-gated fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) with a G4 fluorescent probe, 3,6-bis(1-methyl-2-vinylpyridinium) carbazole diiodide (o-BMVC), to measure the number of o-BMVC foci, which may represent G4 foci, in cells as a common signature to distinguish cancer cells from normal cells. Here, the decrease in the number of o-BMVC foci in the pretreatment of cancer cells with TMPyP4, BRACO-19 and BMVC4 suggested that they directly bind to G4s in cells. In contrast, the increase in the number of o-BMVC foci in the pretreatment of cells with PDS and Hoechst 33258 (H33258) suggested that they do not inhabit the binding site of o-BMVC to G4s in cells. After the H33258 was removed, the gradual decrease of H33258-induced G4 foci may be due to DNA repair. The purpose of this work is to introduce o-BMVC foci as an indicator not only to verify the direct binding of potential G4 ligands to G4 structures but also to examine the possible effect of some DNA binding ligands on DNA integrity by monitoring the number of G4 foci in cells.
The differential transcriptional expression of CLIC4 between tumor cells and the surrounding stroma during cancer progression has been suggested to have a tumor-promoting effect. However, little is known about the transcriptional regulation of CLIC4. To better understand how this gene is regulated, the promoter region of CLIC4 was analyzed. We found that a high GC content near the transcriptional start site (TSS) might form an alternative G-quadruplex (G4) structure. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) confirmed their formation in vitro. The reporter assay showed that one of the G4 structures exerted a regulatory role in gene transcription. When the G4-forming sequence was mutated to disrupt the G4 structure, the transcription activity dropped. To examine whether this G4 structure actually has an influence on gene transcription in the chromosome, we utilized the CRISPR/Cas9 system to edit the G4-forming sequence within the CLIC4 promoter in the cell genome. The pop-in/pop-out strategy was adopted to isolate the precisely-edited A375 cell clone. In CRISPR-modified A375 cell clones whose G4 was disrupted, there was a decrease in the endogenous CLIC4 messenger RNA (mRNA) expression level. In conclusion, we found that the G4 structure in the CLIC4 promoter might play an important role in regulating the level of transcription.
The high concentration of macromolecules in cells affects the stability of proteins and protein complexes via hard repulsions and chemical interactions, yet few studies have focused on chemical interactions. We characterized the domain-swapped dimer of the B1 domain of protein G in buffer and Escherichia coli cells by using heteronuclear, multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. In buffer, the monomer is a partially folded molten globule, but that species is not observed in cells. Experiments using urea suggest that the monomer is unfolded in cells, but again, the molten-globule form of the monomer is absent. The data suggest that attractive chemical interactions in the cytoplasm unfold the molten globule. We conclude that the intracellular environment not only modulates the stability of protein complexes but also can change the species present, reinforcing the idea that chemical interactions are more important than hard repulsions in cells.
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