Abstract
Background
Proteins HMG1 and HMG2 are two of the most abundant non histone proteins in the nucleus of mammalian cells, and contain a domain of homology with many proteins implicated in the control of development, such as the sex-determination factor Sry and the Sox family of proteins. In vitro studies of interactions of HMG1/2 with DNA have shown that these proteins can bind to many unusual DNA structures, in particular to four-way junctions, with binding affinities of 107 to 109 M-1.
Results
Here we show that HMG1 and HMG2 bind with a much higher affinity, at least 4 orders of magnitude higher, to a new structure, Form X, which consists of a DNA loop closed at its base by a semicatenated DNA junction, forming a DNA hemicatenane. The binding constant of HMG1 to Form X is higher than 5 × 1012 M-1, and the half-life of the complex is longer than one hour in vitro.
Conclusions
Of all DNA structures described so far with which HMG1 and HMG2 interact, we have found that Form X, a DNA loop with a semicatenated DNA junction at its base, is the structure with the highest affinity by more than 4 orders of magnitude. This suggests that, if similar structures exist in the cell nucleus, one of the functions of these proteins might be linked to the remarkable property of DNA hemicatenanes to associate two distant regions of the genome in a stable but reversible manner.
Background
Proteins HMG1 and HMG2, two of the most abundant non histone proteins, have been known for more than 25 years (for a review see [1]), and their function has been the subject of varied investigations, especially since it was found that they contain a domain of homology with many proteins implicated in the control of development or of differentiation. As examples of recent studies are their immunocytochemical localization [2], the deletion of the gene coding for HMG1 by homologous recombination in transgenic mice [3], the effect of HMG1 or of the HMG domain on the assembly of certain nucleoproteic complexes [4], the observation of the binding of HMG1 to Oct and Hox proteins [5,6], to nuclear hormone receptors [7], or to p53 [8], the influence of HMG1 on the circularization of short DNA fragments [9,10], on V(D)J rearrangement in vitro [11,12], or on transcription [13,14]. HMG1 has also been recently implicated as a mediator of endotoxin lethality [15]. An important way of studying the function and the mechanism of action of proteins HMG1/2 has obviously been the search for molecular partners, and, starting from the assumption that these chromatin proteins probably interact with DNA, many studies have been performed to study the sequences or the DNA conformations with which the proteins interact preferentially. For some HMG-domain proteins, specific binding sequences have been identified [16], but no such sequences have been found for proteins HMG1 and HMG2 themselves, which interact only weakly with double-stranded DNA. However, it has been shown that HMG1/2 could form complexes with several kinds of non-classical DNA structures: supercoiled circles [17,18,19,20], platinated DNA [21,22], UV-modified DNA [23], bulge loops [18,24,25], and four-way junctions [26]. As the interactions with four-way junctions were stronger than others, they have been the object of particular studies [18,26,27,28,29,30,31]. Thus, the image of HMG1 that has prevailed is of "an all-purpose DNA-bending, -wrapping, and -looping factor that can be recruited for transcription, DNA repair, and recombination" [32].
In the course of our studies with CA microsatellites, we have observed that a protein present in nuclear extracts of cultured monkey cells formed specific retarded complexes with a DNA fragment containing a tract of the poly(CA)· poly(TG) sequence [33] (Fig. 1A). The purification of the DNA-binding activity yielded two proteins which were identified as HMG1 and HMG2 [33] (Fig. 1B). And the DNA contained in the complexes was present as a new form ("Form X", [33]), with a mobility lower than the regular double-stranded fragment, which was bound by purified HMG1 and HMG2 [33] (Fig. 1C) and which has been identified [34] as the semicatenated DNA loop which is schematically represented on the Figure. This structure consists in a double-stranded DNA loop at the base of which DNA duplexes cross and form a knot in which one of the strands of one duplex passes between the two strands of the other duplex, and reciprocally.
Here we have studied the interactions of HMG1/2 with Form X, and found that these proteins bind much more strongly to semicatenated DNA junctions than to any other known DNA substrate.
Results
As HMG1 and HMG2 were known to interact with many different forms of DNA, we first compared the interactions of HMG1/2 with Form X and with several different DNA structures. Using labelled DNA minicircles as a substrate we observed preferential interactions of certain supercoiled topoisomers with HMG1/2 as described, but these interactions were always much weaker than the interactions with Form X (data not shown). Similarly, the interactions of HMG1/2 with bulge loops made by association of appropriate synthetic oligonucleotides were much weaker than the interactions of HMG1/2 with Form X. In all experiments with minicircles or bulge loops we could only observe a partial retardation of the labelled substrate and E. coli DNA was always an effective competitor of the interactions (not shown). In contrast, under identical conditions, Form X was always entirely retarded, and E. coli DNA was not a competitor.
Four-way junctions constitute another well-known substrate for HMG1/2 binding. We compared the affinity of HMG1 to four-way junctions and to Form X. Figure 2 shows in two different ways that the affinity of HMG1 for Form X is several orders of magnitude higher than for cruciform DNA. In the first experiment (Fig. 2A) the formation of complexes was studied in the presence of increasing amounts of E. coli competitor DNA. By comparing the first points in each series (lanes 1) it is observed that under strictly identical conditions all Form X is shifted whereas only part of the cruciform is retarded. It is also observed that the progressive addition of E. coli competitor DNA has no effect on the formation of complexes with Form X, whereas the complexes with cruciform disappear progressively. Identical results are obtained when a DNA containing CA microsatellites such as human DNA, or even pure poly(CA)· poly(TG), are used as competitor. A second experiment (Fig. 2B), with serial fivefold dilutions of protein HMG1 in the absence of competitor DNA, gives a similar result. With Form X, all the material is shifted except with dilution number 5. Complex C2 gradually disappears to give complex C1 when the HMG1 concentration decreases, suggesting that complexes C1 and C2 contain respectively one and two molecules of HMG1 bound per Form X. In contrast, with four-way junctions only 55% of the material is bound with the highest HMG concentration, and the retarded signal has already completely disappeared at the third concentration in the series. Mixing both substrates (two center lanes) confirms these observations. Identical results were obtained with protein HMG2.
Knowing the DNA and protein concentrations used, these experiments (Figs. 2A and 2B, lanes 1) lead to an estimate of the affinity constant of HMG1 for cruciform of about 0.05 × 109 M-1 under the conditions used, in good agreement with values of 0.01 × 109 to 109 which have been published or which can be deduced from published experiments for the interactions of HMG1 or of isolated HMG domains with cruciform [25,27,28]. To obtain an estimate of the much higher affinity constant of HMG1 for Form X, we had to lower the substrate concentration and use much higher dilutions of HMG1. This is shown in Figure 3, where we applied the serial dilution technique to estimate the affinity of HMG1 to Form X (for a review of the thermodynamic aspects of DNA-protein interactions, see e.g. [35,36]; for the determination of the parameters of interactions using the gel retardation technique, see [37]). The basis of the technique is that when 50% of the labelled substrate is shifted the law of mass action gives [P] = KD + [D]/2, where [P] and [D] are the total protein and DNA concentrations, respectively, and KD is the dissociation constant, which is the reciprocal of the affinity constant. Thus, when concentrations are much higher than KD, the amount of protein necessary to shift 50% of the DNA is proportional to the total DNA amount, whereas when the total DNA concentration becomes close to KD the protein concentration necessary to bind 50% of the DNA tends to a constant value which is equal to KD. Figure 3A shows the interactions of serial dilutions of HMG1 with decreasing concentrations of Form X: 16 pM, 1.6 pM and 0.16 pM (going much lower is difficult, the last concentration corresponding to 60 cpm of labelled DNA per sample). It is observed (Fig. 3B) that the amount of protein which is necessary to shift half of Form X decreases with the concentration of Form X, showing that even 0.16 pM is above KD, and therefore that the affinity constant (1/KD) is higher than 5 × 1012 M-1, a very high value which is 4 orders of magnitude higher than the affinity constant of HMG1 to four-way junctions.
Such a high affinity constant is highly suggestive of a long half-life for the complex [35]. We estimated the stability of the complex by carrying out a competition with the substrate [37]. The complex between labelled Form X and HMG1 was preformed at a protein/DNA ratio of ~ 2. An excess of unlabelled Form X was then added and incubation was resumed. When the complex between labelled Form X and HMG1 dissociates, the released protein associates with the excess of unlabelled Form X, while the released Form X remains free. Equal volume aliquots of the mixture are loaded on a running polyacrylamide gel at different incubation times, thus freezing the dissociation process and allowing us to determine the amount of the initial (labelled) complex and the amount of free labelled Form X as a function of time (Fig. 4A). Measurement of the radioactivity in the bands was performed with a phosphorimager (Fig. 4B), and the comparison with a simulation done with the program Chemical Kinetics Simulator (Fig. 4C) yielded estimates for the time constant of dissociation of 1.7 × 10-4 s-1 for complex C1 and 1.2 × 10-3 s-1 for complex C2, corresponding to half-lives of more than one hour for complex C1 and about 10 min for complex C2. If it is assumed that complexes C1 and C2 correspond to complexes of Form X with one and two molecules of HMG1 respectively, the observed difference of stability between C1 and C2 might correspond to different localizations of HMG1 on Form X, for example outside or inside the loop. In agreement with this suggestion, Form X shows a series of different bands on gels, which correspond probably to differences in the size of the loop, localization of the junction along the DNA, and supercoiling inside the loop, and some of these bands are unable to form complex C2 (data not shown).
Discussion
With our results showing that Form X is the strongest known DNA substrate for HMG1/2 proteins, the general situation with respect to the affinity of HMG1/2 to different DNA conformations can be summarized as follows: HMG1 and HMG2 have an affinity of the order of 106 for double-stranded DNA, bent or unbent, lower than the affinity of most HMG-domain proteins which have affinities high enough to show specific binding sites and complexes by gel retardation. A higher affinity is observed towards bulge loops, supercoiled circles, or platinated DNA. Then, with an affinity of 108 to 109, the four-way junction was the known substrate of highest affinity for HMG1/2, and the suggestions of biological function for these proteins have most often dealt with such interactions. Now we observe a much tighter binding of HMG1 and HMG2 to Form X, with an affinity constant of more than 5 × 1012, and the in vivo significance of interactions observed so far in vitro will have to be studied. The first question is obviously whether structures similar to Form X exist in the cell, at what stages, and at which frequency. Technically, given the stability of Form X and its high affinity for HMG1/2, it should be possible to detect Form X in the cell even if it is rare. It will also be important to determine whether the HMG domain is as important in these interactions as with four-way junctions, and whether other HMG-domain proteins also bind Form X structures.
Conclusions
Of all DNA structures described so far with which HMG1 and HMG2 interact, we have found that Form X, a DNA loop with a semicatenated DNA junction at its base, is the structure with the highest affinity by more than 4 orders of magnitude, suggesting that the possibility should be studied that such DNA hemicatenanes might exist in the cell nucleus. In addition, a role for the HMG domain in the formation or the stabilization of higher order chromatin structures has often been suggested (reviews in [1,32,38]), and our results go further in the same direction, by suggesting that one of the functions of HMG1/2 might be linked to the remarkable property of Form X to associate two distant regions of the genome in a stable but reversible manner.
Materials and Methods
Form X
The formation and purification of Form X has been described in detail elsewhere [34]. Briefly, a DNA fragment containing a tract of poly(CA)· poly(TG) in its center is heat-denatured and allowed to renature in the presence of protein HMG1/2. The complexes formed, in which HMG1/2 is found associated with Form X, are purified by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and electroeluted. The protein is then removed by extraction with chloroform in 1 M NaCl and 1% SDS, Form X is ethanol precipitated and redissolved in 0.1 M NaCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl, 1 mM EDTA, pH 7.5.
Four-way junctions were prepared with synthetic oligonucleotides with sequences identical to those used in [26].
Proteins HMG1 and HMG2
Proteins HMG1 and HMG2 were purified as described [33]. In the first experiments, their concentration was determined by electrophoresis on SDS-polyacrylamide gels, staining with coomassie blue, and comparison with known markers. Later, given the quantitative binding of HMG1 and HMG2 to Form X, a better precision was achieved by quantifying the interactions with known amounts of radioactively labelled Form X.
Protein-DNA interactions
Interactions were performed in 25 μL of 25 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5, 50 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT plus 100 μg/mL bovine serum albumin to prevent losses of material on tube walls (0.1% Triton X-100 is equally efficient). After addition of 1 μL of HMG1/2 protein, samples were incubated for 30 min. at 37° and loaded on a polyacrylamide gel. HMG and DNA concentrations are indicated in the Figure legends. Unless otherwise noted, electrophoresis was performed in 4% polyacrylamide gels (acrylamide:bis 29:1) in 6.7 mM Tris-acetate, 3.3 mM Na acetate, 1 mM EDTA, pH 7.8 at 4° with buffer recirculation.
Acknowledgments
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Nathalie Delgehyr for her help with experiments with bulge loops, Caroline Perrin for technical assistance, and Susan Elsevier for critical reading of the manuscript. This work was made possible in part by grants from the Association Française contre les Myopathies, the Ligue Nationale Française Contre le Cancer, and the Association pour la Recherche contre le Cancer.
Contributor Information
Claire Gaillard, Email: gaillard@ijm.jussieu.fr.
François Strauss, Email: strauss@ijm.jussieu.fr.
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