How do site-specific DNA-binding proteins find their targets?
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Abstract
Essentially all the biological functions of DNA depend on site-specific DNA-binding proteins finding their targets, and therefore 'searching' through megabases of non-target DNA. In this article, we review current understanding of how this sequence searching is done. We review how simple diffusion through solution may be unable to account for the rapid rates of association observed in experiments on some model systems, primarily the Lac repressor. We then present a simplified version of the 'facilitated diffusion' model of Berg, Winter and von Hippel, showing how non-specific DNA-protein interactions may account for accelerated targeting, by permitting the protein to sample many binding sites per DNA…
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1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Biology
- DNA
- Processivity
- DNA binding site
- Computational biology
- Binding site
- Lac repressor
- Biophysics
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