Use of green fluorescent protein for the analysis of protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions
Abstract
Restriction modification (RM) systems play a crucial role in preventing the
entry of foreign DNA into the bacterial cell. The best studied Type I RM system is
EcoKI from Escherichia coli K12. Both bacteriophage and conjugative plasmids
have developed a variety of strategies to circumvent the host RM system. One such
strategy involves the production of antirestriction proteins that mimic a short
segment of DNA and efficiently inhibit the RM system. The main aim of this project
was to analyse the interaction of EcoKI and its cognate methylase (MTase) with the
T7 antirestriction protein, known as overcome classical restriction (Ocr), and various
ArdA antirestriction proteins. Currently, there is a paucity of structural data on the
complex formed between the Type I system and the antirestriction proteins. The aim
of this work was twofold; (i) compare the interaction of MTase with DNA and Ocr
and (ii) quantify the strength of interaction between MTase and various ArdA
proteins.
The MTase was fused to the Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) to facilitate
determination of the orientation of interaction with DNA and Ocr. Time resolved
fluorescence measurements were carried out using the GFP-MTase fusion to
determine the fluorescence lifetime and anisotropy decay. These experiments were
conducted using a time resolved fluorescence instrument fabricated in-house. The
values determined in these experiments were then used to perform fluorescence
resonance energy transfer (FRET) measurements with fluorescently labelled DNA or
Ocr. These measurements gave information concerning the relative orientation of the
MTase with either DNA or Ocr.
The GFP-MTase fusion was also used to quantify the strength of interaction
with various ArdA proteins. Previous attempts to determine the strength of
interaction between MTase and ArdA proteins by employing conventional
techniques have been unsuccessful. Therefore, a novel method was developed that
exploits the interaction of MTase with a cation exchange medium, which can
subsequently be displaced upon binding to ArdA. This method facilitated the
determination, for the first time, of a set of binding affinities for the MTase and
ArdA interaction.
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