JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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The N-terminal methionine is a major determinant of the DNA binding specificity of MEF-2C.

Members of the MEF-2 family of transcriptional regulators positively modulate the activity of basic helix-loop-helix proteins in both myogenic and neurogenic cell lineages. Previous work had shown that MEF-2C(2-117), a protein fragment comprising the dimerization and DNA-binding domains of MEF-2C but lacking the N-terminal methionine, bound to AT-rich DNA sequences with high affinity. MEF-2C(2-117) did not discriminate between different AT-rich sequences. We now report the in vitro DNA binding properties of a MEF-2C fragment containing the N-terminal methionine. Measurements of the apparent dissociation constants of the complexes of GG-MEF-2C(1-117) revealed that different AT-rich sequences are bound with different affinities; in particular MEF site containing DNA (CTATAAATAG) is bound preferentially to DNA containing a SRF site (CATAAATG). Strikingly, when the shorter AT run consisted of six alternating thymines and adenines, almost wild-type affinity was observed. Irrespective of the particular DNA sequence, all circular dichroism spectra of the DNA complexes of GG-MEF-2C(1-117) were superimposable and characterized by an identical maximal ellipticity at 269.5 nm, suggesting similar DNA conformations. Bending analysis by circular permutation assay revealed that on complex formation MEF-2C(2-117) induced cognate DNA to bend by 49 degrees, while heterologous DNA remained unbent. In the presence of the N-terminal methionine, however, all DNA sequences were bent by 70 degrees. The above results suggest an important function for the N-terminal methionine in properly orientating MEF-2C on the DNA.

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