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Dive into the research topics where Nancy C. Horton is active.

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Featured researches published by Nancy C. Horton.


Science | 1996

Crystal structure of the lactose operon repressor and its complexes with DNA and inducer.

Mitchell Lewis; Geoffrey Chang; Nancy C. Horton; Michele A. Kercher; Helen C. Pace; Maria A. Schumacher; Richard G. Brennan; Ponzy Lu

The lac operon of Escherichia coli is the paradigm for gene regulation. Its key component is the lac repressor, a product of the lacI gene. The three-dimensional structures of the intact lac repressor, the lac repressor bound to the gratuitous inducer isopropyl-β-D-1-thiogalactoside (IPTG) and the lac repressor complexed with a 21-base pair symmetric operator DNA have been determined. These three structures show the conformation of the molecule in both the induced and repressed states and provide a framework for understanding a wealth of biochemical and genetic information. The DNA sequence of the lac operon has three lac repressor recognition sites in a stretch of 500 base pairs. The crystallographic structure of the complex with DNA suggests that the tetrameric repressor functions synergistically with catabolite gene activator protein (CAP) and participates in the quaternary formation of repression loops in which one tetrameric repressor interacts simultaneously with two sites on the genomic DNA.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2002

Sequence selectivity and degeneracy of a restriction endonuclease mediated by DNA intercalation.

Nancy C. Horton; Lydia F. Dorner; John J. Perona

The crystal structure of the HincII restriction endonuclease–DNA complex shows that degenerate specificity for blunt-ended cleavage at GTPyPuAC sequences arises from indirect readout of conformational preferences at the center pyrimidine-purine step. Protein-induced distortion of the DNA is accomplished by intercalation of glutamine side chains into the major groove on either side of the recognition site, generating bending by either tilt or roll at three distinct loci. The intercalated side chains propagate a concerted shift of all six target-site base pairs toward the minor groove, producing an unusual cross-strand purine stacking at the center pyrimidine–purine step. Comparison of the HincII and EcoRV cocrystal structures suggests that sequence-dependent differences in base–stacking free energies are a crucial underlying factor mediating protein recognition by indirect readout.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2001

Making the most of metal ions

Nancy C. Horton; John J. Perona

Crystal structures of the homing endonuclease I-CreI bound to substrate DNA and divalent metals show that one metal ion is shared between the two active sites of the enzyme. This arrangement appears uniquely suited to the formation of double-stranded DNA breaks via a concerted reaction.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

RECOGNITION OF FLANKING DNA SEQUENCES BY ECORV ENDONUCLEASE INVOLVES ALTERNATIVE PATTERNS OF WATER-MEDIATED CONTACTS

Nancy C. Horton; John J. Perona

The 2.1-Å cocrystal structure ofEcoRV endonuclease bound to 5′-CGGGATATCCC, in a crystal lattice isomorphous with the cocrystallized undecamer 5′-AAAGATATCTT previously determined, shows novel base recognition in the major groove of the DNA flanking the GATATC target site. Lys104 of the enzyme interacts through water molecules with the exocyclic N-4 amino groups of flanking cytosines. Steric exclusion of water molecule-binding sites by the 5-methyl group of thymine drives the adoption of alternative water-mediated contacts with ATversus GC flanks. This structure provides a rare example of structural adaptability in the recognition of different DNA sequences by a protein and suggests preferred strategies for the expansion of target site specificity by EcoRV.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Alteration of Sequence Specificity of the Type II Restriction Endonuclease HincII through an Indirect Readout Mechanism.

Hemant K. Joshi; Christopher Etzkorn; Lorentz Chatwell; Jurate Bitinaite; Nancy C. Horton

The functional and structural consequences of a mutation of the DNA intercalating residue of HincII, Q138F, are presented. Modeling has suggested that the DNA intercalation by Gln-138 results in DNA distortions potentially used by HincII in indirect readout of its cognate DNA, GTYRAC (Y = C or T, R = AorG) (Horton, N. C., Dorner, L. F., and Perona, J. J. (2002) Nat. Struct. Biol. 9, 42-47). Kinetic data presented here indicate that the mutation of glutamine 138 to phenylalanine (Q138F) results in a change in sequence specificity at the center two base pairs of the cognate recognition site. We show that the preference of HincII for cutting, but not binding, the three cognate sites differing in the center two base pairs has been altered by the mutation Q138F. Five new crystal structures are presented including Q138F HincII bound to GTTAAC and GTCGAC both with and without Ca2+ as well as the structure of wild type HincII bound to GTTAAC. The Q138F HincII/DNA structures show conformational changes in the protein, bound DNA, and at the protein-DNA interface, consistent with the formation of adaptive complexes. Analysis of these structures and the effect of Ca2+ binding on the protein-DNA interface illuminates the origin of the altered specificity by the mutation Q138F in the HincII enzyme.


Structure | 2008

Early Interrogation and Recognition of DNA Sequence by Indirect Readout

Elizabeth J. Little; Andrea C. Babić; Nancy C. Horton

Control of replication, transcription, recombination and repair requires proteins capable of finding particular DNA sequences in a background of a large excess of nonspecific sequences. Such recognition can involve direct readout, with direct contacts to the bases of DNA, or in some cases through the less well-characterized indirect readout mechanisms. In order to measure the relative contributions of direct and indirect readout by a sequence specific endonuclease, HincII, a mutant enzyme deficient in a direct contact, was characterized, and surprisingly showed no loss of sequence specificity. The three dimensional crystal structure shows the loss of most of the direct readout contacts to the DNA, possibly capturing an early stage in target site recognition using predominately indirect readout to prescreen sites before full sequence interrogation.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

The structure of SgrAI bound to DNA; recognition of an 8 base pair target

Pete W. Dunten; Elizabeth J. Little; Mark T. Gregory; Veena M. Manohar; Michael Dalton; David Hough; Jurate Bitinaite; Nancy C. Horton

The three-dimensional X-ray crystal structure of the ‘rare cutting’ type II restriction endonuclease SgrAI bound to cognate DNA is presented. SgrAI forms a dimer bound to one duplex of DNA. Two Ca2+ bind in the enzyme active site, with one ion at the interface between the protein and DNA, and the second bound distal from the DNA. These sites are differentially occupied by Mn2+, with strong binding at the protein–DNA interface, but only partial occupancy of the distal site. The DNA remains uncleaved in the structures from crystals grown in the presence of either divalent cation. The structure of the dimer of SgrAI is similar to those of Cfr10I, Bse634I and NgoMIV, however no tetrameric structure of SgrAI is observed. DNA contacts to the central CCGG base pairs of the SgrAI canonical target sequence (CR|CCGGYG, | marks the site of cleavage) are found to be very similar to those in the NgoMIV/DNA structure (target sequence G|CCGGC). Specificity at the degenerate YR base pairs of the SgrAI sequence may occur via indirect readout using DNA distortion. Recognition of the outer GC base pairs occurs through a single contact to the G from an arginine side chain located in a region unique to SgrAI.


PLOS Biology | 2010

Domain Swapping in Allosteric Modulation of DNA Specificity

Chad K. Park; Hemant K. Joshi; Alka Agrawal; M. Imran Ghare; Elizabeth J. Little; Pete W. Dunten; Jurate Bitinaite; Nancy C. Horton

The structure of two DNA-bound SgrAI enzyme dimers is presented, along with mutagenesis experiments supporting a role for this structure in polymer formation and the activation of DNA cleavage by SgrAI.


Structure | 2013

Allosteric Regulation of DNA Cleavage and Sequence-Specificity through Run-On Oligomerization

Dmitry Lyumkis; Heather Talley; Andrew Stewart; Santosh Shah; Chad K. Park; Florence Tama; Clinton S. Potter; Bridget Carragher; Nancy C. Horton

SgrAI is a sequence specific DNA endonuclease that functions through an unusual enzymatic mechanism that is allosterically activated 200- to 500-fold by effector DNA, with a concomitant expansion of its DNA sequence specificity. Using single-particle transmission electron microscopy to reconstruct distinct populations of SgrAI oligomers, we show that in the presence of allosteric, activating DNA, the enzyme forms regular, repeating helical structures characterized by the addition of DNA-binding dimeric SgrAI subunits in a run-on manner. We also present the structure of oligomeric SgrAI at 8.6 Å resolution, demonstrating the conformational state of SgrAI in its activated form. Activated and oligomeric SgrAI displays key protein-protein interactions near the helix axis between its N termini, as well as allosteric protein-DNA interactions that are required for enzymatic activation. The hybrid approach reveals an unusual mechanism of enzyme activation that explains SgrAIs oligomerization and allosteric behavior.


Biochemistry | 2010

Activation of DNA Cleavage by Oligomerization of DNA Bound SgrAI

Chad K. Park; Amanda Stiteler; Santosh Shah; M. Imran Ghare; Jurate Bitinaite; Nancy C. Horton

SgrAI is a type II restriction endonuclease that cuts an unusually long recognition sequence and exhibits allosteric self-modulation of DNA activity and sequence specificity. Precleaved primary site DNA has been shown to be an allosteric effector [Hingorani-Varma, K., and Bitinaite, J. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 40392-40399], stimulating cleavage of both primary (CR|CCGGYG, where the vertical bar indicates a cut site, R denotes A or G, and Y denotes C or T) and secondary [CR|CCGGY(A/C/T) and CR|CCGGGG] site DNA sequences. The fact that DNA is the allosteric effector of this endonuclease suggests at least two DNA binding sites on the functional SgrAI molecule, yet crystal structures of SgrAI [Dunten, P. W., et al. (2008) Nucleic Acids Res. 36, 5405-5416] show only one DNA duplex bound to one dimer of SgrAI. We show that SgrAI forms species larger than dimers or tetramers [high-molecular weight species (HMWS)] in the presence of sufficient concentrations of SgrAI and its primary site DNA sequence that are dependent on the concentration of the DNA-bound SgrAI dimer. Analytical ultracentrifugation indicates that the HMWS is heterogeneous, has sedimentation coefficients of 15-20 s, and is composed of possibly 4-12 DNA-bound SgrAI dimers. SgrAI bound to secondary site DNA will not form HMWS itself but can bind to HMWS formed with primary site DNA and SgrAI. Uncleaved, as well as precleaved, primary site DNA is capable of stimulating HMWS formation. Stimulation of DNA cleavage by SgrAI, at primary as well as secondary sites, is also dependent on the concentration of primary site DNA (cleaved or uncleaved) bound SgrAI dimers. SgrAI bound to secondary site DNA does not have significant stimulatory activity. We propose that the oligomers of DNA-bound SgrAI (i.e., HMWS) are the activated, or activatable, forms of the enzyme.

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John J. Perona

University of California

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Mitchell Lewis

University of Pennsylvania

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Helen C. Pace

University of Pennsylvania

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