©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Nucleotide and DNA-induced Conformational Changes in the Bacteriophage T7 Gene 4 Protein (*)

(Received for publication, June 1, 1995; and in revised form, July 20, 1995)

Yongqi Yong (§) Louis J. Romano (¶)

From the Department of Chemistry, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan 48202

ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES

ABSTRACT

The bacteriophage T7 gene 4 protein is a multifunctional enzyme that has DNA helicase, primase, and deoxyribonucleotide 5`-triphosphatase activities. Prior studies have shown that in the presence of dTTP or dTDP the gene 4 protein assembles into a functionally active hexamer prior to binding to single-stranded DNA. In this study, we have examined the effects of different nucleotide cofactors on the conformation of the gene 4 protein in the presence and absence of DNA. Gel retardation analysis, partial protease digestion, and DNA footprinting all suggest that the gene 4 protein undergoes a conformational change when dTTP is hydrolyzed to dTTP and that in the presence of dTDP the complex with DNA is more open or extended. We have also found that the dissociation constant of the gene 4 proteinbulletDNA complex in the presence of dTDP was 10-fold lower than that determined in the presence of dTTP, further suggesting that these cofactors exerts different allosteric effects on the DNA-binding site of the gene 4 protein.


INTRODUCTION

The bacteriophage T7 gene 4 protein is crucial in the replication of the phage genome. In this process, it functions as a DNA helicase (Kolodner et al., 1978; Kolodner and Richardson, 1978; Matson et al., 1983) and primase (Strätling and Knippers, 1973; Hinkle and Richardson, 1975; Romano and Richardson, 1979a, 1979b). In addition, the gene 4 protein can hydrolyze deoxyribonucleotide triphosphates (dNTPs) to diphosphates, with dTTP being the preferred substrate (Matson and Richardson, 1983). The energy released from hydrolysis of dTTP is used to fuel the other biological activities of this enzyme, such as its unidirectional (from 5` to 3`) translocation along single-stranded DNA (Tabor and Richardson, 1981) and its DNA unwinding activity.

Recently, it has been shown that the gene 4 protein is capable of forming a hexamer (Hingorani and Patel, 1993) that assembles in solution in the presence of either dTTP or dTDP, and in this form binds to single-stranded DNA. Following stabilization by cross-linking with gluteraldehyde, this hexameric complex can be isolated and was shown to retain both its DNA helicase and dTTPase activities^1 implying that the functionally active form of the gene 4 protein is the hexamer. The hexameric structure formed by the gene 4 protein is capable of making simultaneous interactions with both strands of DNA, a complex in which two or three subunits are contacting the same strand of DNA. (^1)

Hydrolysis of dTTP by the gene 4 protein is required for both translocation along single-stranded DNA and unwinding of double-stranded DNA. However, little is known about how the gene 4 protein couples its dTTPase activity to the movement necessary for both of these biological processes. It is likely that a conformational change driven by the energy released from hydrolysis of dTTP may play a pivotal role producing the requisite movement that mediates the translocation and actual strand separation by the gene 4 protein. Indeed, nucleotide-induced conformational changes have been observed for several DNA helicases. These include Escherichia coli dna B protein (Nakyama et al., 1984) and E. coli Rep and Helicase II proteins (Chao and Lohman, 1990; Wong and Lohman, 1992). For the gene 4 protein, additional conformational changes might be induced by binding to single-stranded DNA since the dTTPase activity of the gene 4 protein is DNA-dependent (Matson and Richardson, 1983). It is possible that a structural alteration in the gene 4 protein triggered by the interaction with single-stranded DNA is necessary to initiate the hydrolysis of dTTP.

For these reasons it seemed that a knowledge of the allosteric effects on the structure of the gene 4 protein that are induced by nucleotide cofactors and the interaction with single-stranded DNA might help us understand how this enzyme couples the energy released by dTTP hydrolysis into molecular movement along the DNA strand. In the present study, we have examined the structural alternations in the gene 4 protein using gel retardation analysis, partial proteolysis, and nuclease protection assays. The results from this study clearly show that the gene 4 protein undergoes conformational changes upon hydrolyzing dTTP to dTDP and upon binding to single-stranded DNA.


EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Materials

Enzymes

The T7 gene 4 protein was purified from extracts of E. coli 71.18 (obtained from Stan Tabor, Harvard Medical School) which harbored a plasmid over-expressing the wild type gene 4 protein. The expression of the cloned gene 4 was achieved by a T7 polymerase/promoter system (Tabor and Richardson, 1985). The gene 4 protein was isolated essentially as described (Bernstein and Richardson, 1988). All the gene 4 protein preparations used in the experiments were greater than 99% pure as judged by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of 0.1% SDS and staining the gel with silver. Trypsin was ordered from Sigma. Micrococcal nuclease was purchased from Amersham Corp. The protein molecular weight markers were ordered from Boehringer Mannerheim.

DNA and Nucleotides

Single-stranded M13mp9 DNA was purified as described (Messing, 1982). The homopolymers poly(dT) and poly(dA) and all the oligonucleotides were ordered from Midland Certified Inc. (Midland, TX). dTTP and dTDP were purchased from Pharmacia Biotech Inc. Commercially obtained dTDP contained typically 5-7% of contaminating dTTP and was purified by MonoQ iron-exchange high performance liquid chromatography to greater than 99.9% purity prior to use. The non-hydrolyzable analog of dTTP, beta,-methylene dTTP, was obtained from Amersham. All radioactive nucleotides were ordered from ICN Biomedicals. The concentration of single-stranded M13 DNA and the homopolymers were expressed in terms of nucleotide equivalents, while those of oligonucleotides were expressed in terms of full-length molecules.

Other Reagents

The chemical cross-linking agent glutaraldehyde (50% (v/v) water solution) was purchased from Aldrich and was diluted freshly with de-ionized water to the desired concentration just prior to use.

Methods

Gel Retardation Assays

The DNA-binding reactions (10 µl) were carried out in 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 10 mM MgCl(2), 1 mM dithiothreitol, and up to 5% glycerol (from the enzyme stock). Each reaction typically contained 0.24 µM of the gene 4 protein, 0.24 µM of a P-labeled oligonucleotide, and 1 mM of either beta,-methylene dTTP, dTTP, or dTDP as indicated. The reaction mixtures were incubated at 30 °C for 10 min, after which, 1 µl of a diluted glutaraldehyde (glutaric dialdehyde) solution was added to each reaction to a final concentration of 0.02%. The reactions were incubated for a further 20 s and then stopped by the addition of 6 µl of 100 mM EDTA, 40% glycerol, 0.1% bromphenol blue, and 0.1% xylene cyanol. The resulting mixtures were loaded onto a 6% non-denaturing polyacrylamide gel cast in 0.25 times Tris-borate-EDTA buffer. Electrophoresis was carried out at 12 V/cm and 4 °C with 0.25 times Tris-borate-EDTA as the running buffer. After electrophoresis, the polyacrylamide gel was subjected to autoradiography, and the radioactivity of the individual bands was quantitated by a phosphorimaging scanner (Molecular Dynamics SF) where indicated.

Preparation of Oligonucleotides with Different Sizes

In order to determine the minimum length of single-stranded oligonucleotide molecules that the gene 4 protein could bind under different conditions, we prepared a group of oligonucleotides ranging from 10 to 54 bases long, with their length increasing by an increment of one base. Briefly, an oligonucleotide 54 bases long that had been labeled at the 5`-end with P was cleaved chemically as described for the A + G and C + T reactions of Maxam and Gilbert(1980) sequencing procedure, the products of the chemical cleavage were loaded onto a 10% polyacrylamide gel, and electrophoresis was carried out in the presence of 7 M urea. The individual bands were located by autoradiography, cut from the gel, and the oligonucleotides eluted by crushing the gel slices and soaking them in 0.3 M sodium acetate (pH 5.2), 10 mM magnesium acetate, 1 mM EDTA, and 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate at 37 °C for a minimum of 4 h. The recovered oligonucleotide molecules were either precipitated once with ethanol (for products more than 16 bases long) or desalted with Sep-Pak C18 cartridges (Waters Chromatography) according to the protocol supplied by the manufacturer (for oligonucleotides shorter than 16), and the final products dissolved in deionized water and stored at -20 °C.

Data Analysis

The protein-bound and free oligonucleotide probes separated by electrophoresis in the gel retardation experiments were quantitated by scanning the gels in a Molecular Dynamics PhosphorImager SF. The data obtained was analyzed by a Hill plot:

log[Pt]=log(f1-f)+log K

K(d) was the dissociation constant of the DNA-binding reaction, [Pt] was the total concentration of the protein present in the reaction, and f was the ratio of the amount of the bound oligonucleotides over the total amount of the oligonucleotides present in the reaction. The logarithm of [Pt] was plotted against the logarithm of (f/(1-f), and the intercept at the vertical axis represented the logarithm of K(d).

Partial Proteolytic Digestion of the Gene 4 Protein

The gene 4 protein (0.75 µM) was incubated in 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 10 mM MgCl(2), 1 mM dithiothreitol at 30 °C for 8 min. The reaction mixtures also included 1 mM of either dTTP or dTDP, and 270 µM single-stranded M13mp9 DNA when indicated (total volume of each reaction was 9 µl). After the 8 min preincubation, the indicated amount of trypsin (in 1 µl) was added to the reaction mixture, and the incubation was continued for another 15 min at 30 °C. Tryptic digestion was stopped by the addition of 10 µl of a 2 times SDS sample loading buffer containing 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 6.8), 1.4 M beta-mercaptoethanol, 4% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 0.2% bromphenol blue, and 20% glycerol, followed immediately by boiling the sample for 3 min. The products of trypsin digestion were analyzed on a 12% polyacrylamide gel cast in a discontinuous buffer system containing 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate (Laemmli, 1970), and the protein bands were visualized by staining the gel with silver.

Micrococcal Nuclease Protection

The gene 4 protein (0.4 µM) was incubated in 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 10 mM MgCl(2), and 1 mM dithiothreitol at 25 °C for 12 min; 1 mM of either dTDP or beta,-methylene dTTP, and 75 µM of either poly(dA) or poly(dT) were present in the reaction mixture (10 µl) as indicated. At the end of the 12-min incubation, the indicated amount of micrococcal nuclease (in 2 µl) was added to each reaction mixture; nuclease cleavage was carried out at 30 °C for 30 s, after which it was stopped by the immediate addition of 1.5 µl of 20 mM EGTA (pH 7.6) and boiling for 5 min. The DNA fragments generated by the nuclease digestion were post-labeled with P by adding 2 µl of a solution containing 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 20 mM MgCl(2), 5 mM dithiothreitol, 20 µM [-P]ATP (specific activity 750 Ci/mmol), and 1.5 units/µl of T4 polynucleotide kinase directly into each of the above reaction mixtures, then incubating the samples at 37 °C for 45 min. The P-labeled fragments were fractionated on a 10% polyacrylamide gel containing 7 M urea. After electrophoresis, autoradiography was carried out to visualize the products of micrococcal nuclease digestion.


RESULTS

The Gene 4 ProteinbulletDNA Complexes Formed in the Presence of dTDP or dTTP

In the presence of either dTTP or dTDP, the gene 4 protein assembles into a hexameric complex in solution that binds to single-stranded DNA (Hingorani and Patel, 1993). The quaternary structure of this complex can be stabilized by the protein cross-linking agent glutaraldehyde, so that it remains stable during electrophoresis. A comparison of the electrophoretic mobility of the complex formed in the presence of dTDP and dTTP by gel retardation analysis is shown in Fig. 1. In the presence of dTDP, the gene 4 protein and a 60-mer formed a single proteinbulletDNA complex that was detectable in the mobility-shift gel (Fig. 1). No change was observed if the gene 4 protein concentration was increased to 250 nM ( Fig. 1). However, when dTTP was present, two differences were noted (Fig. 1). First, two shifted bands were observed that migrated substantially differently from each other in the gel. Second, the faster moving of these migrated slightly ahead of the complex formed when dTDP was used as the cofactor (Fig. 1). UV and gluteraldehyde cross-linking followed by SDS gel electrophoretic analysis of these faster moving complexes indicated that these materials contained a single gene 4 protein hexamer (data not shown). At higher concentrations of gene 4 protein in the presence of dTTP, only the slower moving of these two bands was observed suggesting that this complex is produced by the binding of two gene 4 protein hexamers to the oligonucleotide.


Figure 1: The proteinbulletDNA complexes formed by the gene 4 protein and oligonucleotides in the presence of dTDP and dTTP. The DNA binding reactions and the separation of the reaction products were carried out as described under ``Experimental Procedures.'' An oligonucleotide molecule 60 bases long (60-mer) was used in this experiment. The compositions of these reactions are as indicated and the positions of the free 60-mer, and the proteinbulletDNA complexes formed by the gene 4 protein and the 60-mer are indicated. The positions of the origins of the lanes are marked by the arrow.



More interesting is the difference in mobility of the faster moving complexes formed in the presence of dTTP versus dTDP. The proteinbulletDNA complex formed by the gene 4 protein and the 60-mer in the presence of dTDP displayed a clearly slower electrophoretic mobility than the complex formed at low (80 nM) concentrations of gene 4 protein in the presence of dTTP (Fig. 1). As described above, these complexes have identical molecular weights in an SDS gel, suggesting that the gene 4 proteinbulletDNA complex may undergo a conformational change when the nucleotide cofactor is switch from dTTP to dTDP, a process that occurs during hydrolysis of dTTP. This observation also suggests that the gene 4 proteinbulletDNA complex may adopt a more extended conformation in the presence of dTDP since this structure migrates more slowly in the gel than the complex formed in the presence of dTTP.

The Effects of Different Nucleotide Cofactors on the DNA Binding Activity of the Gene 4 Protein

Minimum Oligonucleotide Length

The formation of a stable gene 4-protein complex most likely requires the establishment of a minimum number of contacts between the DNA-binding site of the gene 4 protein and the single-stranded DNA. It is likely that the minimum length oligonucleotide that will bind to the gene 4 protein in the presence of either dTTP or dTDP is related to the conformation that the protein adopts: a more compact structure should bind to a shorter oligonucleotide while an extended structure should bind a longer one. To test this model, we generated a series of P-labeled oligonucleotides differing in length by one nucleotide and tested each for complex formation with the gene 4 protein.

In the presence of dTTP, the gene 4 protein could bind very weakly to an oligonucleotide as short as 12 bases in length (Fig. 2B). However, there appeared to be a sharp decrease in the formation of the proteinbulletDNA complex when the oligonucleotide probe was shorter than 13 bases long. As the length of the oligonucleotide probe used in the binding reaction increased, there was not only a general increase in the amount of the proteinbulletDNA complex observed, but also the formation of a second complex with a lower electrophoretic mobility. In addition, the ratio of the second complex over the first increased steadily as the length of the oligonucleotide probe grew. This observation further substantiated the hypothesis that the slower-migrating complex was the result of contiguous binding of two gene 4 protein hexamers to a single oligonucleotide molecule.


Figure 2: The minimum length of oligonucleotides required to form proteinbulletDNA complexes with the gene 4 protein. A group of oligonucleotide molecules ranging from 11 to 54 bases in size was prepared through chemical cleavage of a 54-mer and were then used in the gel retardation assays as described under ``Experimental Procedures.'' The oligonucleotide molecule used in each reaction and the compositions of these reactions are indicated. A, dTTP was present as the nucleotide cofactor. B, dTDP was used as the nucleotide cofactor.



When dTDP was present in the DNA-binding reaction as the nucleotide cofactor, the gene 4 protein could bind to a 21-mer efficiently; but when a 20-mer was used there was a dramatic decrease in the formation of the proteinbulletDNA complex, and below this chain length no complex was observed (Fig. 2A). This suggested that in the presence of dTDP, an oligonucleotide of at least 21 bases long was required to provide sufficient interaction with the DNA-binding site of the gene 4 protein to obtain a stable proteinbulletDNA complex. These observations also suggest that when the nucleotide cofactor associated with the gene 4 protein is switched from dTTP to dTDP, the allosteric effect induced by this transition caused structural perturbations that lead to an alternation in the DNA-binding site and presumably results in a more extended conformation since only longer oligonucleotides are bound.

Dissociation Constant of the Gene 4 ProteinbulletDNA Complex

To gauge further the impact of different nucleotide cofactors on the DNA binding activity of the gene 4 protein, we examined the effects of dTTP and dTDP on the dissociation constants of the proteinbulletDNA complexes formed by the gene 4 protein and single-stranded DNA. To avoid the possibility that two gene 4 complexes might bind to the oligonucleotide in the presence of dTTP, a situation which would complicate the data analysis (McGhee and von Hippel, 1974), we used a 25-mer probe for the analysis since only one hexamer complex bound to this length oligonucleotide at the protein concentrations used. Because dTDP induced only a single proteinbulletDNA complex to form even with an oligonucleotide up to 60 bases in length (Fig. 2B) we used a longer oligonucleotide for the dTDP binding experiments to obtain higher binding efficiencies.

A fixed amount of the appropriate oligonucleotide probe was titrated with increasing concentrations of the gene 4 protein and the proteinbulletDNA complexes formed were monitored by gel mobility-shift assay (Fig. 3A). In the presence of dTTP, the binding reaction reached a plateau when about 90% of the oligonucleotide probes were bound. However, when dTDP was present, the binding reaction reach a plateau after about 40% of the probes were associated with the gene 4 protein (Fig. 3A). These data were analyzed by a Hill plot (Fig. 3B) and the dissociation constants (K(d)) calculated as described under ``Methods''. In the presence of dTTP, the K(d) was 0.13 µM while dTDP gave a K(d) of 1.3 µM. These results suggest the protein-DNA complex formed in the presence of dTTP was approximately 10 times more stable than the complex formed in the presence of dTDP. In fact, the difference in the K(d) values reported here might well be underestimated because of the shorter length of the oligonucleotide molecule used in the presence of dTTP than in the presence of dTDP. In any case, these results are additional evidence that the transition from a dTTP-associating state to a dTDP-associating state has a major impact on the DNA-binding site of the gene 4 protein.


Figure 3: Determination of the Kof the gene 4 proteinbulletDNA complex. The DNA binding reactions of the gene 4 protein, the separation and quantitation of the reaction products, and the analysis of experimental data were carried out as described under ``Experimental Procedures.'' The DNA binding reactions contained 6.7 nM of either a 25-mer (in the presence of dTTP) or a 60-mer (in the presence of dTDP); and 83.3, 125, 167, 250, 333, 500, 667, 833, 1000, and 1250 nM of the gene 4 protein, respectively. A, the percentages of all the oligonucleotide molecules bound by the gene 4 protein are plotted against the concentration of the gene 4 protein. Each data point represented the mean of at least three different experiments with the standard error indicated. B, Hill plot of the data obtained from the experiments.



Partial Proteolytic Digestion Analysis of the Gene 4 Protein

Hydrolysis of dTTP to dTDP by the gene 4 protein occurs only in the presence of single-stranded DNA. Therefore, it seems likely that conformational changes in the gene 4 protein structure occur not only when dTTP is hydrolyzed to dTTP but also when the DNA binding takes place. To further investigate these putative conformational changes induced by nucleotide cofactors and single-stranded DNA, we conducted a series of limited proteolytic digestion analysis of the gene 4 protein. In these experiments, the gene 4 protein was preincubated with single-stranded M13 DNA, dTTP, or dTDP, or both DNA and the nucleotide cofactor, as indicated, and then trypsin was added and proteolysis was carried out for 10 min. Many studies have shown that whether a particular protease cleavage site is detectable is dependent on the conformation of the protein being digested. For example, this type of analysis has been used to provide information related to the conformation of a variety of protein substrates (Allan et al., 1992a, 1992b; Beekman et al., 1993; Bhat et al., 1993; Mark, 1994; Halazonetis et al., 1993; Bogenhagen, 1993; Nakayama et al., 1984; Chao and Lohman, 1990).

Digestion of the gene 4 protein with trypsin produced a maximum of 14 discrete proteolytic fragments ranging from 21.2 to 53.8 kDa (Fig. 4). Because the amino acid sequence of the gene 4 protein contains 65 potential trypsin cleavage sites, it is possible that other proteolytic fragments also existed but were too short to detect in our electrophoretic system. Alternatively, many of the tryptic cleavage sites may reside at positions not accessible to the protease. A summary of the presence of these fragments under various reaction conditions is shown in Table 1.


Figure 4: Limited proteolysis of the gene 4 protein. Proteolysis of the gene 4 protein with trypsin was carried out as described under ``Experimental Procedures.'' Lanes A and J in all panels are molecular weight markers; lanes I are trypsin. The compositions of each reaction are as indicated. The concentrations of trypsin present in lanes B through H are 0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, and 5.0 ng/µl, respectively. The positions of the undigested gene 4 protein molecules in all the panels are indicated by open arrows, and the positions of trypsin are indicated by closed arrows. The molecular weight of the markers are indicated on the left of each panel, the positions and the molecular weight of the proteolytic fragments are indicated on the right.





When neither single-stranded M13 DNA or nucleotide cofactors were present, limited tryptic digestion revealed six proteolytic fragments (Fig. 4A and Table 1). Addition of single-stranded DNA alone caused no detectable changes in the proteolytic pattern (Fig. 4B and Table 1). This is consistent with the previous observations that nucleotide cofactors are absolutely required by the gene 4 protein in order to bind to single-stranded DNA (Matson and Richardson, 1985), and thus in their absence there is no interaction between the gene 4 protein and DNA and, therefore, no effect on the conformation of the gene 4 protein.

The addition of dTDP alone resulted in a few subtle differences in the digestion pattern (Fig. 4C). Under these condition, the 32.3- and the 21.2-kDa proteolytic fragments were not detected (Table 1). Most of the other fragments were fainter than their counterparts in Fig. 4, A and B, the exception being the 48.2-kDa fragment. In addition, the gene 4 protein was much more resistant to tryptic digestion in the presence of dTDP than when the reaction contained no nucleotides as shown by the level of gene 4 protein that remained when dTDP was present (cf.Fig. 4C with A and B). When the gene 4 protein was digested in the presence of both dTDP and single-stranded M13 DNA (Fig. 4D), the proteolytic pattern was drastically different from all those described above. At intermediate trypsin concentrations a total of 14 fragments were detected (Fig. 4D and Table 1), some of which were not observed in the prior experiments. In addition, the gene 4 protein was more susceptible to the attack of the protease than when only dTDP was present. Taken together, these results suggest that the association with dTDP and the subsequent binding to single-stranded DNA triggered a major perturbation in the structure of the gene 4 protein and also that under these conditions the gene 4 protein was more susceptible to digestion, possibly because of a more open conformation.

When the gene 4 protein was preincubated in a reaction mixture containing dTTP but without single-stranded DNA, a total of five fragments were detectable (Fig. 4E and Table 1). Subtle differences could be observed when this was compared with the experiment where only dTDP was present (Fig. 4C). First, the 35.5-kDa fragment was more resistant to tryptic digestion in the presence of dTTP. Second, we could observe the disappearance of the 26.4-kDa fragment and the appearance of a fragment 38.1 kDa in size. Third, the gene 4 protein appeared to be generally more resistant to the digestion of trypsin, as indicated by the relatively larger amount of the uncleaved gene 4 protein molecules left at the end of the protease digestion. Taken together, these results indicated that the gene 4 protein adopted a different conformation when it was bound to dTTP than when bound to dTDP.

Finally, limited proteolysis of the gene 4 protein was carried out in the presence of both dTTP and single-stranded M13 DNA (Fig. 4F). Under these conditions, a total of nine proteolytic fragments were generated. Compared with the profile where only dTTP was present (Fig. 4E), the proteolytic fragments, in general, started appearing at much lower concentrations of trypsin and with a much stronger intensity, suggesting that upon binding to single-stranded DNA, the gene 4 protein underwent structural alterations so that the trypsin cleavage sites involved were more accessible. When this profile was contrasted with that where both dTDP and single-stranded M13 DNA were present (compare Fig. 4F with Fig. 3D), the difference was even more drastic. In the presence of dTTP and single-stranded DNA (Fig. 3F), not only were the 53.8-, 45.9-, 44.4-, 34.1-, and the 22.6-kDa fragments missing, but the others like the 32.2-, 25.1-, and the 23.8-kDa fragments were also much lower in their intensities and/or started appearing only at higher trypsin concentrations than in the presence of dTDP and DNA (Fig. 4D). In addition, in the presence of dTTP and DNA, the 35.5-kDa fragment appeared to be much more resistant to tryptic digestion than when dTDP was present, suggesting that the three-dimensional structure of this part of the gene 4 protein was different from the structure when dTDP was present. Finally, the dTTP-gene 4 proteinbulletDNA complex was more resistant to tryptic digestion than the dTDP-gene 4 protein complex, as judged by the difference in the amount of the intact gene 4 protein molecules left after proteolysis.

The gene 4 protein hydrolyzes dTTP to dTDP in the presence of single-stranded DNA; therefore, after the gene 4 protein is incubated with dTTP and single-stranded M13 DNA, the nucleotide present would actually become a mixture of both dTTP and dTDP. Thus, it is possible that the protease digestion profile observed in the presence of dTTP resulted from the joint effects of dTTP and dTDP which were present in the ratio of 3:1 at the end of the protease digestion (data not shown). In order to exclude this possibility, we used a nonhydrolyzable analog of dTTP, beta,-methylene dTTP, which also induces strong binding of the gene 4 protein to single-stranded DNA.^1 Limited tryptic digestion of this DNA complex gave results identical to that which were observed in the presence of dTTP (data not shown).

Overall, these results suggested that nucleotide cofactors triggered structural alterations in the gene 4 protein. The subsequent binding of the gene 4 protein to single-stranded DNA caused additional conformational changes that appeared to make it more open or accessible than in the absence of DNA. More importantly, the gene 4 protein adopted different conformations in the presence of dTTP versus dTDP and appeared to be more open when bound to dTDP.

Protection of Single-stranded DNA from Nuclease Digestion by the Gene 4 Protein

The previous results suggested that when the gene 4 protein bound to single-stranded DNA it assumed a more open conformation in the presence of dTDP than when dTTP was present. To confirm this supposition, we attempted to directly visualize these changes by examining the difference in the size of the single-stranded DNA fragments protected by the gene 4 protein in the presence of dTTP or dTDP. The size of the DNA fragments protected could be used as a ``molecular ruler'' to gauge the physical dimension of the gene 4 protein in its different conformational states. Micrococcal nuclease was used for these experiments because this endonuclease cleaves single-stranded DNA in a relatively nonsequence-specific manner producing DNA fragments bearing a 5`-OH group. These fragments can be directly labeled with kinase under conditions where the nuclease is inactivated (addition of EGTA). For these experiments, we used dTDP and beta,-methylene dTTP to prevent the gene 4 protein from translocating off the DNA fragments. Finally, the results obtained using homopolymers templates (poly(dT) and poly(dA)) are shown because native single-stranded viral DNAs produced anomalous results, possibly because of duplex secondary structures and/or the preference of micrococcal nuclease for AT-rich regions.

The gene 4 protein was preincubated with the appropriate nucleotide cofactors and poly(dT) molecules with an average length of 2000 bases, and then micrococcal nuclease was added. When dTDP was present, the ladder produced by the oligonucleotide fragments protected by the gene 4 protein centered at about 11-12 bases in length at low nuclease concentrations (Fig. 5A, lane F). As the amount of micrococcal nuclease used in the digestion increased, the fragments were further shortened to a lower limit of around five to six bases. It was possible that the 11-12-base long fragments reflected the physical dimension of each individual gene 4 protein molecule within the hexameric complex whereas the five to six-base fragments might represent the size of the DNA-binding site of the gene 4 protein.


Figure 5: DNA footprinting analysis of the gene 4 protein[chempDNA complex. The binding of the gene 4 protein to single-stranded homopolymers (poly(dT) or poly(dA)) and the subsequent nuclease digestion were carried out as described under ``Experimental Procedures.'' The concentrations of micrococcal nuclease used in these reactions was 0.2 (lanes A and C), 0.5 (lanes B and D), 1.0 (lanes F and J), 2.0 (lanes G and K), 4.0 (lanes H and L), and 8.0 (lanes I and M) units/µl, respectively, for both panels A and B. Lanes E and N are size markers generated by combining the A, G, C, and T Sanger's dideoxy sequencing reaction mixtures. The primer-template complex used in the sequencing reaction contains a 5` end-labeled 11-mer annealed to a 48-mer. A, poly(dT); B, poly(dA).



The micrococcal nuclease digestion profile in the presence of dTTP was then determined. At low concentrations of micrococcal nuclease, the fragments protected by the gene 4 protein appeared to segregate into two groups; the ladder generated by the slower migrating group centered at about 21-22 bases while that produced by the faster migrating group centered at about seven to eight bases (Fig. 5A, lane J). As the concentration of the nuclease used in the digestion increased, the overall pattern was similar, except that the average length of the upper ladder shrank to about 18-19 bases and that of the lower ladder declined to about four to five. One interpretation of these results (see ``Discussion'') is that the slower moving material represents protection by two adjacent gene 4 protein monomers while the faster bands again represent that within the DNA-binding site. This interpretation is consistent with our observation that two of the monomers simultaneously interact most strongly with the DNA.^1

Taken together, these results indicate a marked difference in the profile of protection from nuclease digestion by the gene 4 protein in the presence of dTDP and dTTP. One interpretation of the data is consistent with the model that the gene 4 protein has a more open or extended conformation in the presence of dTDP.


DISCUSSION

DNA helicases are a class of enzyme indispensable for the process of DNA replication. These proteins precede the other members of the replication complexes to unwind the DNA duplex so that the genetic information carried in DNA is available to the DNA polymerase. How DNA helicases carry out this unwinding process has long been an intriguing and elusive question (Lohman, 1993). All known DNA helicases require the binding and subsequent hydrolysis of either ribo- or deoxyribonucleoside 5`-triphosphates. It has been proposed that conformational changes in DNA helicases driven by the free energy released from hydrolysis of NTPs or dNTPs are essential for their DNA unwinding activity and for their translocation along single-stranded DNA (Hill and Tsuchiya, 1981, Kolodner and Richardson, 1977; Brown and Romano, 1989). Recently, nucleotide- and DNA-induced conformational changes have been observed in E. coli DnaB helicase (Nakayama et al., 1984), Helicase II, and Rep helicase (Chao and Lohman, 1990).

The T7 gene 4 protein, a helicase necessary for phage T7 to replicate its genome, has been shown to form a hexamer (Hingorani and Patel, 1993; Patel and Hingorani, 1993) that is apparently capable of interacting with both strands of DNA at a replication fork.^1 In this study, we present several experiments each of which suggests that the gene 4 protein adopts a different conformation when bound to DNA in the presence of either dTTP or dTDP and that the complex formed in the presence of dTDP is more open or extended. First, we have shown that the gene 4 proteinbulletDNA complex formed in the presence of dTDP migrates slightly more slowly in a gel retardation experiment than the complex formed in the presence of dTTP. This is consistent with the generally observed result that complexes that occupy more space as a result of being more extended migrate more slowly in this type of analysis. Second, we found that the gene 4 protein can bind to much smaller oligonucleotides in the presence of dTTP than it can in the presence of dTDP. Third, the dissociation constant for the gene 4 protein complex is 10-fold lower in the presence of dTDP suggesting a major difference in the conformation occurs when dTTP is hydrolyzed. Fourth, limited proteolysis indicates that the gene 4 protein adopts a more accessible conformation when it binds to single-stranded DNA and that the complex formed in the presence of dTDP is more accessible than that formed in the presence of dTTP. Finally, DNA footprinting suggests that in the presence of dTDP a larger DNA fragment is protected from hydrolysis.

The finding that the gene 4 protein requires a minimum length oligonucleotide ligand in order to form a stable proteinbulletDNA complex provides some important clues for the nature of the protein-DNA interaction involved. This requirement most likely reflects a need to establish a threshold level of contact between this enzyme and single-stranded DNA. Further information regarding the DNA-binding site size of the gene 4 protein protomers can be gleaned from the DNA footprinting experiments. We found that the binding of the gene 4 protein to single-stranded DNA protects short stretches of DNA from micrococcal nuclease digestion and that the sizes of these fragments depend on the nucleotide cofactors involved. The observation that the length of the DNA fragments protected by the gene 4 protein is shorter in the presence of dTDP than in the presence of dTTP is initially surprising because this appears to be contradictory to what has been suggested by all our previous data. However, this inconsistency may be explained if two gene 4 protomers are required for binding and if the nuclease can cleave between protomers more easily when dTDP is present. Thus, in the presence of dTTP, the DNA fragments protected by the gene 4 protein appear to segregate into two size groups: one centered around seven nucleotides and the other around 21 nucleotides in length. From the physical dimensions of the gene 4 protein monomer, it is possible that the 21-nucleotide-protected region represents the binding of two protomers and the seven-nucleotide region represents the less frequent nuclease attack between two adjacent protomers.

In the presence of dTDP, the pattern of nuclease protection showed a dramatic difference from that observed in the presence of dTTP. Only one group of protected fragments is observed with the size of these fragments centering at about 11-12 bases in length at a low concentration of micrococcal nuclease and five to six bases long as the concentration of the nuclease increases. We propose that the 11 to 12-base fragments represent the overall physical dimension of each gene 4 protomer in the presence of dTDP and that as the amount of micrococcal nuclease increases, those nucleotide residues only partially protected by the gene 4 protomer are excised leaving a shorter stretch that is protected by the actual DNA-binding site in the gene 4 protein. The failure to detect a second ladder in the presence of dTDP may be explained by either a different conformation of the protein that allows easier access to the interprotein regions or by the weaker binding in the presence of dTDP that allows release of one of the two bound protomers.

The results presented in this paper have important implications with regard to the mechanism of molecular movement by gene 4 protein. We find that dTDP and dTTP exert different allosteric effects on the gene 4 protein suggesting that the gene 4 protein alternates between these two different conformations during hydrolysis of dTTP. The differences in K(d) for these two complexes suggest that when dTDP is bound, the proteinbulletDNA complex is at a higher energy state, and therefore the displacement of dTDP by dTTP in the nucleotide-binding site of the gene 4 protein is favored and would result in release of free energy. This, in turn, implies that the energy input used to drive the transition from a dTDP-induced conformation to a dTTP-induced one could potentially be provided by the free energy released during this process, while the energy required to effect the structural alternation in the opposite direction is supplied through hydrolysis of dTTP. It is likely that the hydrolysis of dTTP to dTDP and the subsequent displacement of dTDP by a dTTP molecule cycles the gene 4 protein through these different conformational changes and somehow results in unidirectional translocation and the helicase activity.

We have also shown that when the gene 4 protein binds to single-stranded DNA in the presence of dTDP, it adopts a conformation that is more open or extended and interacts with a longer stretch of DNA than the conformation formed in the presence of dTTP. During hydrolysis this conformation change occurs within the context of a hexameric complex and therefore would introduce structural constraints into the complex itself. It is thought that the gene 4 protein translocates along single-stranded DNA in the 5` to 3` direction, raising the possibility that any conformational changes that bring about these movements are also directional. Thus, it is tantalizing to hypothesize that the sequential vectored extension of the structure of these individual protomers causes the protein complex to move in a single orientation in a rolling type process (Lohman, 1993).

Recently an EM study of the gene 4 protein hexamer bound to single-stranded DNA suggested that the DNA passes through the center of the ringed hexameric structure (Egelman et al., 1995). Although our data do not exclude this possibility, an alternative model, in which the DNA contacts two or three monomers on the outside of the hexameric ring (Debyser et al., 1994) would allow a ``rolling'' mechanism for unwinding (Lohman, 1993), and is supported by several experiments. First, we find that micrococcal nuclease is able to digest all but five to six nucleotides, a fact that can be accommodated in the ``outside binding'' model if this is the size of the DNA occluded in the DNA-binding site. From the dimensions of the gene 4 protein hexamer as visualized in the EM, the alternative ``inside binding'' model predicts that each hexamer would protect approximately 25-30 nucleotides (Egelman et al. 1995). Second, it is well established that the gene 4 protein forms hexamers in the presence of nucleotide cofactor in the absence of DNA (Patel and Hingorani).^1 In order for this complex to then bind to circular DNA by the inside binding model, one would need to postulate that the hexamer disassembles prior to DNA binding. Third, we^1 and others (Egelman et al., 1995) have shown that protein-protein cross-links do not form a complex with single-stranded linear DNA that is stable to denaturation, although this complex apparently is stable if the DNA is circular (Egelman et al., 1995). It is possible that the single-stranded DNA slips out through the inside of the hexameric ring after denaturation; however this seems unlikely for DNA that is 7000 bases long and bound to multiple gene 4 protein complexes. Finally, UV cross-linking of the gene 4 hexamer to DNA showed very strong and simultaneous binding between two of the subunits and one DNA strand.^1 The inside binding model not only predicts difficulty in forming a UV cross-link because of the inaccessibility of the DNA to the UV light, it also predicts a more symmetrical interaction between the six subunits and the DNA. Which of these two possible models is correct awaits further study.


FOOTNOTES

*
This investigation was supported by United States Public Health Service Grants CA35451 and CA40605 awarded by the National Cancer Institute, Department of Health and Human Services. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore by hereby marked ``advertisement'' in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

§
Present address: Dept. of Medicine, Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, Bronx, NY 10461.

To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 313-577-2584; Fax: 313-577-8822; ljr{at}chem.wayne.edu.

(^1)
Y. Yong and L. J. Romano, unpublished data.


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