Volume 270,
Number 35,
Issue of September 01, pp. 20692-20697, 1995
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
A
Novel Yeast Gene Product, G4p1, with a Specific Affinity for
Quadruplex Nucleic Acids
(Received for publication, April 28,
1995)
J. Daniel
Frantz ,
Walter
Gilbert
G4 nucleic acids are four-stranded helical structures that are
formed in vitro by nucleic acids that contain guanine tracts.
These structures anneal readily under physiological conditions and are
unusually stable once formed. G4 nucleic acids are thought to
participate in telomere function, retroviral genome dimerization,
chromosome alignment during homologue pairing, and mitotic
recombination, although the in vivo demonstration of these
structures in any of these situations has not yet been achieved. Here
we purify and characterize an activity from yeast, G4p1, which has a
high and specific affinity for G4 nucleic acids. G4p1 prefers
substrates containing multiple G4 domains, has an equal affinity for
parallel and antiparallel G4 structures, and binds equivalently to RNA
and DNA in G4 form. The Keq for G4p1 binding to a G4 DNA oligomer is
5.0
10
M
, under near
physiological conditions. G4p1 was purified and shown to derive from a
42-kDa protein (p42). We have cloned and sequenced the gene encoding
p42 and show it to encode a novel protein with a region significantly
homologous to bacterial methionyl-tRNA synthetase dimerization domains.
We have reconstituted the G4p1 binding activity with recombinant p42
and present evidence that G4p1 is a homodimer of p42.