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  • Title: Dissociation of the lactose repressor-operator DNA complex: effects of size and sequence context of operator-containing DNA.
    Author: Whitson PA, Matthews KS.
    Journal: Biochemistry; 1986 Jul 01; 25(13):3845-52. PubMed ID: 3527257.
    Abstract:
    The dissociation kinetics for repressor-32P-labeled operator DNA have been examined by adding unlabeled operator DNA to trap released repressor or by adding a small volume of concentrated salt solution to shift the Kd of repressor-operator interaction. The dissociation rate constant for pLA 322-8, an operator-containing derivative of pBR 322, was 2.4 X 10(-3) s-1 in 0.15 M KCl. The dissociation rate constant at 0.15 M KCl for both lambda plac and pIQ, each of which contain two pseudooperator sequences, was approximately 6 X 10(-4) s-1. Elimination of flanking nonspecific DNA sequences by use of a 40 base pair operator-containing DNA fragment yielded a dissociation rate constant of 9.3 X 10(-3) s-1. The size and salt dependences of the rate constants suggest that dissociation occurs as a multistep process. The data for all the DNAs examined are consistent with a sliding mechanism of facilitated diffusion to/from the operator site. The ability to form a ternary complex of two operators per repressor, determined by stoichiometry measurements, and the diminished dissociation rates in the presence of intramolecular nonspecific and pseudooperator DNA sites suggest the formation of an intramolecular ternary complex. The salt dependence of the dissociation rate constant for pLA 322-8 at high salt concentrations converges with that for a 40 base pair operator. The similarity in dissociation rate constants for pLA 322-8 and a 40 base pair operator fragment under these conditions indicates a common dissociation mechanism from a primary operator site on the repressor.
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