Publications by authors named "Seo-Ree Choi"

Riboswitches are RNAs that recognize ligands and regulate gene expression. They are typically located in the untranslated region of bacterial messenger RNA and consist of an aptamer and an expression platform. In this study, we examine the folding pathway of the Vc2 (Vibrio cholerae) riboswitch aptamer domain, which targets the bacterial secondary messenger cyclic-di-GMP.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Transcription factors specifically bind to their consensus sequence motifs and regulate transcription efficiency. Transcription factors are also able to non-specifically contact the phosphate backbone of DNA through electrostatic interaction. The homeodomain of Meis1 TALE human transcription factor (Meis1-HD) recognizes its target DNA sequences via two DNA contact regions, the L1-α1 region and the α3 helix (specific binding mode).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fungi play an important role in the solution to important global problems. Making use of processes and goods that are based on fungi can help promote sustainability by making the most efficient use of natural resources. Fungi stand apart from other organisms due to their extraordinary capacity to generate organic compounds.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Chemical shift perturbation (CSP) is a simple NMR technique for studying the DNA binding of proteins. Titration of the unlabeled DNA into the N-labeled protein is monitored by acquiring a two-dimensional (2D) heteronuclear single-quantum correlation (HSQC) spectrum at each step of the titration. CSP can also provide information on the DNA-binding dynamics of proteins, as well as protein-induced conformational changes in DNA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Distal-less 3 (Dlx3) is a homeobox-containing transcription factor and plays a crucial role in the development and differentiation process. Human Dlx3 consists of two transactivation domains and a homeobox domain (HD) that selectively binds to the consensus site (5'-TAATT-3') of the DNA duplex. Here, we performed chemical shift perturbation experiments on Dlx3-HD in a complex with a 10-base-paired (10-bp) DNA duplex under various salt conditions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) relaxation dispersion spectroscopy is commonly used for quantifying conformational changes of protein in μs-to-ms timescale transitions. To elucidate the dynamics and mechanism of protein binding, parameters implementing CPMG relaxation dispersion results must be appropriately determined. Building an analytical model for multi-state transitions is particularly complex.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Antifreeze proteins (AFPs) can inhibit the freezing of body fluid at subzero temperatures to promote the survival of various organisms living in polar regions. Type III AFPs are categorized into three subgroups, QAE1, QAE2, and SP isoforms, based on differences in their isoelectric points. We determined the thermal hysteresis (TH), ice recrystallization inhibition (IRI), and cryopreservation activity of three isoforms of the notched-fin eelpout AFP and their mutant constructs and characterized their structural and dynamic features using NMR.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Structural transformation of the canonical right-handed helix, B-DNA, to the non-canonical left-handed helix, Z-DNA, can be induced by the Zα domain of the human RNA editing enzyme ADAR1 (hZα). To characterize the site-specific preferences of binding and structural changes in DNA containing the 2'-O-methyl guanosine derivative (G), titration of the imino proton spectra and chemical shift perturbations were performed on hZα upon binding to Z-DNA. The structural transition between B-Z conformation as the changing ratio between DNA and protein showed a binding affinity of the modified DNA onto the Z-DNA binding protein similar to wild-type DNA or RNA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Base-pair opening is a conformational transition that is required for proper biological function of nucleic acids. Hydrogen exchange, observed by NMR spectroscopic experiments, is a widely used method to study the thermodynamics and kinetics of base-pair opening in nucleic acids. The hydrogen exchange data of imino protons are analyzed based on a two-state (open/closed) model for the base-pair, where hydrogen exchange only occurs from the open state.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Z-DNA is stabilized by various Z-DNA binding proteins (ZBPs) that play important roles in RNA editing, innate immune response, and viral infection. In this review, the structural and dynamics of various ZBPs complexed with Z-DNA are summarized to better understand the mechanisms by which ZBPs selectively recognize d(CG)-repeat DNA sequences in genomic DNA and efficiently convert them to left-handed Z-DNA to achieve their biological function. The intermolecular interaction of ZBPs with Z-DNA strands is mediated through a single continuous recognition surface which consists of an α3 helix and a β-hairpin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A Z-DNA binding protein (ZBP)-containing protein kinase (PKZ) in fish species has an important role in the innate immune response. Previous structural studies of the Zα domain of the PKZ from Carassius auratus (caZα) showed that the protein initially binds to B-DNA and induces B-Z transition of double stranded DNA in a salt concentration-dependent manner. However, the significantly reduced B-Z transition activity of caZα at high salt concentration was not fully understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The quaternary-amino-ethyl 1 (QAE1) isoforms of type III antifreeze proteins (AFPs) prevent the growth of ice crystals within organisms living in polar regions. We determined the antifreeze activity of wild-type and mutant constructs of the Japanese notched-fin eelpout (Zoarces elongates Kner) AFP8 (nfeAFP8) and characterized the structural and dynamics properties of their ice-binding surface using NMR. We found that the three constructs containing the V20G mutation were incapable of stopping the growth of ice crystals and exhibited structural changes, as well as increased conformational flexibility, in the first 3 helix (residues 18-22) of the sequence.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Antifreeze proteins (AFPs) are found in a variety of cold-adapted (psychrophilic) organisms to promote survival at subzero temperatures by binding to ice crystals and decreasing the freezing temperature of body fluids. The type III AFPs are small globular proteins that consist of one α-helix, three 3(10)-helices, and two β-strands. Sialic acids play important roles in a variety of biological functions, such as development, recognition, and cell adhesion and are synthesized by conserved enzymatic pathways that include sialic acid synthase (SAS).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF