Eric di Luccio
Stardust and other Intergalactic considerations
02.15
2010

by Eric

in science

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Zinc fingers

A nerdy post after such a long break. Sorry :-)

Zinc fingers is typically a domain of about 60 amino acids that fold around one or more zinc ions and is found in over 400 eukaryotic proteins, many of which are involved in the regulation of gene expression and in the maintenance of chromatin structure. Zinc fingers typically show a C4HC3 signature (four cysteines, one histidine, three cysteines) with characteristic cysteine spacing and with additional conserved residues, most notably a tryptophan or other aromatic amino acid preceding the final cysteine pair. Studies have suggested a role for zinc fingers as nucleosome interaction determinants. However their functions are still elusive and controversial, as a variety of functions have been suggested, including phosphoinositide binding and E3 ubiquitin ligase activity. In addition to their role as a DNA-binding module,  zinc finger have been shown to mediate protein-protein and protein-lipid interactions as well.

What about the electrostatic surface properties of zinc-finger domains? Here an example with the models of the 4 zinc-fingers of one of the histone methyl-transferase I’m working on. On the figures, blue is positively charged, and red is negative. The large positive (blue) area will bind to the DNA. But, on the other face, there is room for binding to some positively charged partners. Fascinating!

Electrostatic field lines of DNA regions binding to zinc-fingersElectrostatic properties of DNA and the 4 zinc fingers of a histone methyl transferasePredicted interaction of PHD3 on DNA

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