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Elsevier, Biophysical Journal, 5(75), p. 2170-2177, 1998

DOI: 10.1016/s0006-3495(98)77660-x

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An Analysis of the Relationship between Hydration and Protein-DNA Interactions

Journal article published in 1998 by Juliana Woda, Bohdan Schneider ORCID, Ketan Patel, Kavin Mistry, Helen M. Berman
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Eleven protein-DNA crystal structures were analyzed to test the hypothesis that hydration sites predicted in the first hydration shell of DNA mark the positions where protein residues hydrogen-bond to DNA. For nine of those structures, protein atoms, which form hydrogen bonds to DNA bases, were found within 1.5 A of the predicted hydration positions in 86% of the interactions. The correspondence of the predicted hydration sites with the hydrogen-bonded protein side chains was significantly higher for bases inside the conserved DNA recognition sequences than outside those regions. In two CAP-DNA complexes, predicted base hydration sites correctly marked 71% (within 1.5 A) of protein atoms, which form hydrogen bonds to DNA bases. Phosphate hydration was compared to actual protein binding sites in one CAP-DNA complex with 78% marked contacts within 2.0 A. These data suggest that hydration sites mark the binding sites at protein-DNA interfaces.