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New findings on the regulation of viral gene expression

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IRB Barcelona researcher Miquel Coll has published the study in Molecular Cell

During cell infection, viral genes are expressed in a timedependent manner to optimize protein synthesis. For  example, the synthesis of viral DNA replication proteins occurs in the early phase of the infective cycle, while structural, morphogenesis and lysis proteins are synthesized in the late phase.

But how is the regulation of gene expression achieved? What is the switch that represses some genes and activates others?

A team lead by Miquel Coll, head of the Structural and Computational Biology Programme at IRB Barcelona, has discovered the molecular basis of this transcriptional switch.

This study, a collaboration between the IRB Barcelona team and the group directed by Margarita Salas (CBM, Madrid), has been published in the April 7 issue of Molecular Cell. It describes the atomic structure of the transcriptional regulator protein p4 in complex with a long stretch of the late gene DNApromoter region of bacteriophage phi29.

"Our work helps to explain how gene expression is regulated in viruses and how the infection cycle is programmed. It is fascinating to study how the virus performs such a sophisticated control of the whole process", says M. Coll.

Prof. Coll explained that the new finding related to the p4 protein is a step towards understanding how gene expression is synchronized in viruses and how the infection cycle is controlled.

"We were also surprised to find a new DNA binding motif, which we named N-hook, that should now be added to the repertoire of already known DNA recognition motifs such as helixturn-helix, beta-hairpin and others", adds Prof. Coll. The crystal structure shows a highly bent DNA with an elongated protein dimer that barely interacts with the two tips of the dimer, like a bow and its string.

For this work, both the Automated Crystallography Platform at the Barcelona Science Park (PCB) and the European Synchrotron, in Grenoble,were used.

The next step in the research performed by the IRB Barcelona team is to perform more detailed studies of the whole process. In Prof. Coll words: "Now, we must examine the fine-tuning of the regulation. We know that a second protein, p6, is involved in the regulatory mechanism but we do not know how". The researcher proposes to analyse a ternary complex with the DNA promoter region and proteins p4 and p6 in order to fully elucidate how gene expression is regulated.

The structure of phage f29 transcription regulator p4-DNA complex reveals an N-hook motif for DNA binding
Badia, D., Camacho, A., Pérez-Lago, L., Escandón, C., Salas, M. & Coll, M.
Molecular Cell, 22, 73-81 (2006)

About IRB Barcelona

The Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona) pursues a society free of disease. To this end, it conducts multidisciplinary research of excellence to cure cancer and other diseases linked to ageing. It establishes technology transfer agreements with the pharmaceutical industry and major hospitals to bring research results closer to society, and organises a range of science outreach activities to engage the public in an open dialogue. IRB Barcelona is an international centre that hosts 400 researchers and more than 30 nationalities. Recognised as a Severo Ochoa Centre of Excellence since 2011, IRB Barcelona is a CERCA centre and member of the Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology (BIST).