EBSCO Logo
Connecting you to content on EBSCOhost
Results
Title

Equal impact of diffusion and DNA binding rates on the potential spatial distribution of nuclear factor κB transcription factor inside the nucleus.

Authors

Sycheva, A.; Kel, A.; Nikolaev, E.; Moshkovskii, S.

Abstract

There are two physical processes that influence the spatial distribution of transcription factor molecules entering the nucleus of a eukaryotic cell, the binding to genomic DNA and the diffusion throughout the nuclear volume. Comparison of the DNA-protein association rate constant and the protein diffusion constant may determine which one is the limiting factor. If the process is diffusion-limited, transcription factor molecules are captured by DNA before their even distribution in the nuclear volume. Otherwise, if the reaction rate is limiting, these molecules diffuse evenly and then find their binding sites. Using well-studied human NF-κB dimer as an example, we calculated its diffusion constant using the Debye-Smoluchowski equation. The value of diffusion constant was about 10 cm/s, and it was comparable to the NF-κB association rate constant for DNA binding known from previous studies. Thus, both diffusion and DNA binding play an equally important role in NF-κB spatial distribution. The importance of genome 3D-structure in gene expression regulation and possible dependence of gene expression on the local concentration of open chromatin can be hypothesized from our theoretical estimate.

Subjects

DNA-binding proteins; NF-kappa B; TRANSCRIPTION factors; CELL nuclei; EUKARYOTIC cells; DNA-protein interactions; BINDING sites

Publication

Biochemistry (00062979), 2014, Vol 79, Issue 6, p577

ISSN

0006-2979

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1134/S0006297914060121

EBSCO Connect | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Copyright | Manage my cookies
Journals | Subjects | Sitemap
© 2025 EBSCO Industries, Inc. All rights reserved