In a process known as facilitated diffusion, DNA-binding
proteins
find their target sites by combining three-dimensional diffusion and
one-dimensional scanning of the DNA. Following the trade-off between
speed and stability, agile exploration of DNA requires loose binding,
whereas, at the DNA target site, the searching protein needs to establish
tight interactions with the DNA. To enable both efficient search and
stable binding, DNA-binding proteins and DNA often switch conformations
upon recognition. Here, we study the one-dimensional diffusion and
DNA binding of the dimeric lac repressor (LacI),
which was reported to adopt two different conformations when binding
different conformations of DNA. Using coarse-grained molecular dynamic
simulations, we studied the diffusion and the sequence-specific binding
of these conformations of LacI, as well as their truncated or monomeric
variants, with two DNA conformations: straight and bent. The simulations
were compared to experimental observables. This study supports that
linear diffusion along DNA combines tight rotation-coupled groove
tracking and rotation-decoupled hopping, where the protein briefly
dissociates and reassociates just a few base pairs away. Tight groove
tracking is crucial for target-site recognition, while hopping speeds
up the overall search process. We investigated the diffusion of different
LacI conformations on DNA and show how the flexibility of LacI’s
hinge regions ensures agility on DNA as well as faithful groove tracking.
If the hinge regions instead form α-helices at the protein–DNA
interface, tight groove tracking is not possible. On the contrary,
the helical hinge region is essential for tight binding to bent, specific
DNA, for the formation of the specific complex. Based on our study
of different encounter complexes, we argue that the conformational
change in LacI and DNA bending are somewhat coupled. Our findings
underline the importance of two distinct protein conformations for
facilitated diffusion and specific binding, respectively.