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1.
Eutsey R  Wang G  Maier RJ 《DNA Repair》2007,6(1):19-26
MutY is an adenine glycosylase that has the ability to efficiently remove adenines from adenine/7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxo-G) or adenine/guanine mismatches, and plays an important role in oxidative DNA damage repair. The human gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori has a homolog of the MutY enzyme. To investigate the physiological roles of MutY in H. pylori, we constructed and characterized a mutY mutant. H. pylori mutY mutants incubated at 5% O2 have a 325-fold higher spontaneous mutation rate than its parent. The mutation rate is further increased by exposing the mutant to atmospheric levels of oxygen, an effect that is not seen in an E. coli mutY mutant. Most of the mutations that occurred in H. pylori mutY mutants, as examined by rpoB sequence changes that confer rifampicin resistance, are GC to TA transversions. The H. pylori enzyme has the ability to complement an E. coli mutY mutant, restoring its mutation frequency to the wild-type level. Pure H. pylori MutY has the ability to remove adenines from A/8-oxo-G mismatches, but strikingly no ability to cleave A/G mismatches. This is surprising because E. coli MutY can more rapidly turnover A/G than A/8-oxo-G. Thus, H. pylori MutY is an adenine glycosylase involved in the repair of oxidative DNA damage with a specificity for detecting 8-oxo-G. In addition, H. pylori mutY mutants are only 30% as efficient as wild-type in colonizing the stomach of mice, indicating that H. pylori MutY plays a significant role in oxidative DNA damage repair in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
Li X  Lu AL 《Journal of bacteriology》2001,183(21):6151-6158
The mutY homolog gene (mutY(Dr)) from Deinococcus radiodurans encodes a 39.4-kDa protein consisting of 363 amino acids that displays 35% identity to the Escherichia coli MutY (MutY(Ec)) protein. Expressed MutY(Dr) is able to complement E. coli mutY mutants but not mutM mutants to reduce the mutation frequency. The glycosylase and binding activities of MutY(Dr) with an A/G-containing substrate are more sensitive to high salt and EDTA concentrations than the activities with an A/7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (GO)-containing substrate are. Like the MutY(Ec) protein, purified recombinant MutY(Dr) expressed in E. coli has adenine glycosylase activity with A/G, A/C, and A/GO mismatches and weak guanine glycosylase activity with a G/GO mismatch. However, MutY(Dr) exhibits limited apurinic/apyrimidinic lyase activity and can form only weak covalent protein-DNA complexes in the presence of sodium borohydride. This may be due to an arginine residue that is present in MutY(Dr) at the position corresponding to the position of MutY(Ec) Lys142, which forms the Schiff base with DNA. The kinetic parameters of MutY(Dr) are similar to those of MutY(Ec). Although MutY(Dr) has similar substrate specificity and a binding preference for an A/GO mismatch over an A/G mismatch, as MutY(Ec) does, the binding affinities for both mismatches are slightly lower for MutY(Dr) than for MutY(Ec). Thus, MutY(Dr) can protect the cell from GO mutational effects caused by ionizing radiation and oxidative stress.  相似文献   

3.
The mutY gene of Escherichia coli, which codes for an adenine glycosylase that excises the adenine of a G-A mispair, has been cloned and sequenced. The mutY gene codes for a protein of 350 amino acids (Mr = 39,123) and the clone genetically complements the mutY strain. The protein shows significant sequence homology to E. coli endonuclease III, an enzyme that has previously been shown to have glycosylase activity on damaged base pairs. Sequence analysis suggests that, like endonuclease III, MutY is an iron-sulfur protein with a [4Fe-4S]2+ cluster.  相似文献   

4.
Escherichia coli MutY is an adenine DNA glycosylase active on DNA substrates containing A/G, A/8-oxoG, or A/C mismatches and also has a weak guanine glycosylase activity on G/8-oxoG-containing DNA. The N-terminal domain of MutY, residues 1-226, has been shown to retain catalytic activity. Substrate binding, glycosylase, and Schiff base intermediate formation activities of the truncated and intact MutY were compared. MutY has high binding affinity with 8-oxoG when mispaired with A, G, T, C, or inosine. The truncated protein has more than 18-fold lower affinities for binding various 8-oxoG-containing mismatches when compared with intact MutY. MutY catalytic activity toward A/8-oxoG-containing DNA is much faster than that on A/G-containing DNA whereas deletion of the C-terminal domain reduces its catalytic preference for A/8-oxoG-DNA over A/G-DNA. MutY exerts more inhibition on the catalytic activity of MutM (Fpg) protein than does truncated MutY. The tight binding of MutY with GO mispaired with T, G, and apurinic/apyrimidinic sites may be involved in the regulation of MutM activity. An E. coli mutY strain that produces an N-terminal 249-residue truncated MutY confers a mutator phenotype. These findings strongly suggest that the C-terminal domain of MutY determines the 8-oxoG specificity and is crucial for mutation avoidance by oxidative damage.  相似文献   

5.
Lu AL  Wright PM 《Biochemistry》2003,42(13):3742-3750
Escherichia coli MutY is an adenine and a weak guanine DNA glycosylase involved in reducing mutagenic effects of 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG). The [4Fe-4S] cluster of MutY is ligated by four conserved cysteine residues and has been shown to be important in substrate recognition. Here, we show that the C199A mutant MutY is very insoluble and can be denatured and renatured to regain activity only if iron and sulfur are present in the renaturation steps. The solubility of C199A-MutY can be improved substantially as a fusion protein containing streptococcal protein G (GB1 domain) at its N-terminus. Here, we describe the first biochemical characterization of the purified GB1-C199A-MutY protein which contains a [3Fe-4S] cluster. The apparent dissociation constant (K(d)) values of GB1-C199A-MutY with both A/G and A/8-oxoG mismatches are slightly higher than that of the wild-type protein. The DNA glycosylase activity of GB1-C199A-MutY is comparable to that of the wild-type enzyme. Interestingly, the major difference between the C199A-MutY and wild-type proteins is their trapping activities (formation of Schiff base intermediates). The GB1-C199A-MutY mutant has a weaker trapping activity than the wild-type enzyme. Importantly, highly expressed GB1-C199A-MutY and untagged C199A-MutY can complement mutY mutants; however, GB1-C199A-MutY and untagged C199A-MutY cannot complement mutY mutants in vivo when both proteins are poorly expressed. Therefore, an intact [4Fe-4S] cluster domain is critical for MutY stability and activity.  相似文献   

6.
Chromosomal rearrangements and base substitutions contribute to the large intraspecies genetic diversity of Helicobacter pylori. Here we explored the base excision repair pathway for the highly mutagenic 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (8-oxoG), a ubiquitous form of oxidized guanine. In most organisms, 8-oxoG is removed by a specific DNA glycosylase (Fpg in bacteria or OGG1 in eukaryotes). In the case where replication of the lesion yields an A/8-oxoG base pair, a second DNA glycosylase (MutY) can excise the adenine and thus avoid the fixation of the mutation in the next round of replication. In a genetic screen for H. pylori genes complementing the hypermutator phenotype of an Escherichia coli fpg mutY strain, open reading frame HP0142, a putative MutY coding gene, was isolated. Besides its capacity to complement E. coli mutY strains, HP0142 expression resulted in a strong adenine DNA glycosylase activity in E. coli mutY extracts. Consistently, the purified protein also exhibited such an activity. Inactivation of HP0142 in H. pylori resulted in an increase in spontaneous mutation frequencies. An Mg-dependent AP (abasic site) endonuclease activity, potentially allowing the processing of the abasic site resulting from H. pylori MutY activity, was detected in H. pylori cell extracts. Disruption of HP1526, a putative xth homolog, confirmed that this gene is responsible for the AP endonuclease activity. The lack of evidence for an Fpg/OGG1 functional homolog is also discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Low rates of spontaneous G:C-->C:G transversions would be achieved not only by the correction of base mismatches during DNA replication but also by the prevention and removal of oxidative base damage in DNA. Escherichia coli must have several pathways to repair such mismatches and DNA modifications. In this study, we attempted to identify mutator loci leading to G:C-->C:G transversions in E.coli. The strain CC103 carrying a specific mutation in lacZ was mutagenized by random miniTn 10 insertion mutagenesis. In this strain, only the G:C-->C:G change can revert the glutamic acid at codon 461, which is essential for sufficient beta-galactosidase activity to allow growth on lactose. Mutator strains were detected as colonies with significantly increased rates of papillae formation on glucose minimal plates containing P-Gal and X-Gal. We screened approximately 40 000 colonies and selected several mutator strains. The strain GC39 showed the highest mutation rate to Lac+. The gene responsible for the mutator phenotypes, mut39 , was mapped at around 67 min on the E.coli chromosome. The sequencing of the miniTn 10 -flanking DNA region revealed that the mut39 was identical to the mutY gene of E.coli. The plasmid carrying the mutY + gene reduced spontaneous G:C-->T:A and G:C-->C:G mutations in both mutY and mut39 strains. Purified MutY protein bound to the oligonucleotides containing 7,8-dihydro-8-oxo-guanine (8-oxoG):G and 8-oxoG:A. Furthermore, we found that the MutY protein had a DNA glycosylase activity which removes unmodified guanine from the 8-oxoG:G mispair. These results demonstrate that the MutY protein prevents the generation of G:C-->C:G transversions by removing guanine from the 8-oxoG:G mispair in E.coli.  相似文献   

8.
Genome alterations due to horizontal gene transfer and stress constantly generate strain on the gene pool of Neisseria meningitidis, the causative agent of meningococcal (MC) disease. The DNA glycosylase MutY of the base excision repair pathway is involved in the protection against oxidative stress. MC MutY expressed in Escherichia coli exhibited base excision activity towards DNA substrates containing A:7,8-dihydro-8-oxo-2'-deoxyguanosine and A:C mismatches. Expression in E. coli fully suppressed the elevated spontaneous mutation rate found in the E. coli mutY mutant. An assessment of MutY activity in lysates of neisserial wild-type and mutY mutant strains showed that both MC and gonococcal (GC) MutY is expressed and active in vivo. Strikingly, MC and GC mutY mutants exhibited 60- to 140-fold and 20-fold increases in mutation rates, respectively, compared to the wild-type strains. Moreover, the differences in transitions and transversions in rpoB conferring rifampin resistance observed with the wild type and mutants demonstrated that the neisserial MutY enzyme works in preventing GC-->AT transversions. These findings are important in the context of models linking mutator phenotypes of disease isolates to microbial fitness.  相似文献   

9.
The OGG1 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae codes for a DNA glycosylase that excises 7,8-dihydro-8- oxoguanine (8-OxoG) and 2,6-diamino-4-hydroxy-5- N -methylformamidopyrimidine (Fapy) from damaged DNA. In this paper, we have analysed the substrate specificity and the catalytic mechanism of the Ogg1 protein acting on DNA subtrates containing 8-OxoG residues or apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites. The Ogg1 protein displays a marked preference for DNA duplexes containing 8-OxoG placed opposite a cytosine, the rank order for excision of 8-OxoG and cleavage efficiencies being 8-OxoG/C >8-OxoG/T >>8-OxoG/G and 8-OxoG/A. The cleavage of the DNA strand implies the excision of 8-OxoG followed by abeta-elimination reaction at the 3'-side of the resulting AP site. The Ogg1 protein efficiently cleaves a DNA duplex where a preformed AP site is placed opposite a cytosine (AP/C). In contrast, AP/T, AP/A or AP/G substrates are incised with a very low efficiency. Furthermore, cleavage of 8-OxoG/C or AP/C substrates implies the formation of a reaction intermediate that is converted into a stable covalent adduct in the presence of sodium borohydre (NaBH4). Therefore, the Ogg1 protein is a eukaryotic DNA glycosylase/AP lyase. Sequence homology searches reveal that Ogg1 probably shares a common ancestor gene with the endonuclease III of Escherichia coli. A consensus sequence indicates a highly conserved lysine residue, K120 of endonuclease III or K241 of Ogg1, respectively. Mutations of K241 to Gln (K241Q) and Arg (K241R) have been obtained after site directed mutagenesis of OGG1. Mutation K241Q completely abolishes DNA glycosylase activity and covalent complex formation in the presence of NaBH4. However, the K241Q mutant still binds DNA duplexes containing 8-OxoG/C. In contrast, K241R mutation results in a catalytically active form of Ogg1. These results strongly suggest that the free amino group of Lys241 is involved in the catalytic mechanism of the Ogg1 protein.  相似文献   

10.
The oxidized guanine lesion 7,8-dihydro-8-oxo-2'-deoxyguanosine (OG) is highly mutagenic, resulting in G:C to T:A transversion mutations in the absence of repair. The Escherichia coli adenine glycosylase MutY and its human homolog (hMYH) play an important role in the prevention of mutations associated with OG by removing misincorporated adenine residues from OG:A mismatches. Previously, biallelic mutations of hMYH have been identified in a British family (Family N) with symptoms characteristic of familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP), which is typically associated with mutations in the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene. Afflicted members of this family were compound heterozygotes for two mutations in hMYH, Y165C and G382D. These positions are highly conserved in MutY across phylogeny. The current work reveals a reduced ability of the hMYH variants compared to wild-type (WT) hMYH to complement the activity of E.coli MutY in mutY((-)) E.coli. In vitro analysis of the corresponding mutations in E.coli MutY revealed a reduction in the adenine glycosylase activity of the enzymes. In addition, evaluation of substrate affinity using a substrate analog, 2'-deoxy-2'-fluoroadenosine (FA) revealed that both mutations severely diminish the ability to recognize FA, and discriminate between OG and G. Importantly, adenine removal with both the mutant and WT E.coli enzymes was observed to be less efficient from a mismatch in the sequence context observed to be predominantly mutated in tumors of Family N. Interestingly, the magnitude of the reduced activity of the E.coli mutant enzymes relative to the WT enzyme was magnified in the "hotspot" sequence context. If the corresponding mutations in hMYH cause similar sensitivity to sequence context, this effect may contribute to the specific targeting of the APC gene. The lack of complementation of the hMYH variants for MutY, and the reduced activity of the Y82C and G253D E.coli enzymes, provide additional circumstantial evidence that the somatic mutations in APC, and the occurrence of FAP in Family N, are due to a reduced ability of the Y165C and G382D hMYH enzymes to recognize and repair OG:A mismatches.  相似文献   

11.
Williams SD  David SS 《Biochemistry》1999,38(47):15417-15424
The mutY gene product of Escherichia coli is a 39-kDa protein that catalyzes the removal of adenine bases mispaired with 2'-deoxyguanosine and 7,8-dihydro-8-oxo-2'-deoxyguanosine (OG) in DNA. Although adenine removal proceeds via monofunctional glycosylase activity, MutY is able to form covalent adducts with substrate DNA in the presence of borohydride, a trait otherwise known to be associated only with enzymes having bifunctional glycosylase/AP lyase activity. To help identify active site residues involved in the formation of MutY-DNA adducts in the presence of borohydride, a series of site-directed mutant forms of MutY were generated. Our data show that Lys 142 is the primary residue involved in cross-link formation. The absence of Lys 142 results in near elimination of the enzyme-DNA adducts formed relative to wild-type, suggesting that this residue is the primary one involved in forming covalent associations with DNA during MutY catalysis. Importantly, the enzymatic activity and DNA binding of the K142A enzyme is nearly identical to the WT enzyme. This shows that formation of the covalent intermediate is not required for adenine removal by MutY. Furthermore, this suggests that the covalent intermediate is formed by reaction of Lys 142 with the OG/G:(AP site) product, and this may be a consequence of MutY's unusually high affinity for the product of its glycosylase action.  相似文献   

12.
Bai H  Lu AL 《Journal of bacteriology》2007,189(3):902-910
Escherichia coli MutY and MutS increase replication fidelity by removing adenines that were misincorporated opposite 7,8-dihydro-8-oxo-deoxyguanines (8-oxoG), G, or C. MutY DNA glycosylase removes adenines from these mismatches through a short-patch base excision repair pathway and thus prevents G:C-to-T:A and A:T-to-G:C mutations. MutS binds to the mismatches and initiates the long-patch mismatch repair on daughter DNA strands. We have previously reported that the human MutY homolog (hMYH) physically and functionally interacts with the human MutS homolog, hMutSalpha (Y. Gu et al., J. Biol. Chem. 277:11135-11142, 2002). Here, we show that a similar relationship between MutY and MutS exists in E. coli. The interaction of MutY and MutS involves the Fe-S domain of MutY and the ATPase domain of MutS. MutS, in eightfold molar excess over MutY, can enhance the binding activity of MutY with an A/8-oxoG mismatch by eightfold. The MutY expression level and activity in mutS mutant strains are sixfold and twofold greater, respectively, than those for the wild-type cells. The frequency of A:T-to-G:C mutations is reduced by two- to threefold in a mutS mutY mutant compared to a mutS mutant. Our results suggest that MutY base excision repair and mismatch repair defend against the mutagenic effect of 8-oxoG lesions in a cooperative manner.  相似文献   

13.
Escherichia coli MutY is an adenine and weak guanine DNA glycosylase involved in reducing the mutagenic effects of 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (GO). MutY contains three structural domains: an iron-sulfur module, a six-helix barrel module with the helix-hairpin-helix motif, and a C-terminal domain. Here, we demonstrate that the mutant MutY(Delta26-134), which lacks the six-helix barrel domain, cannot complement the mutator phenotype of a mutY mutant in vivo. However, the mutant can still bind DNA and has weak catalytic activity at high enzyme concentrations. The mutant is a dimer in solution and assembled into two and multiple (up to five) complexes with 20- and 44-bp DNA fragments, respectively, in a concentration-dependent manner. Higher order complexes with DNA substrates containing A/GO mismatches were formed at lower protein concentrations than with the A/G mismatch and homoduplex DNA. Measurement of equilibrium binding using fluorescence anisotropy showed that the mutant protein retains some specificity for A/GO-containing DNA substrates and that the binding event is highly cooperative. This is consistent with the MutY structure determined, which indicates that GO specificity is contributed by both the six-helix barrel and C-terminal domains. The nonspecific binding of MutY(Delta26-134) to DNA suggests a model in which the specific binding of mismatched DNA by MutY involves sequential interactions, in which one MutY molecule scans the DNA and enhances binding of another MutY molecule to the A/GO mismatch.  相似文献   

14.
In the bacterium Escherichia coli, oxidized pyrimidines are removed by two DNA glycosylases, endonuclease III and endonuclease VIII (endo VIII), encoded by the nth and nei genes, respectively. Double mutants lacking both of these activities exhibit a high spontaneous mutation frequency, and here we show that all of the mutations observed in the double mutants were G:C-->A:T transitions; no thymine mutations were found. These findings are in agreement with the preponderance of C-->T transitions in the oxidative and spontaneous mutational databases. The major oxidized purine lesion in DNA, 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG), is processed by two DNA glycosylases, formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase (Fpg), which removes 8-oxoG opposite C, and MutY DNA glycosylase, which removes misincorporated A opposite 8-oxoG. The high spontaneous mutation frequency previously observed in fpg mutY double mutants was significantly enhanced by the addition of the nei mutation, suggesting an overlap in the substrate specificities between endo VIII and Fpg/MutY. When the mutational specificity was examined, all of the mutations observed were G:C-->T:A transversions, indicating that in the absence of Fpg and MutY, endo VIII serves as a backup activity to remove 8-oxoG. This was confirmed by showing that, indeed, endo VIII can recognize 8-oxoG in vitro.  相似文献   

15.
16.
One of the most predominating oxidative DNA damages, both spontaneously formed and after gamma-radiation is 7, 8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8oxoG). This 8oxoG is a mutagenic lesion because it can mispair with adenine instead of the correct cytosine leading to G:C to T:A transversions. In Escherichia coli (E. Coli) base excision repair (BER) is one of the most important repair systems for the repair of 8oxoG and other oxidative DNA damage. An important part of BER in E. coli is the so-called GO system which consists of three repair enzymes, MutM (Fpg), MutY and MutT which are all involved in repair of 8oxoG or 8oxoG mispairs. The aim of this study is to determine the effect of combined Fpg- and MutY-deficiency on the spontaneous and gamma-radiation-induced mutation spectrum of the lacZalpha gene. For that purpose, non-irradiated or gamma-irradiated double-stranded (ds) M13mp10 DNA, with the lacZalpha gene inserted as mutational target sequence was transfected into an E. coli strain which is deficient in both Fpg and MutY (BH1040). The resulting mutation spectra were compared with the mutation spectra of a fpg(-) E. coli strain (BH410) and a wild type E. coli strain (JM105) which were determined in an earlier study. The results of the present study indicate that combined Fpg- and MutY-deficiency induces a large increase in G:C to T:A transversions in both the spontaneous and gamma-radiation-induced mutation spectra of BH1040 (fpg(-)mutY(-)) as compared to the fpg(-) and the wild type strain. Besides the increased levels of G:C to T:A transversions, there is also an increase in G:C to C:G transversions and frameshift mutations in both the spontaneous and gamma-radiation-induced mutation spectra of BH1040 (fpg(-)mutY(-)).  相似文献   

17.
The Escherichia coli methylation-independent repair pathway specific for A/G mismatches has been shown to require the gene product of micA. Extracts prepared from micA mutants do not form an A/G mismatch-specific DNA-protein complex and do not contain an A/G mismatch-specific nicking activity. Moreover, a partially purified protein fraction containing both A/G mismatch-specific nicking and binding activities restores repair activity in micA mutant extracts. The DNA sequence of a 2.3-kb fragment containing the micA gene has been determined. There are two open reading frames (ORF) in this DNA fragment: one ORF encodes a 25.7-kDa protein whose function is still unknown, the other ORF codes for a protein with an Mr of 39,147, but this ORF can be transcribed and the mRNA can be translated to yield a protein with an apparent Mr of 36 kDa on a sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel. Deletion analysis showed that this 39.1-kDa ORF is the micA gene as judged by the capacity of the encoded protein to restore the A/G mismatch-specific nicking activity of micA mutant extracts. Furthermore, our results suggest that micA is the same gene as the closely mapped mutY, which encodes the A/G mismatch-specific glycosylase.  相似文献   

18.
The lethal and mutagenic effects on phage lambdacI857 of 60Co gamma-rays and of decay of 3H incorporated into phage DNA both as 8-3H-deoxyadenosine and 8-3H-deoxyguanosine (using 8-3H-adenine as a labelled DNA precursor) were studied on four isogenic Escherichia coli strains: AB1157 M(+)Y(+) (wild type, mutM(+) mutY(+)), AB1157 M(-)Y(+) (mutM::kan mutY(+) mutant deficient in the formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase MutM), AB1157 M(+)Y(-) (mutM(+) mutY mutant deficient in the A:G mismatch DNA glycosylase MutY), and AB1157 M(-)Y(-) (mutM::kan mutY double mutant deficient in both DNA glycosylases). The main products of transmutation component of 3H decay in position 8 of purine residues are 8-oxo-7, 8-dihydroadenine (8-oxoA) and 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (8-oxoG), the latter being responsible for the most part of the mutagenic effect. The lethal effects of both gamma-rays and tritium decay virtually did not depend on the repair phenotypes of the host strains used. Therefore, the MutM and MutY glycosylases are not involved in the repair of lethal DNA damages induced by ionizing radiation or by the transmutation component of 3H decay in purine residues of phage DNA. The efficiencies of mutagenic action of 3H-purines E(m) (frequencies of c-mutations per one 3H decay in phage genome) were 2.4-, 3.8- and 55-fold higher in the M(-)Y(+), M(+)Y(-) and M(-)Y(-) mutants, respectively, in comparison to the wild-type host. The mutagenic efficiencies E(m) for gamma-rays were nearly identical in the M(+)Y(+) and M(-)Y(+) hosts, but were increased 1.8- and 8.3-fold, respectively, in the M(+)Y(-) and M(-)Y(-) mutants. These data suggest that: (1) the MutY and MutM DNA glycosylases are important for prevention of mutations caused not only by spontaneous oxidation of guanine residues, but also by ionizing radiation or by decay of 3H incorporated into purine bases of DNA; (2) the MutY and MutM enzymes functionally cooperate in elimination of mutagenic damages induced by these agents.  相似文献   

19.
Williams SD  David SS 《Biochemistry》2000,39(33):10098-10109
The E. coli adenine glycosylase MutY is a member of the base excision repair (BER) superfamily of DNA repair enzymes. MutY plays an important role in preventing mutations caused by 7, 8-dihydro-8-oxo-2'-deoxyguanosine (OG) by removing adenine from OG:A base pairs. Some enzymes of the BER superfamily catalyze a strand scission even concomitant with base removal. These bifunctional glycosylase/AP lyases bear a conserved lysine group in the active site region, which is believed to be the species performing the initial nucleophilic attack at C1' in the catalysis of base removal. Monofunctional glycosylases such as MutY are thought to perform this C1' nucleophilic displacement by a base-activated water molecule, and, indeed, the conservation of amine functionality positioning has not been observed in protein sequence alignments. Bifunctional glycosylase/AP lyase activity was successfully engineered into MutY by replacing serine 120 with lysine. MutY S120K is capable of catalyzing DNA strand scission at a rate equivalent to that of adenine excision for both G:A and OG:A mispair substrates. The extent of DNA backbone cleavage is independent of treating reaction aliquots with 0.1 M NaOH. Importantly, the replacement of the serine with lysine results in a catalytic rate that is compromised by at least 20-fold. The reduced efficiency in the glycosylase activity is also reflected in a reduced ability of S120K MutY to prevent DNA mutations in vivo. These results illustrate that the mechanisms of action of the two classes of these enzymes are quite similar, such that a single amino acid change is sufficient, in the case of MutY, to convert a monofunctional glycosylase to a bifunctional glycosylase/AP lyase.  相似文献   

20.
A protein homologous to the Escherichia coli MutY protein, referred to as MYH, has been identified in nuclear extracts of calf thymus and human HeLa cells. Western blot (immunoblot) analysis using polyclonal antibodies to the E. coli MutY protein detected a protein of 65 kDa in both extracts. Partial purification of MYH from calf thymus cells revealed a 65-kDa protein as well as a functional but apparently degraded form of 36 kDa, as determined by glycerol gradient centrifugation and immunoblotting with anti-MutY antibodies. Calf MYH is a DNA glycosylase that specifically removes mispaired adenines from A/G, A/7,8-dihydro-8-oxodeoxyguanine (8-oxoG or GO), and A/C mismatches (mismatches indicated by slashes). A nicking activity that is either associated with or copurified with MYH was also detected. Nicking was observed at the first phosphodiester bond 3' to the apurinic or apyrimidinic (AP) site generated by the glycosylase activity. The nicking activity on A/C mismatches was 30-fold lower and the activity on A/GO mismatches was twofold lower than that on A/G mismatches. No nicking activity was detected on substrates containing other selected mismatches or homoduplexes. Nicking activity on DNA containing A/G mismatches was inhibited in the presence of anti-MutY antibodies or upon treatment with potassium ferricyanide, which oxidizes iron-sulfur clusters. Gel shift analysis showed specific binding complex formation with A/G and A/GO substrates, but not with A/A, C.GO, and C.G substrates. Binding is sevenfold greater on A/GO substrates than on A/G substrates. The eukaryotic MYH may be involved in the major repair of both replication errors and oxidative damage to DNA, the same functions as those of the E. coli MutY protein.  相似文献   

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