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1.
The XPC protein complex is a DNA damage detector of human nucleotide excision repair (NER). Although the XPC complex specifically binds to certain damaged sites, it also binds to undamaged DNA in a non-specific manner. The addition of a large excess of undamaged naked DNA competitively inhibited the specific binding of the XPC complex to (6-4) photoproducts and the NER dual incision step in cell-free extracts. In contrast, the addition of undamaged nucleosomal DNA as a competitor suppressed both of these inhibitory effects. Although nucleosomes positioned on the damaged site inhibited the binding of the XPC complex, the presence of nucleosomes in undamaged DNA regions may help specific binding of the XPC complex to damaged sites by excluding its non-specific binding to undamaged DNA regions.  相似文献   

2.
R S Feldberg  L Grossman 《Biochemistry》1976,15(11):2402-2408
A DNA-binding protein specific for ultraviolet irradiated DNA has been purified extensively from human placenta. The binding preparation is free of exonuclease, polymerase, endonuclease, and N-glycosidase activity. The binding activity is salt dependent and is specific for double-stranded irradiated DNA. DNA from which the pyrimidine dimers have been monomerized by the action of photolyase (photoreactivating enzyme) remains an effective substrate for the binding protein, suggesting that the protein recognizes photoproducts other than pyrimidine dimers. This is supported by the finding that DNA irradiated under conditions which introduce only pyrimidine dimers is not a substrate for the binding protein. Examination of three of the xeroderma pigmentosum complementation groups has revealed no deficiency in this binding activity.  相似文献   

3.
Trego KS  Turchi JJ 《Biochemistry》2006,45(6):1961-1969
The XPC-hHR23B complex (XPC-hHR23B) is a heterodimeric protein required for the initial step of DNA damage recognition in the global nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway. A strong preference of XPC-hHR23B for UV- and cisplatin-damaged DNA has previously been demonstrated using equilibrium binding assays. To better understand the molecular mechanism of damage recognition by XPC-hHR23B, we carried out the pre-steady-state kinetic analysis of the XPC-hHR23B-DNA interactions using a stopped-flow fluorescence assay. XPC-hHR23B displays a faster k(on) for cisplatin- and UV-damaged duplex DNA than for undamaged DNA, with additional, minor effects on the k(off) rates. XPC-hHR23B has a high affinity for undamaged single-stranded DNA compared to duplex DNA, which can be largely attributed to a high rate of association. However, cisplatin damage on single-stranded DNA reduced the overall level of binding by a factor of 7, with nearly equal contributions from changes to the k(on) and k(off) rates. Together, these results support a model for initial damage recognition by XPC-hHR23B that is dependent on structural changes in the DNA, and not adduct chemistry.  相似文献   

4.
We previously reported that distamycin A, a natural antibiotic known as a minor groove binder, could bind to DNA duplexes containing the (6-4) photoproduct formed at its target site, whereas the binding was not observed for duplexes containing the cis-syn cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer in the same sequence context. In this study, we have further analyzed the binding of this drug to lesion-containing duplexes to elucidate its damaged-DNA recognition mechanism. Surface plasmon resonance measurements using various types of DNA showed that distamycin A could bind to several types of lesion-containing DNA. Curve fitting of the CD titration data revealed that the complex formation occurred with K(d) values around 10(-6) and a stoichiometry of 1:1. The results obtained in this study suggested that distamycin A binds to damaged DNA in the same way as to the normal target site, by recognizing the chemical structure of the minor groove.  相似文献   

5.
It was not known how xeroderma pigmentosum group C (XPC) protein, the primary initiator of global nucleotide excision repair, achieves its outstanding substrate versatility. Here, we analyzed the molecular pathology of a unique Trp690Ser substitution, which is the only reported missense mutation in xeroderma patients mapping to the evolutionary conserved region of XPC protein. The function of this critical residue and neighboring conserved aromatics was tested by site-directed mutagenesis followed by screening for excision activity and DNA binding. This comparison demonstrated that Trp690 and Phe733 drive the preferential recruitment of XPC protein to repair substrates by mediating an exquisite affinity for single-stranded sites. Such a dual deployment of aromatic side chains is the distinctive feature of functional oligonucleotide/oligosaccharide-binding folds and, indeed, sequence homologies with replication protein A and breast cancer susceptibility 2 protein indicate that XPC displays a monomeric variant of this recurrent interaction motif. An aversion to associate with damaged oligonucleotides implies that XPC protein avoids direct contacts with base adducts. These results reveal for the first time, to our knowledge, an entirely inverted mechanism of substrate recognition that relies on the detection of single-stranded configurations in the undamaged complementary sequence of the double helix.  相似文献   

6.
The human DNA repair protein, hXRCC1, which is required for DNA single-strand break repair and genetic stability was produced as a histidine-tagged polypeptide in Escherichia coli, purified by affinity chromatography, and subjected to sedimentation and spectroscopic analyses. This study represents the first biophysical examination of full-length XRCC1. Sedimentation equilibrium measurements indicated that hXRCC1 exists as a monomer at lower protein concentrations but forms a dimer at higher protein concentrations with a K(d) of 5.7 x 10(-)(7) M. The size and shape of hXRCC1 in solution were determined by analytical ultracentrifugation studies. The protein exhibited an intrinsic sedimentation coefficient, s(0)(20,w), of 3.56 S and a Stokes radius, R(s), of 44.5 A, which together with the M(r) of 68000 suggested that hXRCC1 is a moderately asymmetric protein with an axial ratio of 7.2. Binding of model ligands, representing single-strand breaks with either a nick or a single nucleotide gap, quenched protein fluorescence, and binding affinities and stoichiometries were determined by carrying out fluorescence titrations as a function of ligand concentration. XRCC1 bound both nicked and 1 nucleotide-gapped DNA substrates tightly in a stoichiometric manner (1:1) with K(d) values of 65 and 34 nM, respectively. However, hXRCC1 exhibited lower affinities for a duplex with a 5 nucleotide gap, the intact duplex with no break, and a single-stranded oligonucleotide with K(d) values of 215, 230, and 260 nM, respectively. Our results suggest that hXRCC1 exhibits preferential binding to DNA with single-strand breaks with a gap size of <5 nucleotides.  相似文献   

7.
8.
In mammalian cells, Nucleotide Excision Repair (NER) plays a role in removing DNA damage induced by UV radiation. In Global Genome-NER subpathway, DDB2 protein forms a complex with DDB1 (UV-DDB), recognizing photolesions. During DNA repair, DDB2 interacts directly with PCNA through a conserved region in N-terminal tail and this interaction is important for DDB2 degradation. In this work, we sought to investigate the role of DDB2-PCNA association in DNA repair and cell proliferation after UV-induced DNA damage. To this end, stable clones expressing DDB2Wt and DDB2PCNA- were used. We have found that cells expressing a mutant DDB2 show inefficient photolesions removal, and a concomitant lack of binding to damaged DNA in vitro. Unexpected cellular behaviour after DNA damage, such as UV-resistance, increased cell growth and motility were found in DDB2PCNA- stable cell clones, in which the most significant defects in cell cycle checkpoint were observed, suggesting a role in the new cellular phenotype. Based on these findings, we propose that DDB2-PCNA interaction may contribute to a correct DNA damage response for maintaining genome integrity.  相似文献   

9.
Strand-specific binding of RPA and XPA to damaged duplex DNA   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway is a major pathway used to repair bulky adduct DNA damage. Two proteins, xeroderma pigmentosum group A protein (XPA) and replication protein A (RPA), have been implicated in the role of DNA damage recognition in the NER pathway. The particular manner in which these two damage recognition proteins align themselves with respect to a damaged DNA site was assessed using photoreactive base analogues within specific DNA substrates to allow site-specific cross-linking of the damage recognition proteins. Results of these studies demonstrate that both RPA and XPA are in close proximity to the adduct as measured by cross-linking of each protein directly to the platinum moiety. Additional studies demonstrate that XPA contacts both the damaged and undamaged strands of the duplex DNA. Direct evidence is presented demonstrating preferential binding of RPA to the undamaged strand of a duplex damaged DNA molecule.  相似文献   

10.
An endonuclease partially purified from human lymphoblasts, and active against ultraviolet-irradiated DNA, was found to act additionally on DNA damaged by either x-radiation or methylmethanesulfonate. To determine if these activities were truly endonucleolytic, the reaction products were analyzed under conditions that prevented conversion of apurinic or apyrimidinic sites to single-strand breaks. With either ultraviolet- or x-irradiated DNA, strand breakage remained maximal, hence confirming the endonucleolytic character of the enzyme. By contrast, with DNA alkylated with methylmethanesulfonate, strand breakage was sharply reduced. Additional experiments indicated that the activity for alkylated DNA induces strand breaks only in concert with a purified endonuclease specific for apurinic sites, suggesting that it is an N-glycosidase that depurinates alkylated bases. This enzyme was separated from the endonuclease specific for irradiated DNA, by chromatography on DNA-agarose.  相似文献   

11.
Distances between DNA and ATP binding sites in the TyrR-DNA complex   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
  相似文献   

12.
The DNA nucleotide excision repair (NER) system is our major defense against carcinogenesis. Defects in NER are associated with several human genetic disorders including xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), which is characterized by a marked predisposition to skin cancer. For initiation of the repair reaction at the genome-wide level, a complex containing one of the gene products involved in XP, the XPC protein, must bind to the damaged DNA site. The UV-damaged DNA-binding protein (UV-DDB), which is impaired in XP group E patients, has also been implicated in damage recognition in global genomic NER, but its precise functions and its relationship to the XPC complex have not been elucidated. However, the recent discovery of the association of UV-DDB with a cullin-based ubiquitin ligase has functionally linked the two damage recognition factors and shed light on novel mechanistic and regulatory aspects of global genomic NER. This article summarizes our current knowledge of the properties of the XPC complex and UV-DDB and discusses possible roles for ubiquitylation in the molecular mechanisms that underlie the efficient recognition and repair of DNA damage, particularly that induced by ultraviolet light irradiation, in preventing damage-induced mutagenesis as well as carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

13.
14.
15.
In experiments designed to measure radiation-induced DNA damage using the DNA unwinding-hydroxyapatite chromatography technique, we observed that under some experimental conditions a significant proportion of the test DNA became tightly bound to the hydroxyapatite (HA) and could not be released even with a high concentration of phosphate buffer. Approximately 5-10% of DNA from unirradiated cells binds to the HA. With increasing radiation doses in air, the fraction of bound DNA increases, reaching about 30% at about 35 Gy. The binding exhibits many of the characteristics of a radiation-induced cell lesion: the proportion of DNA retained by the HA is less when cells are irradiated under hypoxic conditions or in the presence of the thiol radioprotector dithiothreitol; and the binding decreases when an incubation period is allowed between irradiation and harvest of the cells for assay. Studies to determine the nature of the lesion responsible for the binding demonstrated that lesion production requires a component found in cells since no binding was observed with irradiated isolated DNA or nuclear matrix; the binding is not a result of the production of DNA-protein crosslinks; and the bound DNA is single-stranded, based on its sensitivity to nuclease S1. Because of the dose dependence of the binding of DNA to HA, the slopes of the dose-response curves for DNA damage determined with this assay depend on the method used to calculate the fraction of double-stranded DNA. Our demonstration that the bound DNA is single-stranded guides the choice of the method for data analysis.  相似文献   

16.
The Xeroderma pigmentosum complementation group C protein (XPC) serves as the primary initiating factor in the global genome nucleotide excision repair pathway (GG-NER). Recent reports suggest XPC also stimulates repair of oxidative lesions by base excision repair. However, whether XPC distinguishes among various types of DNA lesions remains unclear. Although the DNA binding properties of XPC have been studied by several groups, there is a lack of consensus over whether XPC discriminates between DNA damaged by lesions associated with NER activity versus those that are not. In this study we report a high-throughput fluorescence anisotropy assay used to measure the DNA binding affinity of XPC for a panel of DNA substrates containing a range of chemical lesions in a common sequence. Our results demonstrate that while XPC displays a preference for binding damaged DNA, the identity of the lesion has little effect on the binding affinity of XPC. Moreover, XPC was equally capable of binding to DNA substrates containing lesions not repaired by GG-NER. Our results suggest XPC may act as a general sensor of damaged DNA that is capable of recognizing DNA containing lesions not repaired by NER.  相似文献   

17.
HU, a nonspecific histone-like DNA binding protein, participates in a number of genomic events as an accessory protein and forms multiple complexes with DNA. The HU-DNA binding interaction was characterized by fluorescence, generated with the guanosine analogue 3-methyl-8-(2-deoxy-beta-D-ribofuranosyl)isoxanthopterin (3-MI) directly incorporated into DNA duplexes. The stoichiometry and equilibrium binding constants of complexes formed between HU and 13 and 34 bp DNA duplexes were determined using fluorescence anisotropy and analytical ultracentrifugation. These measurements reveal that three HU molecules bind to the 34 bp duplexes, while two HU molecules bind to the 13 bp duplex. The data are well described by an independent binding site model, and the association constants for the first binding event for both duplexes are similar (approximately 1 x 10(6) M(-1)), indicating that HU binding affinity is independent of duplex length. Further analysis of the binding curves in terms of a nonspecific binding model is indicative that HU binding to DNA exhibits little to no cooperativity. The fluorescence intensity also increases upon HU binding, consistent with decreased base stacking and increased solvent exposure of the 3-MI fluorescence probe. These results are suggestive of a local bending or unwinding of the DNA. On the basis of these results we propose a model in which bending of DNA accompanies HU binding. Up to five complex bands are observed in gel mobility shift assays of HU binding to the 34 bp duplexes. We suggest that protein-induced bending of the DNA leads to the observation of complexes in the gel, which have the same molecular weight but different relative mobilities.  相似文献   

18.
19.
20.
Human polynucleotide kinase (hPNK), which possesses both 5'-DNA kinase and 3'-DNA phosphatase activities, is a DNA repair enzyme required for processing and rejoining of single- and double-strand-break termini. Full-length hPNK was subjected to sedimentation and spectroscopic analyses in association with its ligands, a 20-mer oligonucleotide, ATP, and AMP-PNP (a nonhydrolyzable analogue of ATP). Sedimentation equilibrium measurements indicated that hPNK was a monomer in the presence and absence of the ligands. Circular dichroism measurements revealed that the ligands induced different conformational changes in hPNK, although AMP-PNP induced the same conformational changes as ATP. CD also indicated that the oligonucleotide could bind to the protein-AMP-PNP complex. Protein-ligand binding affinities and stoichiometries were determined by measuring changes in protein intrinsic fluorescence. Titrating hPNK with the oligonucleotide indicated tight binding with a K(d) value of 1.3 microM and with 1:1 stoichiometry. A 5'-phosphorylated oligonucleotide with the same sequence exhibited an almost 6-fold lower affinity (K(d) value, 7.2 microM). ATP and AMP-PNP bound with high affinity (K(d) values, respectively, of 1.4 and 1.6 microM), and the observed binding stoichiometries were 1:1. Furthermore, the nonphosphorylated oligonucleotide was able to bind to hPNK in the presence of AMP-PNP with a K(d) value of 2.5 microM, confirming the formation of a ternary complex. This study provides the first direct physical evidence for such a ternary complex involving a polynucleotide kinase, AMP-PNP, and an oligonucleotide, and supports a reaction mechanism in which ATP and DNA bind simultaneously to the enzyme.  相似文献   

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