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1.
The structure of the complex of the hexameric replicative helicase RepA protein of plasmid RSF1010 with ssDNA has been examined using the fluorescence energy transfer and analytical ultracentrifugation methods. We utilized the fact that the RepA monomer contains a single, natural cysteine residue. The cysteine residue has been modified with a fluorescent marker, which serves as the donor to the acceptor placed in different locations on the DNA. Using the two independent fluorescence donor-acceptor pairs and different DNA oligomers, we provide direct evidence that, in the complex with the enzyme, the ssDNA passes through the inner channel of the RepA hexamer. In the stationary complex, the RepA hexamer assumes a strictly single orientation with respect to the polarity of the sugar-phosphate backbone of the nucleic acid, with the large domain of protomers facing the 3' end of the bound DNA. Interactions with the helicase induce profound changes in the structure of the bound DNA, and these changes are predominantly localized in the proper DNA-binding site. The heterogeneity of the structure of the bound DNA reflects the heterogeneous structure of the total RepA helicase DNA-binding site. This is in excellent agreement with the thermodynamic data. The structure of the RepA hexamer, in solution, differs considerably from the crystal structure of the enzyme. Both fluorescence energy transfer and analytical ultracentrifugation data indicate a significant conformational flexibility of the RepA hexamer. Implications of these results for the mechanism of interactions of the hexameric helicase with the DNA are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The kinetic mechanism of the single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) recognition by the RepA hexameric replicative helicase of the plasmid RSF1010 and the nature of formed intermediates, in the presence of the ATP nonhydrolyzable analog, β,γ-imidoadenosine-5′-triphosphate (AMP-PNP), have been examined, using the fluorescence intensity and anisotropy stopped-flow and analytical ultracentrifugation methods. Association of the RepA hexamer with the ssDNA oligomers that engage the total DNA-binding site and exclusively the strong DNA-binding subsite is a minimum four-step mechanism
  相似文献   

3.
Interactions between the replicative RepA helicase hexamer of plasmid RSF1010 with the single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) have been studied, using the quantitative fluorescence titration, analytical sedimentation velocity, and sedimentation equilibrium techniques. Experiments were performed with fluorescein-labeled ssDNA oligomers. Studies with unmodified ssDNA oligomers were accomplished using the macromolecular competition titration method. Analyses of RepA helicase interactions with a series of the ssDNA provide direct evidence that the total site-size of the RepA hexamer-ssDNA complex is 19 +/- 1 nucleotide residues. The total ssDNA-binding site of the hexamer has a heterogeneous structure. Part of the total binding site constitutes the proper ssDNA-binding site of the enzyme, an area that possesses strong ssDNA-binding capability and encompasses only 8 +/- 1 residues of the ssDNA. The statistical effect on the macroscopic binding constant for the proper ssDNA-binding site indicates that it is structurally separated from the remaining part of the total ssDNA-binding site. Engagement in interactions with the ssDNA is accompanied by net ion release. Moreover, the proper ssDNA-binding site shows little base specificity. On the other hand, with long ssDNA oligomers, the entire total ssDNA-binding site of the RepA hexamer engages in interactions with the ssDNA resulting in a dramatic change in the nature of interactions with the nucleic acid. The association includes an uptake of ions by the protein. Moreover, unlike the proper-ssDNA-binding site, the total binding site shows a significant preference for pyrimidine oligomers. In this aspect, the RepA helicase is different from the Escherichia coli DnaB hexamer that shows large preference for purine homo-oligomers. In similar solution conditions, the ssDNA intrinsic affinity of the RepA hexamer is similar to the intrinsic affinity of the DnaB helicase. The RepA helicase binds to ssDNA oligomers that can accept more than one RepA hexamer with significant positive cooperative interactions.  相似文献   

4.
The Escherichia coli PriA helicase complex with the double-stranded DNA (dsDNA), the location of the strong DNA-binding subsite, and the effect of the nucleotide cofactors, bound to the strong and weak nucleotide-binding site of the enzyme on the dsDNA affinity, have been analyzed using the fluorescence titration, analytical ultracentrifugation, and photo-cross-linking techniques. The total site size of the PriA-dsDNA complex is only 5 ± 1 bp, that is, dramatically lower than 20 ± 3 nucleotides occluded in the enzyme-single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) complex. The helicase associates with the dsDNA using its strong ssDNA-binding subsite in an orientation very different from the complex with the ssDNA. The strong DNA-binding subsite of the enzyme is located on the helicase domain of the PriA protein. The dsDNA intrinsic affinity is considerably higher than the ssDNA affinity and the binding process is accompanied by a significant positive cooperativity. Association of cofactors with strong and weak nucleotide-binding sites of the protein profoundly affects the intrinsic affinity and the cooperativity, without affecting the stoichiometry. ATP analog binding to either site diminishes the intrinsic affinity but preserves the cooperativity. ADP binding to the strong site leads to a dramatic increase of the cooperativity and only slightly affects the affinity, while saturation of both sites with ADP strongly increases the affinity and eliminates the cooperativity. Thus, the coordinated action of both nucleotide-binding sites on the PriA-dsDNA interactions depends on the structure of the phosphate group. The significance of these results for the enzyme activities in recognizing primosome assembly sites or the ssDNA gaps is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Interactions of the RepA hexameric helicase with nucleotide cofactors have been examined using nucleotide analogues, TNP-ADP and TNP-ATP, and unmodified nucleotides. Thermodynamic parameters for the interactions of modified and unmodified nucleotides have been obtained using quantitative fluorescence titration and competition titration methods. The intrinsic binding constant of ATP is by a factor of approximately 10 and approximately 1000 higher than the value observed for ADP and PO(4)(-). The data suggest that helicase acquires free-energy transducing capabilities when associated with the ssDNA, thus, forming a "holoenzyme". ATP binding is characterized by significantly stronger negative cooperativity than ADP. The cooperative interactions are predominantly induced through the specific interactions of the gamma phosphate and the ribose with the protein. The salt effect on cofactor binding indicates a very different nature of the intrinsic and cooperative interactions. Surprisingly, binding of Mg(2+), to both the cofactor and helicase, predominantly controls the ADP-RepA interactions. Mg(2+) cations seem to play a role in affecting the distribution of high and low ssDNA-affinity states, through the strong effect on the diphosphate versus triphosphate binding. The data indicate that Mg(2+) has a dual function in nucleotide-helicase interactions. At low [Mg(2+)], NTP binds stronger than NDP and the enzyme is predominantly in the high ssDNA-affinity state. At higher [Mg(2+)], NTP binds weaker than NDP and the helicase subunits can exist in alternating low- and high-affinity states that facilitate the efficient dsDNA unwinding. The RepA helicase shows a preference toward purine nucleotides. The cooperative interactions are independent of the type of the base.  相似文献   

6.
DNA replication is a key biological process that involves different protein complexes whose assembly is rigorously regulated in a successive order. One of these complexes is a replicative hexameric helicase, the MCM complex, which is essential for the initiation and elongation phases of replication. After the assembly of a double heterohexameric MCM2-7 complex at replication origins in G1, the 2 heterohexamers separate from each other and associate with Cdc45 and GINS proteins in a CMG complex that is capable of unwinding dsDNA during S phase. Here, we have reconstituted and characterized the purified human MCM2-7 (hMCM2-7) hexameric complex by co-expression of its 6 different subunits in insect cells. The conformational variability of the complex has been analyzed by single particle electron microscopy in the presence of different nucleotide analogs and DNA. The interaction with nucleotide stabilizes the complex while DNA introduces conformational changes in the hexamer inducing a cylindrical shape. Our studies suggest that the assembly of GINS and Cdc45 to the hMCM2-7 hexamer would favor conformational changes on the hexamer bound to ssDNA shifting the cylindrical shape of the complex into a right-handed spiral conformation as observed in the CMG complex bound to DNA.  相似文献   

7.
Biswas SB  Biswas-Fiss EE 《Biochemistry》2006,45(38):11505-11513
DnaB helicase is responsible for unwinding duplex DNA during chromosomal DNA replication and is an essential component of the DNA replication apparatus in Escherichia coli. We have analyzed the mechanism of binding of single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) by the DnaB x DnaC complex and DnaB helicase. Binding of ssDNA to DnaB helicase was significantly modulated by nucleotide cofactors, and the modulation was distinctly different for its complex with DnaC. DnaB helicase bound ssDNA with a high affinity [Kd = (5.09 +/- 0.32) x 10(-8) M] only in the presence of ATPgammaS, a nonhydrolyzable analogue of ATP, but not other nucleotides. The binding was sensitive to ionic strength but not to changes in temperature in the range of 30-37 degrees C. On the other hand, ssDNA binding in the presence of ADP was weaker than that observed with ATPgammaS, and the binding was insensitive to ionic strength. DnaC protein hexamerizes to form a 1:1 complex with the DnaB hexamer and loads it onto the ssDNA by forming a DnaB6 x DnaC6 dodecameric complex. Our results demonstrate that the DnaB6 x DnaC6 complex bound ssDNA with a high affinity [Kd = (6.26 +/- 0.65) x 10(-8) M] in the presence of ATP, unlike the DnaB hexamer. In the presence of ATPgammaS or ADP, binding of ssDNA by the DnaB6 x DnaC6 complex was a lower-affinity process. In summary, our results suggest that in the presence of ATP in vivo, the DnaB6 x DnaC6 complex should be more efficient in binding DNA as well as in loading DnaB onto the ssDNA than DnaB helicase itself.  相似文献   

8.
Xing X  Bell CE 《Biochemistry》2004,43(51):16142-16152
RecA catalyzes the DNA pairing and strand-exchange steps of homologous recombination, an important mechanism for repair of double-stranded DNA breaks. The binding of RecA to DNA is modulated by adenosine nucleotides. ATP increases the affinity of RecA for DNA, while ADP decreases the affinity. Previously, the crystal structures of E. coli RecA and its complex with ADP have been determined to resolutions of 2.3 and 3.0 A, respectively, but the model for the RecA-ADP complex did not include magnesium ion or side chains. Here, we have determined the crystal structures of RecA in complex with MgADP and MnAMP-PNP, a nonhydrolyzable analogue of ATP, at resolutions of 1.9 and 2.1 A, respectively. Both crystals grow in the same conditions and have RecA in a right-handed helical form with a pitch of approximately 82 A. The crystal structures show the detailed interactions of RecA with the nucleotide cofactors, including the metal ion and the gamma phosphate of AMP-PNP. There are very few conformational differences between the structures of RecA bound to ADP and AMP-PNP, which differ from uncomplexed RecA only in a slight opening of the P-loop residues 66-73 upon nucleotide binding. To interpret the functional significance of the structure of the MnAMP-PNP complex, a coprotease assay was used to compare the ability of different nucleotides to promote the active, extended conformation of RecA. Whereas ATPgammaS and ADP-AlF(4) facilitate a robust coprotease activity, ADP and AMP-PNP do not activate RecA at all. We conclude that the crystal structure of the RecA-MnAMP-PNP complex represents a preisomerization state of the RecA protein that exists after ATP has bound but before the conformational transition to the active state.  相似文献   

9.
Helicase loading factors are thought to transfer the hexameric ring-shaped helicases onto the replication fork during DNA replication. However, the mechanism of helicase transfer onto DNA remains unclear. In Bacillus subtilis, the protein DnaI, which belongs to the AAA+ family of ATPases, is responsible for delivering the hexameric helicase DnaC onto DNA. Here we investigated the interaction between DnaC and DnaI from Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426 (GkDnaC and GkDnaI, respectively) and determined that GkDnaI forms a stable complex with GkDnaC with an apparent stoichiometry of GkDnaC6-GkDnaI6 in the absence of ATP. Surface plasmon resonance analysis indicated that GkDnaI facilitates loading of GkDnaC onto single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) and supports complex formation with ssDNA in the presence of ATP. Additionally, the GkDnaI C-terminal AAA+ domain alone could bind ssDNA, and binding was modulated by nucleotides. We also determined the crystal structure of the C-terminal AAA+ domain of GkDnaI in complex with ADP at 2.5 Å resolution. The structure not only delineates the binding of ADP in the expected Walker A and B motifs but also reveals a positively charged region that may be involved in ssDNA binding. These findings provide insight into the mechanism of replicative helicase loading onto ssDNA.  相似文献   

10.
DNA helicases are motor proteins that play essential roles in DNA replication, repair and recombination. In the replicative hexameric helicase, the fundamental reaction is the unwinding of duplex DNA; however, our understanding of this function remains vague due to insufficient structural information. Here, we report two crystal structures of the DnaB-family replicative helicase from Geobacillus kaustophilus HTA426 (GkDnaC) in the apo-form and bound to single-stranded DNA (ssDNA). The GkDnaC–ssDNA complex structure reveals that three symmetrical basic grooves on the interior surface of the hexamer individually encircle ssDNA. The ssDNA-binding pockets in this structure are directed toward the N-terminal domain collar of the hexameric ring, thus orienting the ssDNA toward the DnaG primase to facilitate the synthesis of short RNA primers. These findings provide insight into the mechanism of ssDNA binding and provide a working model to establish a novel mechanism for DNA translocation at the replication fork.  相似文献   

11.
Unwinding of double-stranded DNA into single-stranded intermediates required for various fundamental life processes is catalyzed by helicases, a family of mono-, di- or hexameric motor proteins fueled by nucleoside triphosphate hydrolysis. The three-dimensional crystal structure of the hexameric helicase RepA encoded by plasmid RSF1010 has been determined by X-ray diffraction at 2.4 A resolution. The hexamer shows an annular structure with 6-fold rotational symmetry and a approximately 17 A wide central hole, suggesting that single-stranded DNA may be threaded during unwinding. Homologs of all five conserved sequence motifs of the DnaB-like helicase family are found in RepA, and the topography of the monomer resembles RecA and the helicase domain of the bacteriophage T7 gp4 protein. In a modeled complex, ATP molecules are located at the subunit interfaces and clearly define adenine-binding and ATPase catalytic sites formed by amino acid residues located on adjacent monomers; most remarkable is the "arginine finger" Arg207 contributing to the active site in the adjacent monomer. This arrangement of active-site residues suggests cooperativity between monomers in ATP hydrolysis and helicase activity of RepA. The mechanism of DNA unwinding remains elusive, as RepA is 6-fold symmetric, contrasting the recently published asymmetric structure of the bacteriophage T7 gp4 helicase domain.  相似文献   

12.
Jezewska MJ  Bujalowski W 《Biochemistry》2000,39(34):10454-10467
Quantitative analyses of the interactions of the Escherichia coli replicative helicase PriA protein with a single-stranded DNA have been performed, using the thermodynamically rigorous fluorescence titration technique. The analysis of the PriA helicase interactions with nonfluorescent, unmodified nucleic acids has been performed, using the macromolecular competition titration (MCT) method. Thermodynamic studies of the PriA helicase binding to ssDNA oligomers, as well as competition studies, show that independently of the type of nucleic acid base, as well as the salt concentration, the type of salt in solution, and nucleotide cofactors, the PriA helicase binds the ssDNA as a monomer. The enzyme binds the ssDNA with significant affinity in the absence of any nucleotide cofactors. Moreover, the presence of AMP-PNP diminishes the intrinsic affinity of the PriA protein for the ssDNA by a factor approximately 4, while ADP has no detectable effect. Analyses of the PriA interactions with different ssDNA oligomers, over a large range of nucleic acid concentrations, indicates that the enzyme has a single, strong ssDNA-binding site. The intrinsic affinities are salt-dependent. The formation of the helicase-ssDNA complexes is accompanied by a net release of 3-4 ions. The experiments have been performed with ssDNA oligomers encompassing the total site size of the helicase-ssDNA complex and with oligomers long enough to encompass only the ssDNA-binding site of the enzyme. The obtained results indicate that salt dependence of the intrinsic affinity results predominantly, if not exclusively, from the interactions of the ssDNA-binding site of the helicase with the nucleic acid. There is an anion effect on the studied interactions, which suggests that released ions originate from both the protein and the nucleic acid. Contrary to the intrinsic affinities, cooperative interactions between bound PriA molecules are accompanied by a net uptake of approximately 3 ions. The PriA protein shows preferential intrinsic affinity for pyrimidine ssDNA oligomers. In our standard conditions (pH 7.0, 10 degrees C, 100 mM NaCl), the intrinsic binding constant for the pyrimidine oligomers is approximately 1 order of magnitude higher than the intrinsic binding constant for the purine oligomers. The significance of these results for the mechanism of action of the PriA helicase is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Escherichia coli UvrD is a superfamily 1 DNA helicase and single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) translocase that functions in DNA repair and plasmid replication and as an anti-recombinase by removing RecA protein from ssDNA. UvrD couples ATP binding and hydrolysis to unwind double-stranded DNA and translocate along ssDNA with 3′-to-5′ directionality. Although a UvrD monomer is able to translocate along ssDNA rapidly and processively, DNA helicase activity in vitro requires a minimum of a UvrD dimer. Previous crystal structures of UvrD bound to a ssDNA/duplex DNA junction show that its 2B sub-domain exists in a “closed” state and interacts with the duplex DNA. Here, we report a crystal structure of an apo form of UvrD in which the 2B sub-domain is in an “open” state that differs by an ∼ 160° rotation of the 2B sub-domain. To study the rotational conformational states of the 2B sub-domain in various ligation states, we constructed a series of double-cysteine UvrD mutants and labeled them with fluorophores such that rotation of the 2B sub-domain results in changes in fluorescence resonance energy transfer. These studies show that the open and closed forms can interconvert in solution, with low salt favoring the closed conformation and high salt favoring the open conformation in the absence of DNA. Binding of UvrD to DNA and ATP binding and hydrolysis also affect the rotational conformational state of the 2B sub-domain, suggesting that 2B sub-domain rotation is coupled to the function of this nucleic acid motor enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
Kinetics of the Escherichia coli primary replicative helicase DnaB protein binding to a single-stranded DNA, in the presence of the ATP non-hydrolyzable analog AMP-PNP, have been performed, using the fluorescence stopped-flow technique. This is the first direct determination of the mechanism of the ssDNA recognition by a hexameric helicase. Binding of the fluorescent etheno-derivative of a ssDNA to the enzyme is characterized by a strong increase of the nucleic acid fluorescence, which provides an excellent signal to quantitatively study the mechanism of ssDNA recognition by the helicase. The kinetic experiments have been performed with a ssDNA 20-mer, depsilonA(pepsilonA)(19), that encompasses the entire, total ssDNA-binding site of the helicase and with the 10-mer depsilonA(pepsilonA)(9), which binds exclusively to the ssDNA strong subsite within the total ssDNA-binding site. Association of the DnaB helicase with the 20-mer is characterized by three relaxation times, which indicates that the binding occurs by the minimum three-step mechanism where the bimolecular binding step is followed by two isomerization steps. This mechanism is described by the equation: Helicase+ssDNAk1/(k1)<-->(k-1)(H-ssDNA)1(k2)<-->(k-2)(H-ssDNA)2 (k3)<-->(k-3)(H-ssDNA)3. The value of the bimolecular rate constant, k(1), is four to six orders of magnitude lower than the value expected for the diffusion-controlled reaction. Moreover, quantitative amplitude analysis suggests that the major conformational change of the ssDNA takes place in the formation of the (H-ssDNA)(1). These results indicate that the determined first step includes formation of the collision and an additional transition of the protein-ssDNA complex, most probably the local opening of the protein hexamer. The data indicate that the binding mechanism reflects the interactions of the ssDNA predominantly through the strong ssDNA-binding subsite. The analysis of the stopped-flow kinetics has been performed using the matrix-projection operator technique, which provides a powerful method to address stopped-flow kinetics, particularly, the amplitudes. The method allowed us to determine the specific fluorescence changes accompanying the formation of all the intermediates. The sequential nature of the determined mechanism indicates the lack of the kinetically significant conformational equilibrium of the DnaB hexamer as well as a transient dissociation of the hexamer prior to the ssDNA binding. The significance of these results for the functioning of the DnaB helicase is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The AAA (ATPases associated with a variety of cellular activities) family of proteins bind, hydrolyze, and release ATP to effect conformational changes, assembly, or disassembly upon their binding partners and substrate molecules. One of the members of this family, the hexameric p97/valosin-containing protein p97/VCP, is essential for the dislocation of misfolded membrane proteins from the endoplasmic reticulum. Here, we observe large motions and dynamic changes of p97/VCP as it proceeds through the ATP hydrolysis cycle. The analysis is based on crystal structures of four representative ATP hydrolysis states: APO, AMP-PNP, hydrolysis transition state ADP x AlF3, and ADP bound. Two of the structures presented herein, ADP and AMP-PNP bound, are new structures, and the ADP x AlF3 structure was re-refined to higher resolution. The largest motions occur at two stages during the hydrolysis cycle: after, but not upon, nucleotide binding and then following nucleotide release. The motions occur primarily in the D2 domain, the D1 alpha-helical domain, and the N-terminal domain, relative to the relatively stationary and invariant D1alpha/beta domain. In addition to the motions, we observed a transition from a rigid state to a flexible state upon loss of the gamma-phosphate group, and a further increase in flexibility within the D2 domains upon nucleotide release. The domains within each protomer of the hexameric p97/VCP deviate from strict 6-fold symmetry, with the more flexible ADP state exhibiting greater asymmetry compared to the relatively rigid ADP x AlF3 state, suggesting a mechanism of action in which hydrolysis and conformational changes move about the hexamer in a processive fashion.  相似文献   

16.
Quantitative studies of interactions between the Escherichia coli replication factor DnaC protein and the DnaB helicase have been performed using sedimentation velocity and fluorescence energy transfer techniques. The applied novel analysis of the sedimentation data allows us to construct thermodynamic rigorous binding isotherms without any assumption as to the relationship between the observed molecular property of the complexes formed, the average sedimentation coefficient, or the degree of binding. Experiments have been performed with the fluorescein-modified DnaB helicase, which allows an exclusive monitoring of the DnaB-DnaC complex formation. The DnaC binding to the unmodified helicase has been characterized in competition experiments. The data establish that, in the presence of the ATP analog AMP-PNP, or ADP, a maximum of six DnaC monomers bind cooperatively to the DnaB hexamer. The positive cooperative interactions are limited to the two neighboring DnaC molecules. Analyses using a statistical thermodynamic hexagon model indicate that, under the solution conditions examined, the affinity is characterized by the intrinsic binding constant K=1.4(+/-0.5)x10(5)M(-1) and cooperativity parameter sigma=21+/-5. These data suggest strongly that the DnaC-DnaB complex exists in vivo as a mixture of complexes with a different number of bound DnaC molecules, although the complex with six DnaC molecules bound dominates the distribution. The DnaC nucleotide-binding site is not involved in the stabilization of the complex. Moreover, the hydrolysis of NTP bound to the helicase or the DnaC is not required for the release of the DnaC protein from the complex. The single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) bound to the helicase does not affect the DnaC protein binding. However, in the presence of the DNA, there is a significant difference in the energetics and structure of the ternary complex, DnaC-DnaB-ssDNA, formed in the presence of AMP-PNP as compared to ADP. The topology of the ternary complex DnaC-DnaB-ssDNA has been determined using the fluorescence energy transfer method. In solution, the DnaC protein-binding site is located on the large 33 kDa domain of the DnaB helicase. The significance of the results in the functioning of the DnaB helicase-DnaC protein complex is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
We have determined the crystal structure of an active, hexameric fragment of the gene 4 helicase from bacteriophage T7. The structure reveals how subunit contacts stabilize the hexamer. Deviation from expected six-fold symmetry of the hexamer indicates that the structure is of an intermediate on the catalytic pathway. The structural consequences of the asymmetry suggest a "binding change" mechanism to explain how cooperative binding and hydrolysis of nucleotides are coupled to conformational changes in the ring that most likely accompany duplex unwinding. The structure of a complex with a nonhydrolyzable ATP analog provides additional evidence for this hypothesis, with only four of the six possible nucleotide binding sites being occupied in this conformation of the hexamer. This model suggests a mechanism for DNA translocation.  相似文献   

18.
SPP1-encoded replicative DNA helicase gene 40 product (G40P) is an essential product for phage replication. Hexameric G40P, in the presence of AMP-PNP, preferentially binds unstructured single-stranded (ss)DNA in a sequence-independent manner. The efficiency of ssDNA binding, nucleotide hydrolysis and the unwinding activity of G40P are affected in a different manner by different nucleotide cofactors. Nuclease protection studies suggest that G40P protects the 5′ tail of a forked molecule, and the duplex region at the junction against exonuclease attack. G40P does not protect the 3′ tail of a forked molecule from exonuclease attack. By using electron microscopy we confirm that the ssDNA transverses the centre of the hexameric ring. Our results show that hexameric G40P DNA helicase encircles the 5′ tail, interacts with the duplex DNA at the ss–double-stranded DNA junction and excludes the 3′ tail of the forked DNA.  相似文献   

19.
Concerted, stochastic and sequential mechanisms of action have been proposed for different hexameric AAA+ molecular motors. Here we report the crystal structure of the E1 helicase from bovine papillomavirus, where asymmetric assembly is for the first time observed in the absence of nucleotide cofactors and DNA. Surprisingly, the ATP-binding sites adopt specific conformations linked to positional changes in the DNA-binding hairpins, which follow a wave-like trajectory, as observed previously in the E1/DNA/ADP complex. The protein's assembly thus maintains such an asymmetric state in the absence of DNA and nucleotide cofactors, allowing consideration of the E1 helicase action as the propagation of a conformational wave around the protein ring. The data imply that the wave's propagation within the AAA+ domains is not necessarily coupled with a strictly sequential hydrolysis of ATP. Since a single ATP hydrolysis event would affect the whole hexamer, such events may simply serve to rectify the direction of the wave's motion.  相似文献   

20.
Analytical ultracentrifugation was used to determine the molecular mass, M, of hexameric DNA-helicase RepA at pH 5.8 and 7.6. At pH 7.6, a molecular mass of 179.5+/-2.6 kDa was found, consistent with the known hexameric state of RepA, (RepA)(6). At pH 5.8, (RepA)(6) associates to form a dimer with a molecular mass of 366.2+/-4.1 kDa. Analytical ultracentrifugation was also applied to characterize the interaction of single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) with the two different oligomeric states of (RepA)(6) at pH 5.8 and 7.6. The dissociation constants, K(d), for the equilibrium binding of (dA)(30) to the (RepA)(6) dimer at pH 5.8 and to (RepA)(6) at pH 7.6 were determined at 10 degrees C in the presence of 0.5 mM ATPgammaS, 10 mM MgCl(2) and 60 mM NaCl as K(d5.8)=0.94+/-0.13 microM at pH 5.8 and K(d7. 6)=25.4+/-6.4 microM at pH 7.6. The stoichiometries, n, for the two complexes (dA)(30)/(RepA)(6) dimer and (dA)(30)/(RepA)(6) at pH 5.8 and 7.6 were calculated from the corresponding binding curves. At pH 5.8 one (dA)(30) molecule was bound per (RepA)(6) dimer, while at pH 7.6 one (dA)(30) molecule was bound to one (RepA)(6). Binding curves were compatible with a single ssDNA binding site present on the (RepA)(6) dimer and on (RepA)(6), respectively, with no indication of cooperativity. (RepA)(6) tends to form larger aggregates under acidic conditions (pH<6.0) which are optimal for ssDNA binding. In contrast, at pH 5.8 in the presence of 60 mM NaCl, only the (RepA)(6) dimer was observed both in the absence and presence of (dA)(30).  相似文献   

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