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1.
Xu L  Mu W  Ding Y  Luo Z  Han Q  Bi F  Wang Y  Song Q 《Biochemistry》2008,47(33):8736-8743
Escherichia coli DNA photolyase repairs cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) in UV-damaged DNA through a photoinduced electron transfer mechanism. The catalytic activity of the enzyme requires fully reduced FAD (FADH (-)). After purification in vitro, the cofactor FADH (-) in photolyase is oxidized into the neutral radical form FADH (*) under aerobic conditions and the enzyme loses its repair function. We have constructed a mutant photolyase in which asparagine 378 (N378) is replaced with serine (S). In comparison with wild-type photolyase, we found N378S mutant photolyase containing oxidized FAD (FAD ox) but not FADH (*) after routine purification procedures, but evidence shows that the mutant protein contains FADH (-) in vivo as the wild type. Although N378S mutant photolyase is photoreducable and capable of binding CPD in DNA, the activity assays indicate the mutant protein is catalytically inert. We conclude that the Asn378 residue of E. coli photolyase is crucial both for stabilizing the neutral flavin radical cofactor and for catalysis.  相似文献   

2.
Escherichia coli photolyase catalyzes the repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD) in DNA under near UV/blue-light irradiation. The enzyme contains flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and methenyltetrahydrofolate (MTHF) as noncovalently bound light sensing cofactors. To study the apoprotein-chromophore interactions we developed a new procedure to prepare apo-photolyase. MTHF-free photolyase was obtained by binding the C-terminal His-tagged holoenzyme to a metal-affinity column at neutral pH and washing the column with deionized water. Under these conditions the flavin remains bound and the defolated enzyme can be released from the column with 0.5 M imidazole pH 7.2. The MTHF-free protein was still capable of DNA repair, showing 70% activity of native enzyme. Fluorescence polarization experiments confirmed that MTHF binding is weakened at low ionic strength. Apo-photolyase was obtained by treating the His-tagged holoenzyme with 0.5 M imidazole pH 10.0. The apo-photolyase thus obtained was highly reconstitutable and bound nearly stoichiometric amounts of FAD(ox). Photolyase reconstituted with FAD(ox) had about 34% activity of native enzyme, which increased to 83% when FAD(ox) was reduced to FADH(-). Reconstitution kinetics performed at 20 degrees C showed that apo-photolyase associates with FADH(-) much faster (k(obs) approximately 3,000 M(-1) s(-1)) than with FAD(ox) (k(obs)=16 [corrected] M(-1) s(-1)). The dissociation constant of the photolyase-FAD(ox) complex is about 2.3 microM and that of E-FADH(-) is not higher than 20 nM (pH 7.2).  相似文献   

3.
The cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) and (6-4) photoproduct, two major types of DNA damage caused by UV light, are repaired under illumination with near UV-visible light by CPD and (6-4) photolyases, respectively. To understand the mechanism of DNA repair, we examined the resonance Raman spectra of complexes between damaged DNA and the neutral semiquinoid and oxidized forms of (6-4) and CPD photolyases. The marker band for a neutral semiquinoid flavin and band I of the oxidized flavin, which are derived from the vibrations of the benzene ring of FAD, were shifted to lower frequencies upon binding of damaged DNA by CPD photolyase but not by (6-4) photolyase, indicating that CPD interacts with the benzene ring of FAD directly but that the (6-4) photoproduct does not. Bands II and VII of the oxidized flavin and the 1398/1391 cm(-1) bands of the neutral semiquinoid flavin, which may reflect the bending of U-shaped FAD, were altered upon substrate binding, suggesting that CPD and the (6-4) photoproduct interact with the adenine ring of FAD. When substrate was bound, there was an upshifted 1528 cm(-1) band of the neutral semiquinoid flavin in CPD photolyase, indicating a weakened hydrogen bond at N5-H of FAD, and band X seemed to be downshifted in (6-4) photolyase, indicating a weakened hydrogen bond at N3-H of FAD. These Raman spectra led us to conclude that the two photolyases have different electron transfer mechanisms as well as different hydrogen bonding environments, which account for the higher redox potential of CPD photolyase.  相似文献   

4.
Cryptochrome (Cry) photoreceptors share high sequence and structural similarity with DNA repair enzyme DNA-photolyase and carry the same flavin cofactor. Accordingly, DNA-photolyase was considered a model system for the light activation process of cryptochromes. In line with this view were recent spectroscopic studies on cryptochromes of the CryDASH subfamily that showed photoreduction of the flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) cofactor to its fully reduced form. However, CryDASH members were recently shown to have photolyase activity for cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in single-stranded DNA, which is absent for other members of the cryptochrome/photolyase family. Thus, CryDASH may have functions different from cryptochromes. The photocycle of other members of the cryptochrome family, such as Arabidopsis Cry1 and Cry2, which lack DNA repair activity but control photomorphogenesis and flowering time, remained elusive. Here we have shown that Arabidopsis Cry2 undergoes a photocycle in which semireduced flavin (FADH(.)) accumulates upon blue light irradiation. Green light irradiation of Cry2 causes a change in the equilibrium of flavin oxidation states and attenuates Cry2-controlled responses such as flowering. These results demonstrate that the active form of Cry2 contains FADH(.) (whereas catalytically active photolyase requires fully reduced flavin (FADH(-))) and suggest that cryptochromes could represent photoreceptors using flavin redox states for signaling differently from DNA-photolyase for photorepair.  相似文献   

5.
Ultraviolet radiation promotes the formation of a cyclobutane ring between adjacent pyrimidine residues on the same DNA strand to form a pyrimidine dimer. Such dimers may be restored to their monomeric forms through the action of a light-absorbing enzyme named DNA photolyase. The redox-active cofactor involved in the light-induced electron transfer reactions of DNA repair and enzyme photoactivation is a noncovalently bound FAD. In this paper, the FAD cofactor of Escherichia coli DNA photolyase was characterized as the neutral flavin semiquinone by EPR spectroscopy at 9.68 and 94.5 GHz. From the high-frequency/high-field EPR spectrum, the principal values of the axially symmetric g-matrix of FADH(*) were extracted. Both EPR spectra show an emerging hyperfine splitting of 0.85 mT that could be assigned to the isotropic hyperfine coupling constant (hfc) of the proton at N(5). To obtain more information about the electron spin density distribution ENDOR and TRIPLE resonance spectroscopies were applied. All major proton hfc's could be measured and unambiguously assigned to molecular positions at the isoalloxazin moiety of FAD. The isotropic hfc's of the protons at C(8alpha) and C(6) are among the smallest values reported for protein-bound neutral flavin semiquinones so far, suggesting a highly restricted delocalization of the unpaired electron spin on the isoalloxazin moiety. Two further hfc's have been detected and assigned to the inequivalent protons at C(1'). Some conclusions about the geometrical arrangement of the ribityl side chain with respect to the isoalloxazin ring could be drawn: Assuming tetrahedral angles at C(1') the dihedral angle between the C(1')-C(2') bond and the 2p(z)() orbital at N(10) has been estimated to be 170.4 degrees +/- 1 degrees.  相似文献   

6.
Byrdin M  Villette S  Eker AP  Brettel K 《Biochemistry》2007,46(35):10072-10077
DNA photolyases repair UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in DNA by photoinduced electron transfer. The redox-active cofactor is FAD in its doubly reduced state FADH-. Typically, during enzyme purification, the flavin is oxidized to its singly reduced semiquinone state FADH degrees . The catalytically potent state FADH- can be reestablished by so-called photoactivation. Upon photoexcitation, the FADH degrees is reduced by an intrinsic amino acid, the tryptophan W306 in Escherichia coli photolyase, which is 15 A distant. Initially, it has been believed that the electron passes directly from W306 to excited FADH degrees , in line with a report that replacement of W306 with redox-inactive phenylalanine (W306F mutant) suppressed the electron transfer to the flavin [Li, Y. F., et al. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 6322-6329]. Later it was realized that two more tryptophans (W382 and W359) are located between the flavin and W306; they may mediate the electron transfer from W306 to the flavin either by the superexchange mechanism (where they would enhance the electronic coupling between the flavin and W306 without being oxidized at any time) or as real redox intermediates in a three-step electron hopping process (FADH degrees * <-- W382 <-- W359 <-- W306). Here we reinvestigate the W306F mutant photolyase by transient absorption spectroscopy. We demonstrate that electron transfer does occur upon excitation of FADH degrees and leads to the formation of FADH- and a deprotonated tryptophanyl radical, most likely W359 degrees. These photoproducts are formed in less than 10 ns and recombine to the dark state in approximately 1 micros. These results support the electron hopping mechanism.  相似文献   

7.
DNA photolyases are enzymes which mediate the light-dependent repair (photoreactivation) of UV-induced damage products in DNA by direct reversal of base damage rather than via excision repair pathways. Arabidopsis thaliana contains two photolyases specific for photoreactivation of either cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) or pyrimidine (6-4)pyrimidones (6-4PPs), the two major UV-B-induced photoproducts in DNA. Reduced FADH and a reduced pterin were identified as cofactors of the native Arabidopsis CPD photolyase protein. This is the first report of the chromophore composition of any native class II CPD photolyase protein to our knowledge. CPD photolyase protein levels vary between tissues and with leaf age and are highest in flowers and leaves of 3-5-week-old Arabidopsis plants. White light or UV-B irradiation induces CPD photolyase expression in Arabidopsis tissues. This contrasts with the 6-4PP photolyase protein which is constitutively expressed and not regulated by either white or UV-B light. Arabidopsis CPD and 6-4PP photolyase enzymes can remove UV-B-induced photoproducts from DNA in planta even when plants are grown under enhanced levels of UV-B irradiation and at elevated temperatures although the rate of removal of CPDs is slower at high growth temperatures. These studies indicate that Arabidopsis possesses the photorepair capacity to respond effectively to increased UV-B-induced DNA damage under conditions predicted to be representative of increases in UV-B irradiation levels at the Earth's surface and global warming in the twenty-first century.  相似文献   

8.
Y F Li  P F Heelis  A Sancar 《Biochemistry》1991,30(25):6322-6329
DNA photolyases repair cyclobutadipyrimidines (Pyr()Pyr) in DNA by photoinduced electron transfer. The enzyme isolated from Escherichia coli contains methenyltetrahydrofolate (MTHF), which functions as photoantenna, and FADH2, which is the redox-active cofactor. During purification, FADH2 is oxidized to the blue neutral radical form, FADH., which has greatly diminished activity. Previous nanosecond flash photolysis studies [Heelis, P.F., Okamura, T., & Sancar, A. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 5694-5698] indicated that excitation of FADH. either directly by absorbing a photon or indirectly by electronic energy transfer from MTHF excited singlet state yielded an FADH. quartet which abstracted a hydrogen atom from a nearby tryptophan to generate the catalytically competent FADH2 from of the enzyme. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we replaced all 15 photolyase tryptophan residues by phenylalanine, individually, in order to identify the internal hydrogen atom donor responsible for photoreduction. We found that W306F mutation abolished photoreduction of FADH. without affecting the excited-state properties of FADH. or the substrate binding (KA approximately 10(9) M-1) of the enzyme. The specificity constant (kcat/km) was approximately 0 for the mutant enzyme in the absence of reducing agents in the reaction mixture, indicating that photoreduction of FADH. is an essential step for photorepair by photolyase in vitro. Chemical reduction of FADH. of the mutant enzyme restored the specificity constant to the wild-type level.  相似文献   

9.
A W MacFarlane  R J Stanley 《Biochemistry》2001,40(50):15203-15214
DNA photolyase is a flavoprotein that repairs cyclobutylpyrimidine dimers by ultrafast photoinduced electron transfer. One unusual feature of this enzyme is the configuration of the FAD cofactor, where the isoalloxazine and adenine rings are nearly in vdW contact. We have measured the steady-state and transient absorption spectra and excited-state decay kinetics of oxidized (FAD-containing, folate-depleted) Escherichia coli DNA photolyase with and without dinucleotide and polynucleotide single-stranded thymidine dimer substrates. The steady-state absorption spectrum for the enzyme-polynucleotide substrate complex showed a blue shift, as seen previously by Jorns et al. (1). No shift was observed for the dinucleotide substrate, suggesting that there are significant differences in the binding geometry of dinucleotide versus polynucleotide dimer lesions. Evidence was obtained from transient absorption experiments for a long-lived charge-transfer complex involving the isoalloxazine of the FAD cofactor. No evidence of excited-state quenching was measurable upon binding either substrate. To explain these data, we hypothesize the existence of a large substrate electric field in the cavity containing the FAD cofactor. A calculation of the magnitude and direction of this dipolar electric field is consistent with electrochromic band shifts for both S(0) --> S(1) and S(0) --> S(2) transitions. These observations suggest that the substrate dipolar electric field may be a critical component in its electron-transfer-mediated repair by photolyase and that the unique relative orientation of the isoalloxazine and adenine rings may have resulted from the consequences of the dipolar substrate field.  相似文献   

10.
DNA photolyase from the cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans contains two chromophores, flavin adenine dinucleotide (FADH2) and 8-hydroxy-5-deazaflavin (8-HDF) (Eker, A. P. M., Kooiman, P., Hessels, J. K. C., and Yasui, A. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 8009-8015). While evidence exists that the flavin chromophore (in FADH2 form) can catalyze photorepair directly and that the 8-HDF chromophore is the major photosensitizer in photoreactivation it was not known whether 8-HDF splits pyrimidine dimer directly or indirectly through energy transfer to FADH2 at the catalytic center. We constructed a plasmid which over-produces the A. nidulans photolyase in Escherichia coli and purified the enzyme from this organism. Apoenzyme was prepared and enzyme containing stoichiometric amounts of either or both chromophores was reconstituted. The substrate binding and catalytic activities of the apoenzyme (apoE), E-FADH2, E-8-HDF, E-FAD(ox)-8-HDF, and E-FADH2-8-HDF were investigated. We found that FAD is required for substrate binding and catalysis and that 8-HDF is not essential for binding DNA, and participates in catalysis only through energy transfer to FADH2. The quantum yields of energy transfer from 8-HDF to FADH2 and of electron transfer from FADH2 to thymine dimer are near unity.  相似文献   

11.
Escherichia coli DNA photolyase catalyzes the light-driven (300-500 nm) repair of pyrimidine dimers formed between adjacent pyrimidine bases in DNA exposed to UV light (200-300 nm). The light-driven repair process is facilitated by two enzyme-bound cofactors, FADH2 and 5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolate. The function of the folate has been characterized in greater detail in this series of experiments. Investigations of the relative binding affinities of photolyase for the monoglutamate and polyglutamate forms of 5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolate show that the enzyme has a greater affinity for the naturally occurring polyglutamate forms of the folate and that the exogenously added monoglutamate derivative is less tightly associated with the protein. Multiple turnover experiments reveal that the folate remains bound to photolyase even after 10 turnovers of the enzyme. Examination of the rates of repair by photolyase containing stoichiometric folate in the presence or absence of free folate under multiple turnover conditions and at micromolar concentrations of enzyme also demonstrates that the folate acts catalytically. The stimulation of turnover by exogenous folate seen at low concentrations of photolyase is shown to be due to the lower affinity of photolyase for the monoglutamate derivative used in reconstitution procedures. These results demonstrate that the folate of E. coli DNA photolyase is a bona fide cofactor and does not decompose or dissociate during multiple turnovers of the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Light-induced activation of class II cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) photolyases of Arabidopsis thaliana and Oryza sativa has been examined by UV/Vis and pulsed Davies-type electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy, and the results compared with structure-known class I enzymes, CPD photolyase and (6–4) photolyase. By ENDOR spectroscopy, the local environment of the flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) cofactor is probed by virtue of proton hyperfine couplings that report on the electron-spin density at the positions of magnetic nuclei. Despite the amino-acid sequence dissimilarity as compared to class I enzymes, the results indicate similar binding motifs for FAD in the class II photolyases. Furthermore, the photoreduction kinetics starting from the FAD cofactor in the fully oxidized redox state, FADox, have been probed by UV/Vis spectroscopy. In Escherichia coli (class I) CPD photolyase, light-induced generation of FADH from FADox, and subsequently FADH? from FADH, proceeds in a step-wise fashion via a chain of tryptophan residues. These tryptophans are well conserved among the sequences and within all known structures of class I photolyases, but completely lacking from the equivalent positions of class II photolyase sequences. Nevertheless, class II photolyases show photoreduction kinetics similar to those of the class I enzymes. We propose that a different, but also effective, electron-transfer cascade is conserved among the class II photolyases. The existence of such electron transfer pathways is supported by the observation that the catalytically active fully reduced flavin state obtained by photoreduction is maintained even under oxidative conditions in all three classes of enzymes studied in this contribution.  相似文献   

13.
A new broad-host-range plasmid, pSL1211, was constructed for the over-expression of genes in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. The plasmid was derived from RSF1010 and an Escherichia coli over-expression plasmid, pTrcHisC. Over-expressed protein is made with a removable N-terminal histidine tag. The plasmid was used to over-express the phrA gene and purify the gene product from Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. PhrA is the major ultraviolet-light-resistant factor in the cyanobacterium. The purified PhrA protein exhibited an optical absorption spectrum similar to that of the cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) DNA photolyase from Synechocuccus sp. strain PCC 6301 (Anacystis nidulans). Mass spectrometry analysis of PhrA indicated that the protein contains 8-hydroxy-5-deazariboflavin and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FADH2) as cofactors. PhrA repairs only cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer but not pyrimidine (6-4) pyrimidinone photoproducts. On the basis of these results, the PhrA protein is classified as a class I, HDF-type, CPD DNA photolyase.  相似文献   

14.
The UV-induced DNA lesions, cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) and pyrimidine (6-4) pyrimidone photoproducts (6-4 photoproducts), can be directly photorepaired by CPD photolyases and 6-4 photolyases, respectively. The fully reduced flavin (hydroquinone, HQ) cofactor is required for the catalysis of both types of these photolyases. On the other hand, flavin cofactor in the semireduced state, semiquinone, can be utilized by photolyase homologs, the cryptochromes. However, the evolutionary process of the transition of the functional states of flavin cofactors in photolyases and cryptochromes remains mysterious. In this work, we investigated three representative photolyases (Escherichia coli CPD photolyase, Microcystis aeruginosa DASH, and Phaeodactylum tricornutum 6-4 photolyase). We show that the residue at a single site adjacent to the flavin cofactor (corresponding to Ala377 in E. coli CPD photolyase, hereafter referred to as site 377) can fine-tune the stability of the HQ cofactor. We found that, in the presence of a polar residue (such as Ser or Asn) at site 377, HQ was stabilized against oxidation. Furthermore, this polar residue enhanced the photorepair activity of these photolyases both in vitro and in vivo. In contrast, substitution of hydrophobic residues, such as Ile, at site 377 in these photolyases adversely affected the stability of HQ. We speculate that these differential residue preferences at site 377 in photolyase proteins might reflect an important evolutionary event that altered the stability of HQ on the timeline from expression of photolyases to that of cryptochromes.  相似文献   

15.
The UV component of sunlight threatens all life on the earth by damaging DNA. The photolyase (PHR) DNA repair proteins maintain genetic integrity by harnessing blue light to restore intact bases from the major UV-induced photoproducts, cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD), and (6-4) photoproducts ((6-4) PPs). The (6-4) PHR must catalyze not only covalent bond cleavage between two pyrmidine bases but also hydroxyl or amino group transfer from the 5'- to 3'-pyrimidine base, requiring a more complex mechanism than that postulated for CPD PHR. In this paper, we apply Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy to (6-4) PHR and report difference FTIR spectra that correspond to its photoactivation, substrate binding, and light-dependent DNA repair processes. The presence of DNA carrying a single (6-4) PP uniquely influences vibrations of the protein backbone and a protonated carboxylic acid, whereas photoactivation produces IR spectral changes for the FAD cofactor and the surrounding protein. Difference FTIR spectra for the light-dependent DNA damage repair reaction directly show significant DNA structural changes in the (6-4) lesion and the neighboring phosphate group. Time-dependent illumination of samples with different enzyme:substrate stoichiometries successfully distinguished signals characteristic of structural changes in the protein and the DNA resulting from binding and catalysis.  相似文献   

16.
Ozone depletion increases terrestrial solar ultraviolet B (UV-B; 280–315 nm) radiation, intensifying the risks plants face from DNA damage, especially covalent cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD). Without efficient repair, UV-B destroys genetic integrity, but plant breeding creates rice cultivars with more robust photolyase (PHR) DNA repair activity as an environmental adaptation. So improved strains of Oryza sativa (rice), the staple food for Asia, have expanded rice cultivation worldwide. Efficient light-driven PHR enzymes restore normal pyrimidines to UV-damaged DNA by using blue light via flavin adenine dinucleotide to break pyrimidine dimers. Eukaryotes duplicated the photolyase gene, producing PHRs that gained functions and adopted activities that are distinct from those of prokaryotic PHRs yet are incompletely understood. Many multicellular organisms have two types of PHR: (6-4) PHR, which structurally resembles bacterial CPD PHRs but recognizes different substrates, and Class II CPD PHR, which is remarkably dissimilar in sequence from bacterial PHRs despite their common substrate. To understand the enigmatic DNA repair mechanisms of PHRs in eukaryotic cells, we determined the first crystal structure of a eukaryotic Class II CPD PHR from the rice cultivar Sasanishiki. Our 1.7 Å resolution PHR structure reveals structure-activity relationships in Class II PHRs and tuning for enhanced UV tolerance in plants. Structural comparisons with prokaryotic Class I CPD PHRs identified differences in the binding site for UV-damaged DNA substrate. Convergent evolution of both flavin hydrogen bonding and a Trp electron transfer pathway establish these as critical functional features for PHRs. These results provide a paradigm for light-dependent DNA repair in higher organisms.  相似文献   

17.
DNA photolyase catalyzes the repair of pyrimidine dimers in UV-damaged DNA in a reaction which requires visible light. Class I photolyases (Escherichia coli, yeast) contain 1,5-dihydroFAD (FADH2) plus a pterin derivative (5,10-methenyltetrahydropteroylpolyglutamate). In class II photolyases (Streptomyces griseus, Scenedesmus acutus, Anacystis nidulans, Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum) the pterin chromophore is replaced by an 8-hydroxy-5-deazaflavin derivative. The two classes of enzymes exhibit a high degree of amino acid sequence homology, suggesting similarities in protein structure. Action spectra studies show that both chromophores in each enzyme tested act as sensitizers in catalysis. Studies with E. coli photolyase show that the pterin chromophore is not required when FADH2 acts as the sensitizer but that FADH2 is required when the pterin chromophore acts as sensitizer. FADH2 is probably the chromophore that directly interacts with substrate in a reaction which may be initiated by electron transfer from the excited singlet state (1FADH2*) to form a flavin radical plus an unstable pyrimidine dimer radical. Pterin, the major chromophore in E. coli photolyase, may act as an antenna to harvest light energy which is then transferred to FADH2.  相似文献   

18.
(6-4) photolyase catalyzes the light-dependent repair of UV-damaged DNA containing (6-4) photoproducts. Blue light excitation of the enzyme generates the neutral FAD radical, FADH., which is believed to be transiently formed during the enzymatic DNA repair. Here (6-4) photolyase has been examined by optical spectroscopy, electron paramagnetic resonance, and pulsed electron nuclear double resonance spectroscopy. Characterization of selected proton hyperfine couplings of FADH., namely those of H(8alpha) and H(1'), yields information on the micropolarity at the site where the DNA substrate is expected to bind. Shifts in the hyperfine couplings as a function of structural modifications induced by point mutations and pH changes distinguish the protonation states of two highly conserved histidines, His(354) and His(358), in Xenopus laevis (6-4) photolyase. These are proposed to catalyze formation of the oxetane intermediate that precedes light-initiated DNA repair. The results show that at pH 9.5, where the enzymatic repair activity is highest, His(358) is deprotonated, whereas His(354) is protonated. Hence, the latter is likely the proton donor that initiates oxetane formation from the (6-4) photoproduct.  相似文献   

19.
UV exposure of DNA molecules induces serious DNA lesions. The cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) photolyase repairs CPD-type - lesions by using the energy of visible light. Two chromophores for different roles have been found in this enzyme family; one catalyzes the CPD repair reaction and the other works as an antenna pigment that harvests photon energy. The catalytic cofactor of all known photolyases is FAD, whereas several light-harvesting cofactors are found. Currently, 5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolate (MTHF), 8-hydroxy-5-deaza-riboflavin (8-HDF) and FMN are the known light-harvesting cofactors, and some photolyases lack the chromophore. Three crystal structures of photolyases from Escherichia coli (Ec-photolyase), Anacystis nidulans (An-photolyase), and Thermus thermophilus (Tt-photolyase) have been determined; however, no archaeal photolyase structure is available. A similarity search of archaeal genomic data indicated the presence of a homologous gene, ST0889, on Sulfolobus tokodaii strain7. An enzymatic assay reveals that ST0889 encodes photolyase from S. tokodaii (St-photolyase). We have determined the crystal structure of the St-photolyase protein to confirm its structural features and to investigate the mechanism of the archaeal DNA repair system with light energy. The crystal structure of the St-photolyase is superimposed very well on the three known photolyases including the catalytic cofactor FAD. Surprisingly, another FAD molecule is found at the position of the light-harvesting cofactor. This second FAD molecule is well accommodated in the crystal structure, suggesting that FAD works as a novel light-harvesting cofactor of photolyase. In addition, two of the four CPD recognition residues in the crystal structure of An-photolyase are not found in St-photolyase, which might utilize a different mechanism to recognize the CPD from that of An-photolyase.  相似文献   

20.
Kavakli IH  Sancar A 《Biochemistry》2004,43(48):15103-15110
Escherichia coli DNA photolyase contains FADH(-) as the catalytic cofactor. The cofactor becomes oxidized to the FADH(*) blue neutral radical during purification. The E-FADH(*) form of the enzyme is catalytically inert but can be converted to the active E-FADH(-) form by a photoreduction reaction that involves intraprotein electron transfer from Trp306. It is thought that the E-FADH(*) form is also transiently generated during pyrimidine dimer repair by photoinduced electron transfer, and it has been suggested that the FADH(*) that is generated after each round of catalysis must be photoreduced before the enzyme can engage in subsequent rounds of repair. In this study, we introduced the Trp306Phe mutation into the chromosomal gene and tested the non-photoreducible W306F mutant for photorepair in vivo. We find that both wild-type and W306F mutant photolyases carry out at least 25 rounds of photorepair at the same rate. We conclude that photoreduction by intraprotein electron transfer is not part of the photolyase photocycle under physiological conditions.  相似文献   

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