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1.
DNase I footprint of ABC excinuclease   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
The incision and excision steps of nucleotide excision repair in Escherichia coli are mediated by ABC excinuclease, a multisubunit enzyme composed of three proteins, UvrA, UvrB, and UvrC. To determine the DNA contact sites and the binding affinity of ABC excinuclease for damaged DNA, it is necessary to engineer a DNA fragment uniquely modified at one nucleotide. We have recently reported the construction of a 40 base pair (bp) DNA fragment containing a psoralen adduct at a central TpA sequence (Van Houten, B., Gamper, H., Hearst, J. E., and Sancar, A. (1986a) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 14135-14141). Using similar methodology a 137-bp fragment containing a psoralen-thymine adduct was synthesized, and this substrate was used in DNase I-footprinting experiments with the subunits of ABC excinuclease. It was found that the UvrA subunit binds specifically to the psoralen modified 137-bp fragment with an apparent equilibrium constant of K8 = 0.7 - 1.5 X 10(8) M-1, while protecting a 33-bp region surrounding the DNA adduct. The equilibrium constant for the nonspecific binding of UvrA was Kns = 0.7 - 2.9 X 10(5) M-1 (bp). In the presence of the UvrB subunit, the binding affinity of UvrA for the damaged substrate increased to K8 = 1.2 - 6.7 X 10(8) M-1 while the footprint shrunk to 19 bp. In addition the binding of the UvrA and UvrB subunits to the damaged substrate caused the 11th phosphodiester bond 5' to the psoralen-modified thymine to become hypersensitive to DNase I cleavage. These observations provide evidence of an alteration in the DNA conformation which occurs during the formation of the ternary UvrA.UvrB.DNA complex. The addition of the UvrC subunit to the UvrA.UvrB.DNA complex resulted in incisions on both sides of the adduct but did not cause any detectable change in the footprint. Experiments with shorter psoralen-modified DNA fragments (20-40 bp) indicated that ABC excinuclease is capable of incising a DNA fragment extending either 3 or 1 bp beyond the normal 5' or 3' incision sites, respectively. These results suggest that the DNA beyond the incision sites, while contributing to ABC excinuclease-DNA complex formation, is not essential for cleavage to occur.  相似文献   

2.
One of the least understood steps in the UvrABC mediated excision repair process is the recognition of lesions in the DNA. The isolation of different reaction intermediates is of vital importance for the unraveling of the mechanism. A mobility shift gel electrophoresis assay is described which visualizes such intermediates. After incubation of a DNA substrate containing a specific cisplatin adduct with UvrA alone or with UvrA and UvrB, UvrA.DNA, UvrAB.DNA and UvrB.DNA complexes were observed which could be identified using specific antibodies. At low UvrA concentrations in the presence of UvrB only the UvrB.DNA complex is observed. Bands corresponding to the UvrAB.DNA complex and also other nonspecific bands are found at relatively high UvrA concentrations. The DNase-I footprint for the UvrAB.- and UvrB.DNA complex are very similar and protect about 20 bases. Both complexes are incised in the presence of UvrC with comparable efficiency. The UvrAB.- and the UvrB.DNA complex were both incised at the 8th phosphodiester bond 5' to a specific cisplatin adduct. In addition the UvrAB.DNA complex could also be incised at the 15th phosphodiesterbond 5' to the damaged site. The results suggest that the UvrB.DNA complex is the natural substrate for UvrC-induced incision.  相似文献   

3.
Escherichia coli ABC excinuclease initiates the removal of dodecanucleotides from damaged DNA in an ATP-dependent reaction. Using a synthetic DNA fragment containing a psoralen adduct at a defined position we have investigated the interaction of the components of the enzyme with substrate by DNase I footprinting. We find that the UvrA subunit binds to DNA specifically in the absence of cofactors and that the binding affinity is stimulated about 4-fold by ATP and only marginally inhibited by ADP. The UvrA.DNA complexes formed in the absence of co-factors or in the presence of either ATP or ADP are remarkably similar. In contrast, adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) increases nonspecific binding and completely abolishes the UvrA footprint. The UvrB subunit can associate with the UvrA subunit on DNA in the absence of ATP, but this ternary UvrA.UvrB.DNA complex is qualitatively different from that formed in the presence of ATP. The UvrC subunit elicits no additional change in the UvrA-UvrB footprint. Helicase II (UvrD protein) does not alter the UvrA-UvrB footprint but does appear to interact at the 5'-incision site of the postincision complex. DNA polymerase I fills in the excision gap in the presence or absence of helicase II and apparently releases the ABC excinuclease from the repaired DNA. Nearly 90% of the repair patches are 12 nucleotides long, and this length is not affected by helicase II. We see no evidence by DNase I footprinting for the formation of a multiprotein complex encompassing the UvrA, -B, -C, and -D proteins and DNA polymerase I.  相似文献   

4.
Prokaryotic DNA repair nucleases are useful reagents for detecting DNA lesions. UvrABC endonuclease, encoded by the UvrA, UvrB, and UvrC genes can incise DNA containing bulky nucleotide adducts and intrastrand cross-links. UvrA, UvrB, and UvrC were cloned from Bacillus caldotenax (Bca)and UvrC from Thermatoga maritima (Tma), and recombinant proteins were overexpressed in and purified from Escherichia coli. Incision activities of UvrABC composed of all Bca-derived subunits (UvrABC(Bca)) and an interspecies combination UvrABC composed of Bca-derived UvrA and UvrB and Tma-derived UvrC (UvrABC(Tma)) were compared on benoz[a]pyrene-7,8-dihyrodiol-9,10-epoxide (BPDE)-adducted substrates. Both UvrABC(Bca) and UvrABC(Tma) specifically incised both BPDE-adducted plasmid DNAs and site-specifically modified 50-bp oligonucleotides containing a single (+)-trans- or (+)-cis-BPDE adduct. Incision activity was maximal at 55-60 degrees C. However, UvrABC(Tma) was more robust than UvrABC(Bca) with 4-fold greater incision activity on BPDE-adducted oligonucleotides and 1.5-fold greater on [(3)H]BPDE-adducted plasmid DNAs. Remarkably, UvrABC(Bca) incised only at the eighth phosphodiester bond 5' to the BPDE-modified guanosine. In contrast, UvrABC(Tma) performed dual incision, cutting at both the fifth phosphodiester bond 3' and eighth phosphodiester bond 5' from BPDE-modified guanosine. BPDE adduct stereochemistry influenced incision activity, and cis adducts on oligonucleotide substrates were incised more efficiently than trans adducts by both UvrABC(Bca) and UvrABC(Tma). UvrAB-DNA complex formation was similar with (+)-trans- and (+)-cis-BPDE-adducted substrates, suggesting that UvrAB binds both adducts equally and that adduct configuration modifies UvrC recognition of the UvrAB-DNA complex. The dual incision capabilities and higher incision activity of UvrABC(Tma) make it a robust tool for DNA adduct studies.  相似文献   

5.
UvrA, UvrB, and UvrC initiate nucleotide excision repair by incising a damaged DNA strand on each side of the damaged nucleotide. This incision reaction is substoichiometric with regard to UvrB and UvrC, suggesting that both proteins remain bound following incision and do not "turn over." The addition of only helicase II to such reaction mixtures turns over UvrC; UvrB turnover requires the addition of helicase II, DNA polymerase I, and deoxynucleoside triphosphates. Column chromatography and psoralen photocross-linking experiments show that following incision, the damaged oligomer remains associated with the undamaged strand, UvrB, and UvrC in a post-incision complex. Helicase II releases the damaged oligomer and UvrC from this complex, making repair synthesis possible; DNase I footprinting experiments show that UvrB remains bound to the resulting gapped DNA until displaced by DNA polymerase I. The specific binding of UvrB to a psoralen adduct in DNA inhibits psoralen-mediated DNA-DNA cross-linking, yet promotes the formation of UrvB-psoralen-DNA cross-links. The discovery of psoralen-UvrB photocross-linking offers the potential of active-site labeling.  相似文献   

6.
We have isolated UvrB-DNA complexes by capture of biotinylated damaged DNA substrates on streptavidin-coated magnetic beads. With this method the UvrB-DNA preincision complex remains stable even in the absence of ATP. For the binding of UvrC to the UvrB-DNA complex no cofactor is needed. The subsequent induction of 3' incision does require ATP binding by UvrB but not hydrolysis. This ATP binding induces a conformational change in the DNA, resulting in the appearance of the DNase I-hypersensitive site at the 5' side of the damage. In contrast, the 5' incision is not dependent on ATP binding because it occurs with the same efficiency with ADP. We show with competition experiments that both incision reactions are induced by the binding of the same UvrC molecule. A DNA substrate containing damage close to the 5' end of the damaged strand is specifically bound by UvrB in the absence of UvrA and ATP (Moolenaar, G. F., Monaco, V., van der Marel, G. A., van Boom, J. H., Visse, R., and Goosen, N. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 8038-8043). To initiate the formation of an active UvrBC-DNA incision complex, however, UvrB first needs to hydrolyze ATP, and subsequently a new ATP molecule must be bound. Implications of these findings for the mechanism of the UvrA-mediated formation of the UvrB-DNA preincision complex will be discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Structure and function of the (A)BC excinuclease of Escherichia coli   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
C P Selby  A Sancar 《Mutation research》1990,236(2-3):203-211
(A)BC excinuclease is the enzymatic activity resulting from the mixture of E. coli UvrA, UvrB and UvrC proteins with damaged DNA. This is a functional definition as new evidence suggests that the three proteins never associate in a ternary complex. The UvrA subunit associates with the UvrB subunit in the form of an A2B1 complex which, guided by UvrA's affinity for damaged DNA binds to a lesion in DNA and delivers the UvrB subunit to the damaged site. The UvrB-damaged DNA complex is extremely stable (t1/2 congruent to 100 min). The UvrC subunit, which has no specific affinity for damaged DNA, recognizes the UvrB-DNA complex with high specificity and the protein complex consisting of UvrB and UvrC proteins makes two incisions, the 8th phosphodiester bond 5' and the 5th phosphodiester bond 3' to the damaged nucleotide. (A)BC excinuclease recognizes DNA damage ranging from AP sites and thymine glycols to pyrimidine dimers, and the adducts of psoralen, cisplatinum, mitomycin C, 4-nitroquinoline oxide and interstrand crosslinks.  相似文献   

8.
(A)BC excinuclease of Escherichia coli removes damaged nucleotides from DNA by hydrolyzing the 8th phosphodiester bond 5' and the 15th phosphodiester bond 3' to the modified base. The activity results from the ordered action of UvrA, UvrB, and UvrC proteins. The role of UvrA is to help assemble the UvrB.DNA complex, and it is not involved in the actual incision reactions which are carried out by UvrB and UvrC. To investigate the role of UvrC in the nuclease activity a subset of His, Asp, and Glu residues in the C-terminal half of the protein were mutagenized in vitro. The effect of these mutations on UV resistance in vivo and incision activity in vitro were investigated. Mutations, H538F, D399A, D438A, and D466A conferred extreme UV sensitivity. Enzyme reconstituted with these mutant proteins carried out normal 3' incision but was completely defective in 5' incision activity. Our data suggest that UvrC makes the 5' incision by employing a mechanism whereby the three carboxylates acting in concert with H538 and a Mg2+ ion facilitate nucleophilic attack by an active site water molecule.  相似文献   

9.
Nucleotide excision repair in Escherichia coli is initiated by the UvrA, UvrB and UvrC proteins. UvrA is the damage recognition subunit, makes an A2B1 complex with the targeting subunit UvrB, and the complex binds to the lesion site; UvrA dissociates leaving behind a very stable UvrB-DNA complex that is recognized by the trigger subunit, UvrC, and the ensuing UvrB-UvrC heterodimer makes two incisions, one on either side of the lesion. Using electron microscopy, we investigated the structures of these early A, A-B intermediates on DNA containing ultraviolet light photoproducts. UvrA, which is known to bind to DNA as a dimer and produce a DNase I footprint of 33 base-pairs does not change the trajectory of DNA appreciably. The A2B1 complex clearly shows a bipartite structure and its effect on the trajectory of the DNA was not consistently straight or kinked. In contrast, the DNA in the preincision UvrB-DNA complex appears to be severely kinked; 43% of the molecules are bent by 80 degrees or more, with an average bending angle of 127 degrees. It appears that protein-induced bending is an important step on the pathway leading to excision of the damaged nucleotide by (A)BC excinuclease.  相似文献   

10.
Malta E  Moolenaar GF  Goosen N 《Biochemistry》2007,46(31):9080-9088
UvrB plays a key role in bacterial nucleotide excision repair. It is the ultimate damage-binding protein that interacts with both UvrA and UvrC. The oligomeric state of UvrB and the UvrAB complex have been subject of debate for a long time. Using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between GFP and YFP fused to the C-terminal end of Escherichia coli UvrB, we unambiguously show that in solution two UvrB subunits bind to UvrA, most likely as part of a UvrA2B2 complex. This complex is most stable when both UvrA and UvrB are in the ATP-bound form. Analysis of a truncated form of UvrB shows that binding to UvrA promotes dimerization of the two C-terminal domain 4 regions of UvrB. The presence of undamaged DNA leads to dissociation of the UvrA2B2 complex, but when the ATPase site of UvrB is inactivated, the complex is trapped on the DNA. When the complex is bound to a damaged site, FRET between the two UvrB subunits could still be detected, but only as long as UvrA remains associated. Dissociation of UvrA from the damage-bound UvrB dimer leads to the reduction of the magnitude of the FRET signal, indicating that the domain 4 regions no longer interact. We propose that the UvrA-induced dimerization of the domain 4 regions serves to shield these domains from premature UvrC binding. Only after specific binding of the UvrB dimer to a damaged site and subsequent release of UvrA is the contact between the domain 4 regions broken, allowing recruitment of UvrC and subsequent incisions.  相似文献   

11.
Nazimiec M  Lee CS  Tang YL  Ye X  Case R  Tang M 《Biochemistry》2001,40(37):11073-11081
The uvrA, uvrB, and uvrC genes of Escherichia coli control the initial steps of nucleotide excision repair. The uvrC gene product is involved in at least one of the dual incisions produced by the UvrABC complex. Using single-stranded (ss) DNA affinity chromatography, we have separated two forms of UvrC from both wild-type E. coli cells and overproducing cells. UvrCI elutes at 0.4 M KCl, and UvrCII elutes at 0.6 M KCl. In general, both forms, in the presence of UvrA and UvrB, actively incise UV-irradiated and CC-1065-modified DNA in the same fashion; i.e., they incise six to eight nucleotides 5' to and three to five nucleotides 3' to a photoproduct or a CC-1065-N3-adenine adduct. They produce different incisions, however, at a CC-1065-N3-adenine adduct in the sequence 5'-GATTACG- present in the MspI-BstNI 117 bp fragment of M13mp1. UvrABCI incises at both the 5' and 3' sides of the adduct (UvrABCI cut), while UvrABCII incises only at the 5' side (UvrABCII cut). Mixing UvrCI and UvrCII results in both UvrABCI and UvrABCII cuts, and the levels of these two types of cutting are proportional to the amount of UvrCI and UvrCII. DNase I footprints of the MspI-BstNI 117 bp DNA fragment containing a site-directed CC-1065-adenine adduct at the 5'-GATTACG- site show that UvrCII, but not UvrCI, binds to the adduct site. Furthermore, the pattern of DNase I footprints induced by UvrCII binding differs from the pattern of the footprints induced by UvrA, UvrAB, and UvrABCI binding. Interestingly, while the presence of unirradiated DNA enhances the efficiency of UvrABCII in incising UV-irradiated DNA, it does not enhance UvrABCII incision of the CC-1065-N3-adenine adduct formed at 5'-GATTACG-. These results show that two different forms of UvrC differ in DNA binding properties as well as incision modes at some kinds of DNA damage.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of negative supercoiling on UvrABC incision of covalently closed duplex DNA circles containing either a furan-side monoadduct or a cross-link of 4'-hydroxymethyl-4,5',8-trimethylpsoralen at a unique site was examined. The rate of UvrABC incision of these DNA substrates was measured as a function of superhelical density, sigma, for values of sigma between 0 and -0.050. The monoadducted DNA substrate was incised at close to the maximum rate at all superhelical densities, with only a slight stimulation of activity between sigma = 0 and -0.035. In contrast, efficient UvrABC incision of the cross-linked DNA substrate required the DNA to be underwound, and activity showed a linear dependence on superhelical density up to sigma = -0.035. DNase I protection studies show that in the presence of both UvrA and UvrB a protein complex binds to the site of a psoralen monoadduct or cross-link in linear DNA. This UvrA-UvrB-dependent complex binds with similar affinity to both the monoadducted and the cross-linked DNA helices. However, differences in the DNase I footprint on these two DNA substrates indicate that the interaction of this protein complex is different at these two lesions. The addition of UvrC to linear DNA molecules that are saturated at the site of the lesion with the UvrA-UvrB-dependent complex resulted in efficient nicking of the monoadducted DNA, but not the cross-linked DNA. Thus, the properties of a DNA lesion site that lead to UvrAB recognition and binding are not necessarily sufficient to allow incision when all three Uvr subunits are present. We propose that after recognition and binding of a lesion site by the UvrAB complex and prior to incision, the damaged DNA helix undergoes a conformational change such as unwinding or melting that is induced by the lesion-bound Uvr complex.  相似文献   

13.
DNA polymerase I (PolI) functions both in nucleotide excision repair (NER) and in the processing of Okazaki fragments that are generated on the lagging strand during DNA replication. Escherichia coli cells completely lacking the PolI enzyme are viable as long as they are grown on minimal medium. Here we show that viability is fully dependent on the presence of functional UvrA, UvrB, and UvrD (helicase II) proteins but does not require UvrC. In contrast, delta polA cells grow even better when the uvrC gene has been deleted. Apparently UvrA, UvrB, and UvrD are needed in a replication backup system that replaces the PolI function, and UvrC interferes with this alternative replication pathway. With specific mutants of UvrC we could show that the inhibitory effect of this protein is related to its catalytic activity that on damaged DNA is responsible for the 3' incision reaction. Specific mutants of UvrA and UvrB were also studied for their capacity to support the PolI-independent replication. Deletion of the UvrC-binding domain of UvrB resulted in a phenotype similar to that caused by deletion of the uvrC gene, showing that the inhibitory incision activity of UvrC is mediated via binding to UvrB. A mutation in the N-terminal zinc finger domain of UvrA does not affect NER in vivo or in vitro. The same mutation, however, does give inviability in combination with the delta polA mutation. Apparently the N-terminal zinc-binding domain of UvrA has specifically evolved for a function outside DNA repair. A model for the function of the UvrA, UvrB, and UvrD proteins in the alternative replication pathway is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Recently, an open reading frame which has a deduced amino acid sequence that shows 38% homology to Escherichia coli UvrC protein was found upstream of the aspartokinase II gene (ask) in Bacillus subtilis (Chen, N.-Y., Zhang, J.-J., and Paulus, H. (1989) J. Gen. Microbiol. 135, 2931-2940). We found that plasmids containing this open reading frame complement the uvrC mutations in E. coli. We joined the open reading frame to a tac promoter to amplify the gene product in E. coli and purified the protein to near homogeneity. The apparent molecular weight of the gene product is 69,000, which is consistent with the calculated molecular weight of 69,378 fro the deduced gene product of the open reading frame. The purified gene product causes the nicking of DNA at the 8th phosphodiester bond 5' and the 5th phosphodiester bond 3' to a thymine dimer when mixed with E. coli UvrA and UvrB proteins and a DNA substrate containing a uniquely located thymine dimer. We conclude that the gene product of the open reading frame is the B. subtilis UvrC protein. Our results suggest that the B. subtilis nucleotide excision repair system is quite similar to that of E. coli. Furthermore, complementation of the UvrA and UvrB proteins from a Gram-negative bacterium with the UvrC protein of Gram-positive B. subtilis indicates a significant evolutionary conservation of the nucleotide excision repair system.  相似文献   

15.
Formation and enzymatic properties of the UvrB.DNA complex   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The UvrA, UvrB, and UvrC proteins collectively catalyze the dual incision of a damaged DNA strand in an ATP-dependent reaction. We previously reported (Orren, D. K., and Sancar, A. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 86, 5237-5241) that UvrA delivers UvrB to damaged sites in DNA; upon addition of UvrC to these UvrB.DNA complexes, the DNA is incised. In the present study, we have further characterized both the delivery of UvrB to DNA and the subsequent incision process, with emphasis on the role of ATP in these reactions. The UvrA-dependent delivery of UvrB onto damaged DNA is relatively slow (kon approximately 6 x 10(4) M-1 s-1) and requires ATP hydrolysis (Km = 120 microM). Although ATP enhances the stability of UvrB.DNA complexes (koff = 8.5 x 10(-5) s-1), the isolated UvrB.DNA complexes do not contain any covalently attached or stably bound nucleotide. However, ATP binding is required for the UvrC-dependent dual incision of DNA bound by UvrB. Interestingly, adenosine 5'-(3-O-thio)triphosphate can substitute for ATP at this step. The Km for ATP during incision is 2 microM, but ATP is not hydrolyzed at a detectable level during the incision reaction. The incisions made by UvrB-UvrC are on both sides of the adduct and result in the excision of the damaged nucleotide.  相似文献   

16.
An examination has been made into the nature of the nucleoprotein complexes formed during the incision reaction catalyzed by the Escherichia coli UvrABC endonuclease when acting on a pyrimidine dimer-containing fd RF-I DNA species. The complexes of proteins and DNA form in unique stages. The first stage of binding involves an ATP-stimulated interaction of the UvrA protein with duplex DNA containing pyrimidine dimer sites. The UvrB protein significantly stabilizes the UvrA-pyrimidine dimer containing DNA complex which, in turn, provides a foundation for the binding of UvrC to activate the UvrABC endonuclease. The binding of one molecule of UvrC to each UvrAB-damaged DNA complex is needed to catalyze incision in the vicinity of pyrimidine dimer sites. The UvrABC-DNA complex persists after the incision event suggesting that the lack of UvrABC turnover may be linked to other activities in the excision-repair pathway beyond the initial incision reaction.  相似文献   

17.
Potential role of proteolysis in the control of UvrABC incision.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
UvrB is specifically proteolyzed in Escherichia coli cell extracts to UvrB*. UvrB* is capable of interacting with UvrA in an apparently similar manner to the UvrB, however UvrB* is defective in the DNA strand displacement activity normally displayed by UvrAB. Whereas the binding of UvrC to a UvrAB-DNA complex leads to DNA incision and persistence of a stable post-incision protein-DNA complex, the binding of UvrC to UvrAB* leads to dissociation of the protein complex and no DNA incision is seen. The factor which stimulates this proteolysis has been partially purified and its substrate specificity has been examined. The protease factor is induced by "stress" and is under control of the htpR gene. The potential role of this proteolysis in the regulation of levels of active repair enzymes in the cell is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Nucleotide excision repair is distinguished from other DNA repair pathways by its ability to process a wide range of structurally unrelated DNA lesions. In bacteria, damage recognition is achieved by the UvrA·UvrB ensemble. Here, we report the structure of the complex between the interaction domains of UvrA and UvrB. These domains are necessary and sufficient for full-length UvrA and UvrB to associate and thereby form the DNA damage-sensing complex of bacterial nucleotide excision repair. The crystal structure and accompanying biochemical analyses suggest a model for the complete damage-sensing complex.Nucleotide excision repair is distinguished from other DNA repair pathways by its ability to process a diverse set of lesions. In bacteria, the initial steps are carried out by three proteins: UvrA, UvrB, and UvrC. The UvrA·UvrB complex conducts surveillance of DNA and recognizes damage. Having located a lesion, UvrA “loads” UvrB onto the DNA at the damaged sites and then dissociates. Damage searching, formation of the UvrB·DNA “preincision” complex, and dissociation of UvrA are regulated by ATP (1). UvrB subsequently recruits the endonuclease UvrC, which catalyzes incisions on either side of the lesion (2, 3). Following incision, UvrC and the damage-containing oligonucleotide are removed by UvrD (helicase II), whereas UvrB remains bound to the gapped DNA and recruits DNA polymerase I for repair synthesis. Sealing of the single-stranded nick completes the repair process and restores the original DNA sequence (4).Since its discovery more than 40 years ago, bacterial nucleotide excision repair has been extensively studied, resulting in a large body of work that describes the protein components and the details of how they operate. Notwithstanding the trove of genetic and biochemical data, several key questions remain unanswered. For example, how does the same set of proteins handle a diverse set of lesions while maintaining specificity? How do UvrA and UvrB cooperate during damage recognition, and what is the precise role of ATP? Ongoing studies in the field, including those described below, aim to address these issues.Recently, we reported the structure of Geobacillus stearothermophilus UvrA and the identification of binding sites for DNA and UvrB (5). We also established that the identified UvrB-binding domain is necessary and sufficient to mediate the UvrA-UvrB interaction and that the isolated interaction domains of UvrA (5) and UvrB (6) bind to each other in solution.To understand the interaction between UvrA and UvrB, we have determined the crystal structure of the complex between the two isolated interaction domains. The structure revealed that UvrA-UvrB interaction interface is largely polar, mediated by several highly conserved charged residues. Site-directed mutagenesis and biochemical characterization of the mutant proteins confirmed the importance of the observed interactions. Based on the interaction domain complex structure, we have constructed a structural model for the full-length UvrA·UvrB ensemble and propose two models for lesion recognition that will serve as a basis for future experiments.  相似文献   

19.
Prokaryotic DNA repair nucleases are useful reagents for detecting DNA lesions. Escherichia coli UvrABC endonuclease can incise DNA containing UV photoproducts and bulky chemical adducts. The limited stability of the E. coli UvrABC subunits leads to difficulty in estimating incision efficiency and quantitative adduct detection. To develop a more stable enzyme with greater utility for the detection of DNA adducts, thermoresistant UvrABC endonuclease was cloned from the eubacterium Bacillus caldotenax (Bca) and individual recombinant protein subunits were overexpressed in and purified from E. coli. Here, we show that Bca UvrC that had lost activity or specificity could be restored by dialysis against buffer containing 500 mM KCl and 20mM dithiothreitol. Our data indicate that UvrC solubility depended on high salt concentrations and UvrC nuclease activity and the specificity of incisions depended on the presence of reduced sulfhydryls. Optimal conditions for BCA UvrABC-specific cleavage of plasmid DNAs treated with [3H](+)-7R,8S-dihydroxy-9S,10R-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene (BPDE) (1-5 lesions/plasmid) were developed. Preincubation of substrates with UvrA and UvrB enhanced incision efficiency on damaged substrates and decreased non-specific nuclease activity on undamaged substrates. Under optimal conditions for damaged plasmid incision, approximately 70% of adducts were incised in 1 nM plasmid DNA (2 BPDE adducts/5.4 kbp plasmid) with UvrA at 2.5 nM, UvrB at 62.5 nM, and UvrC at 25 nM. These results demonstrate the potential usefulness of the Bca UvrABC for monitoring the distribution of chemical carcinogen-induced lesions in DNA.  相似文献   

20.
Incision of damaged DNA by the Escherichia coli UvrABC endonuclease requires the UvrA, UvrB, and UvrC proteins as well as ATP hydrolysis. This incision reaction can be divided into three steps: site recognition, preincision complex formation, and incision. UvrAB is able to execute the first two steps in the reaction while the addition of UvrC is required for the incision of DNA. This incision reaction does not require ATP hydrolysis and results in the formation of a tight UvrABC post-incision complex and the generation of an oligomer of approximately 12 nucleotides. At high UvrABC concentrations the specificity of the incision for damaged DNA is decreased and significant incision of undamaged DNA occurs. Analogous to damage specific incision, this type of incision leads to generation of an oligonucleotide, but in this case the size is approximately 9 nucleotides in length. Further evidence shows that the combination of UvrB and UvrC proteins can generate a significant amount of a similar size product on undamaged DNA. In addition, the UvrC protein alone can generate a small amount of the same product. Immunological characterization of the weak nuclease activity seen with UvrC indicates that the activity is very tightly associated with the purified UvrC protein.  相似文献   

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