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1.
Fiala KA  Suo Z 《Biochemistry》2004,43(7):2116-2125
The kinetic mechanism of DNA polymerization catalyzed by Sulfolobus solfataricus P2 DNA polymerase IV (Dpo4) is resolved by pre-steady-state kinetic analysis of single-nucleotide (dTTP) incorporation into a DNA 21/41-mer. Like replicative DNA polymerases, Dpo4 utilizes an "induced-fit" mechanism to select correct incoming nucleotides. The affinity of DNA and a matched incoming nucleotide for Dpo4 was measured to be 10.6 nM and 230 microM, respectively. Dpo4 binds DNA with an affinity similar to that of replicative polymerases due to the presence of an atypical little finger domain and a highly charged tether that links this novel domain to its small thumb domain. On the basis of the elemental effect between the incorporations of dTTP and its thio analogue S(p)-dTTPalphaS, the incorporation of a correct incoming nucleotide by Dpo4 was shown to be limited by the protein conformational change step preceding the chemistry step. In contrast, the chemistry step limited the incorporation of an incorrect nucleotide. The measured dissociation rates of the enzyme.DNA binary complex (0.02-0.07 s(-1)), the enzyme.DNA.dNTP ternary complex (0.41 s(-1)), and the ternary complex after the protein conformational change (0.004 s(-1)) are significantly different and support the existence of a bona fide protein conformational change step. The rate-limiting protein conformational change was further substantiated by the observation of different reaction amplitudes between pulse-quench and pulse-chase experiments. Additionally, the processivity of Dpo4 was calculated to be 16 at 37 degrees C from analysis of a processive polymerization experiment. The structural basis for both the protein conformational change and the low processivity of Dpo4 was discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Enzyme structures solved with and without bound substrate often show that substrate-induced conformational changes bring catalytic residues into alignment, alter the local environment, and position the substrate for catalysis. Although the structural data are compelling, the role of conformational changes in enzyme specificity has been controversial in that specificity is a kinetic property that is not easy to predict based upon structure alone. Recent studies on DNA polymerization have illuminated the role of substrate-induced conformational changes in enzyme specificity by showing that the rate at which the enzyme opens to release the bound substrate is a key kinetic parameter. The slow release of a correct substrate commits it to the forward reaction so that specificity is determined solely by the rate of substrate binding, including the isomerization step, and not by the slower rate of the chemical reaction. In contrast, fast dissociation of an incorrect substrate favors release rather than reaction. Thus, the conformational change acts as a molecular switch to select the right substrate and to recognize and disfavor the reaction of an incorrect substrate. A conformational switch may also favor release rather than reverse reaction of the product.  相似文献   

3.
A nucleotide-induced change in DNA polymerase structure governs the kinetics of polymerization by high fidelity DNA polymerases. Mutation of a GAG hinge (G542A/G544A) in T7 DNA polymerase resulted in a 1000-fold slower rate of conformational change, which then limited the rate of correct nucleotide incorporation. Rates of misincorporation were comparable to that seen for wild-type enzyme so that the net effect of the mutation was a large decrease in fidelity. We demonstrate that a presumably modest change from glycine to alanine 20 Å from the active site can severely restrict the flexibility of the enzyme structure needed to recognize and incorporate correct substrates with high specificity. These results emphasize the importance of the substrate-induced conformational change in governing nucleotide selectivity by accelerating the incorporation of correct base pairs but not mismatches.  相似文献   

4.
Despite the fact that DNA polymerases have been investigated for many years and are commonly used as tools in a number of molecular biology assays, many details of the kinetic mechanism they use to catalyze DNA synthesis remain unclear. Structural and kinetic studies have characterized a rapid, pre-catalytic open-to-close conformational change of the Finger domain during nucleotide binding for many DNA polymerases including Thermus aquaticus DNA polymerase I (Taq Pol), a thermostable enzyme commonly used for DNA amplification in PCR. However, little has been performed to characterize the motions of other structural domains of Taq Pol or any other DNA polymerase during catalysis. Here, we used stopped-flow Förster resonance energy transfer to investigate the conformational dynamics of all five structural domains of the full-length Taq Pol relative to the DNA substrate during nucleotide binding and incorporation. Our study provides evidence for a rapid conformational change step induced by dNTP binding and a subsequent global conformational transition involving all domains of Taq Pol during catalysis. Additionally, our study shows that the rate of the global transition was greatly increased with the truncated form of Taq Pol lacking the N-terminal domain. Finally, we utilized a mutant of Taq Pol containing a de novo disulfide bond to demonstrate that limiting protein conformational flexibility greatly reduced the polymerization activity of Taq Pol.  相似文献   

5.
Like most enzymes, DNA polymerases undergo a large conformational change on the binding of a correct nucleotide. To determine how the conformational change contributes to substrate specificity, we labeled the T7 DNA polymerase with a conformationally sensitive fluorophore at a position that provides a signal coincident with structural changes following nucleotide binding and distinguishes correct base pairs from incorrect ones by the sign of the fluorescence change. Here we describe methods to document that only one site on the polymerase was labeled with the fluorophore based on mass spectral analysis of tryptic peptides. In addition, we show by equilibrium titrations of opposing signals that mismatches and correct bases compete for the same site. This analysis forms an essential basis for characterization of a fluorescently labeled enzyme intended for mechanistic studies. Finally, we show that the labeled enzyme can be used to identify single-nucleotide mutations in a procedure that could be automated.  相似文献   

6.
High-fidelity DNA polymerases select the correct nucleotide over the structurally similar incorrect nucleotides with extremely high specificity while maintaining fast rates of incorporation. Previous analysis revealed the conformational dynamics and complete kinetic pathway governing correct nucleotide incorporation using a high-fidelity DNA polymerase variant containing a fluorescent unnatural amino acid. Here we extend this analysis to investigate the kinetics of nucleotide misincorporation and mismatch extension. We report the specificity constants for all possible misincorporations and characterize the conformational dynamics of the enzyme during misincorporation and mismatch extension. We present free energy profiles based on the kinetic measurements and discuss the effect of different steps on specificity. During mismatch incorporation and subsequent extension with the correct nucleotide, the rates of the conformational change and chemistry are both greatly reduced. The nucleotide dissociation rate, however, increases to exceed the rate of chemistry. To investigate the structural basis for discrimination against mismatched nucleotides, we performed all atom molecular dynamics simulations on complexes with either the correct or mismatched nucleotide bound at the polymerase active site. The simulations suggest that the closed form of the enzyme with a mismatch bound is greatly destabilized due to weaker interactions with active site residues, nonideal base pairing, and a large increase in the distance from the 3ʹ-OH group of the primer strand to the α-phosphate of the incoming nucleotide, explaining the reduced rates of misincorporation. The observed kinetic and structural mechanisms governing nucleotide misincorporation reveal the general principles likely applicable to other high-fidelity DNA polymerases.  相似文献   

7.
The DNA polymerase beta mutant enzyme, which is altered from glutamic acid to lysine at position 249, exhibits a mutator phenotype in primer extension assays and in the herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase (HSV-tk) forward mutation assay. The basis for this loss of accuracy was investigated by measurement of misincorporation fidelity in single turnover conditions. For the four misincorporation reactions investigated, the fidelity of the E249K mutant was not significantly different from wild type, implying that the mutator phenotype was not caused by a general inability to distinguish between correct and incorrect bases during the incorporation reaction. However, the discrimination between correct and incorrect substrates by the E249K enzyme occurred less during the conformational change and chemical steps and more during the initial binding step, compared with pol beta wild type. This implies that the E249K mutation alters the kinetic mechanism of nucleotide discrimination without reducing misincorporation fidelity. In a missing base primer extension assay, we observed that the mutant enzyme produced mispairs and extended them. This indicates that the altered fidelity of E249K could be due to loss of discrimination against mispaired primer termini. This was supported by the finding that the E249K enzyme extended a G:A mispair 8-fold more efficiently than wild type and a C:T mispair 4-fold more efficiently. These results demonstrate that an enhanced ability to extend mispairs can produce a mutator phenotype and that the Glu-249 side chain of DNA polymerase beta is critical for mispair extension fidelity.  相似文献   

8.
An exonuclease-deficient mutant of T7 DNA polymerase was constructed and utilized in a series of kinetic studies on misincorporation and next correct dNTP incorporation. By using a synthetic oligonucleotide template-primer system for which the kinetic pathway for correct incorporation has been solved [Patel, S.S., Wong, I., & Johnson, K. A. (1991) Biochemistry (first of three papers in this issue)], the kinetic parameters for the incorporation of the incorrect triphosphates dATP, dCTP, and dGTP were determined, giving, respectively, kcat/Km values of 91, 23, and 4.3 M-1 s-1 and a discrimination in the polymerization step of 10(5)-10(6). The rates of misincorporation in all cases were linearly dependent on substrate concentration up to 4 mM, beyond which severe inhibition was observed. Competition of correct incorporation versus dCTP revealed an estimated Ki of approximately 6-8 mM, suggesting a corresponding kcat of 0.14s-1. Moderate elemental effects of 19-, 17-, and 34-fold reduction in rates were measured by substituting the alpha-thiotriphosphate analogues for dATP, dCTP, and dGTP, respectively, indicating that the chemistry step is partially rate-limiting. The absence of a burst of incorporation during the first turnover places the rate-limiting step at a triphosphate binding induced conformational change before chemistry. In contrast, the incorporation of the next correct triphosphate, dCTP, on a mismatched DNA substrate was saturable with a Km of 87 microM for dCTP, 4-fold higher than the Kd for the correct incorporation on duplex DNA, and a kcat of 0.025 s-1. A larger elemental effect of 60, however, suggests a rate-limiting chemistry step. The rate of pyrophosphorolysis on a mismatched 3'-end is undetectable, indicating that pyrophosphorolysis does not play a proofreading role in replication. These results show convincingly that the T7 DNA polymerase discriminates against the incorrect triphosphate by an induced-fit conformational change and that, following misincorporation, the enzyme then selects against the resultant mismatched DNA by a slow, rate-limiting chemistry step, thereby allowing sufficient time for the release of the mismatched DNA from the polymerase active site to be followed by exonucleolytic error correction.  相似文献   

9.
A new paradigm for DNA polymerase specificity   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Tsai YC  Johnson KA 《Biochemistry》2006,45(32):9675-9687
We show that T7 DNA polymerase exists in three distinct structural states, as reported by a conformationally sensitive fluorophore attached to the recognition (fingers) domain. The conformational change induced by a correct nucleotide commits the substrate to the forward reaction, and the slow reversal of the conformational change eliminates the rate of the chemistry step from any contribution toward enzyme specificity. Discrimination against mismatches is enhanced by the rapid release of mismatched nucleotides from the ternary E.DNA.deoxynucleoside triphosphate complex and by the use of substrate-binding energy to actively misalign catalytic residues to reduce the rate of misincorporation. Our refined model for enzyme selectivity extends traditional thermodynamic formalism by including substrate-induced structural alignment or misalignment of catalytic residues as a third dimension on the free-energy profile and by including the rate of substrate dissociation as a key kinetic parameter.  相似文献   

10.
Kinetic characteristics of specific recognition of damaged base by the DNA glycosylase MutY in model DNA substrates, containing oxoG/A-, G/A-, oxoG/C- and F/G pairs in the central position, were investigated. Conformational changes of the MutY enzyme during the recognition of the damaged base in DNA have been recorded by the change in the fluorescence intensity of tryptophan residues using the stopped-flow technique in real time. DNA duplexes containing a fluorescein residue were used for the registration of DNA conformational changes. Analysis of the kinetic curves allowed us to determine the values of rate constants for the kinetic stages of the interaction. It was shown that nonspecific contacts between the DNA-binding site of the enzyme and the DNA duplex are formed at the first stage of the interaction. It was found that the discrimination of Gua and oxoGua bases occurs at the second stage of the MutY interaction with the DNA duplex. The data obtained for the oxoG/C-substrate showed that the recognition of the base located opposite oxoGua also occurs at this stage.  相似文献   

11.
Replicative DNA polymerases are stalled by damaged DNA while the newly discovered Y-family DNA polymerases are recruited to rescue these stalled replication forks, thereby enhancing cell survival. The Y-family DNA polymerases, characterized by low fidelity and processivity, are able to bypass different classes of DNA lesions. A variety of kinetic and structural studies have established a minimal reaction pathway common to all DNA polymerases, although the conformational intermediates are not well defined. Furthermore, the identification of the rate-limiting step of nucleotide incorporation catalyzed by any DNA polymerase has been a matter of long debate. By monitoring time-dependent fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) signal changes at multiple sites in each domain and DNA during catalysis, we present here a real-time picture of the global conformational transitions of a model Y-family enzyme: DNA polymerase IV (Dpo4) from Sulfolobus solfataricus. Our results provide evidence for a hypothetical DNA translocation event followed by a rapid protein conformational change prior to catalysis and a subsequent slow, post-chemistry protein conformational change. Surprisingly, the DNA translocation step was induced by the binding of a correct nucleotide. Moreover, we have determined the directions, rates, and activation energy barriers of the protein conformational transitions, which indicated that the four domains of Dpo4 moved in a synchronized manner. These results showed conclusively that a pre-chemistry conformational change associated with domain movements was too fast to be the rate-limiting step. Rather, the rearrangement of active site residues limited the rate of correct nucleotide incorporation. Collectively, the conformational dynamics of Dpo4 offer insights into how the inter-domain movements are related to enzymatic function and their concerted interactions with other proteins at the replication fork.  相似文献   

12.
The large-scale opening motion of mammalian DNA polymerase beta is followed at atomic resolution by dynamic simulations that link crystal "closed" and "open" conformations. The closing/opening conformational change is thought to be key to the ability of polymerases to choose a correct nucleotide (through "induced fit") and hence maintain DNA repair synthesis fidelity. Corroborating available structural and kinetic measurements, our studies bridge static microscopic crystal structures with macroscopic kinetic data by delineating a specific sequence, Phe272 ring flip, large thumb movement, Arg258 rotation with release of catalytic Mg2+, together with estimated time-scales, that suggest the Arg258 rearrangement as a limiting factor of large subdomain motions. If similarly slow in the closing motion, this conformational change might be restricted further when an incorrect nucleotide binds and thus play a role in pol beta's selectivity for the correct nucleotide. These results suggest new lines of experimentation in the study of polymerase mechanisms (e.g. enzyme mutants), which should provide further insights into mechanisms of error discrimination and DNA synthesis fidelity.  相似文献   

13.
Recent data on structural and biochemical features of human 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase (hOGG1) has enabled detailed evaluation of the mechanism by which the damaged DNA bases are recognized and eliminated from the chain. Pre-steady-state kinetic studies with recording of conformational transitions of the enzyme and DNA substrate significantly contribute to understanding of this mechanism. In this review we particularly focus on the interrelationship between the conformational changes of interacting molecules and kinetics of their interaction and on the nature of each elementary step during the enzymatic process. Exhaustive analysis of these data and detailed mechanism of hOGG1-catalyzed reaction are proposed.  相似文献   

14.
《Journal of molecular biology》2019,431(6):1098-1112
Endonuclease VIII-like protein 1 (NEIL1) is a DNA repair enzyme found in higher eukaryotes, including humans. It belongs to the helix–two turn–helix (H2TH) structural superfamily together with Escherichia coli formamidopyrimidine–DNA glycosylase (Fpg) and endonuclease VIII (Nei), and removes a variety of oxidized purine and pyrimidine bases from DNA. Structural, modeling and kinetic studies have established that the bacterial H2TH superfamily enzymes proceed through several conformational intermediates while recognizing and removing their cognate lesions. Here we apply stopped-flow kinetics with detection of intrinsic Trp fluorescence and Förster resonance energy transfer fluorescence to follow the conformational dynamics of human NEIL1 and DNA when the enzyme interacts with undamaged DNA, or DNA containing cleavable or non-cleavable abasic sites, or dihydrouracil lesions. NEIL1 processed a natural abasic site and a damaged base in DNA equally well but showed an additional fluorescently discernible step when DHU was present, likely reflecting additional rearrangements during base eversion into the enzyme's active site. With undamaged DNA and DNA containing a non-cleavable abasic site analog, (3-hydroxytetrahydrofuran-2-yl)methyl phosphate, NEIL1 was diverted to a non-productive DNA conformation early in the reaction. Our results support the view of NEIL1 as an enzyme that actively destabilizes damaged DNA and uses multiple checkpoints along the reaction coordinate to drive substrate lesions into the active site while rejecting normal bases and non-substrate lesions.  相似文献   

15.
Structural data suggest that DNA polymerases, from at least three different families, employ common strategies for carrying out DNA replication. Universal features include a large conformational change in the enzyme-template complex and a conserved active-site geometry that imposes a sharp kink at the 5 end of the template strand. Recent single molecule experiments have shown that stretching the DNA template markedly alters the rate of DNA synthesis catalyzed by these motor enzymes. From these data, it was previously inferred that T7 DNA polymerase and two related enzymes convert two or four (depending on the enzyme) single-stranded (ss) template bases to double helix geometry in the polymerase active site during each catalytic cycle. We discuss structural data on related DNA polymerases, which suggest that only one (ss) template base is contracted to dsDNA geometry during the rate-limiting step of each replication cycle. Previous interpretations relied upon the global stretching curves for DNA polymers alone (with no reference to the enzyme or the structure of the transition state). In contrast, we present a structurally guided model that presumes the force dependence of the replication rate is governed chiefly by local interactions in the immediate vicinity of the enzyme s active site. Our analysis reconciles single molecule kinetic studies with structural data on DNA polymerases.  相似文献   

16.
A mutant of DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment) with reduced fidelity   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The kinetic parameters governing incorporation of correct and incorrect bases into synthetic DNA duplexes have been investigated for Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I [Klenow fragment (KF)] and for two mutants, Tyr766Ser and Tyr766Phe. Tyr766 is located at the C-terminus of helix O in the DNA-binding cleft of KF. The catalytic efficiency for correct incorporation of dNTP is reduced 5-fold for Tyr766Ser. The catalytic efficiencies of all 12 possible misincorporations have been determined for both KF and Tyr766Ser by using single-turnover kinetic conditions and a form of the enzyme that is devoid of the 3'-5' exonuclease activity because of other single amino acid replacements. Tyr766Ser displays an increased efficiency of misincorporation (a reduction in fidelity) for several of the 12 mismatches. The largest increase in efficiency of misincorporation for Tyr766Ser occurs for the misincorporation of TMP opposite template guanosine, a 44-fold increase. In contrast, the efficiencies of misincorporation of dAMP opposite template A, G, or C are little affected by the mutation. A determination of the kinetic parameters associated with a complete kinetic scheme has been made for Tyr766Ser. The rate of addition of the next correct nucleotide onto a preexisting mismatch is decreased for Tyr766Ser. The fidelity of Tyr766Phe was not substantially different from that of KF for the misincorporations examined, indicating that it is the loss of the phenolic ring of the side chain of Tyr766 that leads to the significant decrease in fidelity. The results indicate that KF actively participates in the reduction of misincorporations during the polymerization event and that Tyr766 plays an important role in maintaining the high fidelity of replication by KF.  相似文献   

17.
Telomerase is a ribonucleoprotein that adds DNA to the ends of chromosomes. The catalytic protein subunit of telomerase (TERT) contains an N-terminal domain (TEN) that is important for activity and processivity. Here we describe a mutation in the TEN domain of human TERT that results in a greatly increased primer K(d), supporting a role for the TEN domain in DNA affinity. Measurement of enzyme kinetic parameters has revealed that this mutant enzyme is also defective in dNTP polymerization, particularly while copying position 51 of the RNA template. The catalytic defect is independent of the presence of binding interactions at the 5'-region of the DNA primer, and is not a defect in translocation rate. These data suggest that the TEN domain is involved in conformational changes required to position the 3'-end of the primer in the active site during nucleotide addition, a function which is distinct from the role of the TEN domain in providing DNA binding affinity.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract

Structural data suggest that DNA polymerases, from at least three different families, employ common strategies for carrying out DNA replication. Universal features include a large conformational change in the enzyme-template complex and a conserved active-site geometry that imposes a sharp kink at the 5′ end of the template strand. Recent single molecule experiments have shown that stretching the DNA template markedly alters the rate of DNA synthesis catalyzed by these motor enzymes. From these data, it was previously inferred that T7 DNA polymerase and two related enzymes convert two or four (depending on the enzyme) single-stranded (ss) template bases to double helix geometry in the polymerase active site during each catalytic cycle. We discuss structural data on related DNA polymerases, which suggest that only one (ss) template base is contracted to dsDNA geometry during the rate- limiting step of each replication cycle. Previous interpretations relied upon the global stretching curves for DNA polymers alone (with no reference to the enzyme or the structure of the transition state). In contrast, we present a structurally guided model that presumes the force dependence of the replication rate is governed chiefly by local interactions in the immediate vicinity of the enzyme's active site. Our analysis reconciles single molecule kinetic studies with structural data on DNA polymerases.  相似文献   

19.
Formamidopyrimidine-DNA-glycosylase (Fpg pro tein, MutM) catalyses excision of 8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG) and other oxidatively damaged purines from DNA in a glycosylase/apurinic/apyrimidinic-lyase reaction. We report pre-steady-state kinetic analysis of Fpg action on oligonucleotide duplexes containing 8-oxo-2′-deoxyguanosine, natural abasic site or tetrahydrofuran (an uncleavable abasic site analogue). Monitoring Fpg intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence in stopped-flow experiments reveals multiple conformational transitions in the protein molecule during the catalytic cycle. At least four and five conformational transitions occur in Fpg during the interaction with abasic and 8-oxoG-containing substrates, respectively, within 2 ms to 10 s time range. These transitions reflect the stages of enzyme binding to DNA and lesion recognition with the mutual adjustment of DNA and enzyme structures to achieve catalytically competent conformation. Unlike these well-defined binding steps, catalytic stages are not associated with discernible fluorescence events. Only a single conformational change is detected for the cleavable substrates at times exceeding 10 s. The data obtained provide evidence that several fast sequential conformational changes occur in Fpg after binding to its substrate, converting the protein into a catalytically active conformation.  相似文献   

20.
A structural and kinetic characterization of a fragment of the HoLaMa DNA polymerase is presented here. In particular, a truncated form of HoLaMa, devoid of a consistent portion of the thumb domain, was isolated and purified. This HoLaMa fragment, denoted as ΔNter-HoLaMa, is surprisingly competent in catalyzing DNA extension, albeit featuring a kcat one order of magnitude lower than the corresponding kinetic constant of its full-length counterpart. The conformational rearrangements, if any, of enzyme tryptophanes triggered by DNA binding or extension were assayed under pre-steady-state conditions. The fluorescence of HoLaMa tryptophanes was found to significantly change upon DNA binding and extension. On the contrary, no fluorescence changes of ΔNter-HoLaMa tryptophanes were detected under the same conditions, suggesting that major conformational transitions are not required for DNA binding or extension by this truncated DNA polymerase.  相似文献   

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