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A novel type of uracil-DNA glycosylase mediating repair of hydrolytic DNA damage in the extremely thermophilic eubacterium Thermus thermophilus
Authors:Starkuviene Vytaute  Fritz Hans-Joachim
Institution:Abteilung Molekulare Genetik und Pr?parative Molekularbiologie and G?ttingen Genomics Laboratory, Institut für Mikrobiologie und Genetik, Georg-August-Universit?t G?ttingen, Grisebachstrasse 8, D-37077 G?ttingen, Germany.
Abstract:Spontaneous hydrolytic deamination of DNA cytosine and 5-methyl-cytosine residues is an abundant source of C/G (5-meC/G) to T/A transition mutations. As a result of this pressure, at least six different families of enzymes have evolved that initiate repair at U/G (T/G) mispairs, the relevant pre-mutagenic intermediates. The necessarily higher rate of the process at elevated temperatures must pose a correspondingly accentuated problem to contemporary thermophilic organisms and may have been a serious bottleneck in early evolution when life passed through a phase of very high ambient temperatures. Here we show that Thermus thermophilus, an aerobic, Gram-negative eubacterium thriving at up to 85°C, harbors two uracil-DNA glycosylases (UDGs), termed TTUDGA and TTUDGB. According to both amino acid sequence and enzymatic properties, TTUDGA clearly belongs to the family of ‘thermostable UDGs’. TTUDGB shares with TTUDGA 23% sequence identity, but differs from it in profound functional aspects. TTUDGB, unlike TTUDGA, does not act upon uracil residues in the context of single-stranded DNA whereas both enzymes process various double-stranded substrates, albeit with different preferences. TTUDGB shows a number of sequence features characteristic of the UDG superfamily, but surprisingly lacks any polar residue within its so-called motif 1 (GLAPG-X10-F). This finding is in conflict with a previously assumed crucial catalytic role of motif 1 in water activation and supports a more recently suggested alternative of a dissociative (‘SN1-type’) reaction mechanism. Together, the characteristics of TTUDGB and its homologs in other organisms define a novel family of UDG repair enzymes.
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