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Steady-state,Pre-steady-state,and Single-turnover Kinetic Measurement for DNA Glycosylase Activity
Authors:Akira Sassa  William A. Beard  David D. Shock  Samuel H. Wilson
Affiliation:1.Laboratory of Structural Biology, NIEHS, National Institutes of Health
Abstract:Human 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase (OGG1) excises the mutagenic oxidative DNA lesion 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (8-oxoG) from DNA. Kinetic characterization of OGG1 is undertaken to measure the rates of 8-oxoG excision and product release. When the OGG1 concentration is lower than substrate DNA, time courses of product formation are biphasic; a rapid exponential phase (i.e. burst) of product formation is followed by a linear steady-state phase. The initial burst of product formation corresponds to the concentration of enzyme properly engaged on the substrate, and the burst amplitude depends on the concentration of enzyme. The first-order rate constant of the burst corresponds to the intrinsic rate of 8-oxoG excision and the slower steady-state rate measures the rate of product release (product DNA dissociation rate constant, koff). Here, we describe steady-state, pre-steady-state, and single-turnover approaches to isolate and measure specific steps during OGG1 catalytic cycling. A fluorescent labeled lesion-containing oligonucleotide and purified OGG1 are used to facilitate precise kinetic measurements. Since low enzyme concentrations are used to make steady-state measurements, manual mixing of reagents and quenching of the reaction can be performed to ascertain the steady-state rate (koff). Additionally, extrapolation of the steady-state rate to a point on the ordinate at zero time indicates that a burst of product formation occurred during the first turnover (i.e. y-intercept is positive). The first-order rate constant of the exponential burst phase can be measured using a rapid mixing and quenching technique that examines the amount of product formed at short time intervals (<1 sec) before the steady-state phase and corresponds to the rate of 8-oxoG excision (i.e. chemistry). The chemical step can also be measured using a single-turnover approach where catalytic cycling is prevented by saturating substrate DNA with enzyme (E>S). These approaches can measure elementary rate constants that influence the efficiency of removal of a DNA lesion.
Keywords:Chemistry   Issue 78   Biochemistry   Genetics   Molecular Biology   Microbiology   Structural Biology   Chemical Biology   Eukaryota   Amino Acids   Peptides   and Proteins   Nucleic Acids   Nucleotides   and Nucleosides   Enzymes and Coenzymes   Life Sciences (General)   enzymology   rapid quench-flow   active site titration   steady-state   pre-steady-state   single-turnover   kinetics   base excision repair   DNA glycosylase   8-oxo-7   8-dihydroguanine   8-oxoG   sequencing
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