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An ancient anion‐binding structural module in RNA and DNA helicases
Authors:E. James Milner‐White  Zbigniew Pietras  Ben F. Luisi
Affiliation:1. Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, United Kingdom;2. Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1GA, United Kingdom
Abstract:RNA and DNA helicases manipulate or translocate along single strands of nucleic acids by grasping them using a conserved structural motif. We have examined the available crystal structures of helicases of the two principal superfamilies, SF1 and SF2, and observed that the most conserved interactions with the nucleic acid occur between the phosphosugar backbone of a trinucleotide and the three strand‐helix loops within a (β‐strand/α‐helix)3 structural module. At the first and third loops is a conserved hydrogen‐bonded feature called a thr‐motif, often seen at α‐helical N‐termini, with the threonine as the N‐cap residue. These loops can be aligned with few insertions or deletions, and their main chain atoms are structurally congruent amongst the family members and between the two modules found as tandem pairs in all SF1 and SF2 proteins. The other highly conserved interactions with nucleic acid involve mainchain NH groups, often at the helical N‐termini, interacting with phosphate groups. We comment on how the sequence motifs that are commonly used to identify helicases map to locations on the module and discuss the implications of the conserved orientation of nucleic acid on the surface of the module for directional stepping along DNA or RNA. Proteins 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Keywords:RNA helicase  DNA helicase  threonine  serine  protein–  nucleic acid interactions
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