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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11554309

ABSTRACT

Cells have evolved distinct mechanisms for both preventing and removing mutagenic and lethal DNA damage. Structural and biochemical characterization of key enzymes that function in DNA repair pathways are illuminating the biological and chemical mechanisms that govern initial lesion detection, recognition, and excision repair of damaged DNA. These results are beginning to reveal a higher level of DNA repair coordination that ensures the faithful repair of damaged DNA. Enzyme-induced DNA distortions allow for the specific recognition of distinct extrahelical lesions, as well as tight binding to cleaved products, which has implications for the ordered transfer of unstable DNA repair intermediates between enzymes during base excision repair.


Subject(s)
DNA Damage , DNA Glycosylases , DNA Ligases/physiology , DNA Repair , Guanine/analogs & derivatives , Alkylation , Animals , Carbon-Oxygen Lyases/chemistry , Carbon-Oxygen Lyases/physiology , DNA/chemistry , DNA/genetics , DNA Ligases/chemistry , DNA-(Apurinic or Apyrimidinic Site) Lyase , Deoxyribonuclease IV (Phage T4-Induced) , Endodeoxyribonucleases/physiology , Flap Endonucleases , Guanine/metabolism , Humans , Models, Molecular , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/chemistry , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/physiology , Protein Binding , Protein Conformation , Pyrophosphatases/chemistry , Pyrophosphatases/physiology , Uracil-DNA Glycosidase
2.
Mutat Res ; 460(3-4): 211-29, 2000 Aug 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10946230

ABSTRACT

DNA damage occurs unceasingly in all cells. Spontaneous DNA base loss, as well as the removal of damaged DNA bases by specific enzymes targeted to distinct base lesions, creates non-coding and lethal apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites. AP sites are the central intermediate in DNA base excision repair (BER) and must be processed by 5' AP endonucleases. These pivotal enzymes detect, recognize, and cleave the DNA phosphodiester backbone 5' of, AP sites to create a free 3'-OH end for DNA polymerase repair synthesis. In humans, AP sites are processed by APE1, whereas in yeast the primary AP endonuclease is termed APN1, and these enzymes are the major constitutively expressed AP endonucleases in these organisms and are homologous to the Escherichia coli enzymes Exonuclease III (Exo III) and Endonuclease IV (Endo IV), respectively. These enzymes represent both of the conserved 5' AP endonuclease enzyme families that exist in biology. Crystal structures of APE1 and Endo IV, both bound to AP site-containing DNA reveal how abasic sites are recognized and the DNA phosphodiester backbone cleaved by these two structurally unrelated enzymes with distinct chemical mechanisms. Both enzymes orient the AP-DNA via positively charged complementary surfaces and insert loops into the DNA base stack, bending and kinking the DNA to promote flipping of the AP site into a sequestered enzyme pocket that excludes undamaged nucleotides. Each enzyme-DNA complex exhibits distinctly different DNA conformations, which may impact upon the biological functions of each enzyme within BER signal-transduction pathways.


Subject(s)
Apurinic Acid/chemistry , Carbon-Oxygen Lyases/chemistry , DNA Damage , DNA Repair , Escherichia coli Proteins , Polynucleotides/chemistry , Apurinic Acid/metabolism , Binding Sites , Carbon-Oxygen Lyases/physiology , DNA-(Apurinic or Apyrimidinic Site) Lyase , Deoxyribonuclease IV (Phage T4-Induced) , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Exodeoxyribonucleases/chemistry , Exodeoxyribonucleases/physiology , Humans , Models, Molecular , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Polynucleotides/metabolism , Protein Conformation , Protein Folding , Structure-Activity Relationship , Substrate Specificity
3.
EMBO J ; 19(7): 1719-30, 2000 Apr 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10747039

ABSTRACT

Human O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase (AGT), which directly reverses endogenous alkylation at the O(6)-position of guanine, confers resistance to alkylation chemotherapies and is therefore an active anticancer drug target. Crystal structures of active human AGT and its biologically and therapeutically relevant methylated and benzylated product complexes reveal an unexpected zinc-stabilized helical bridge joining a two-domain alpha/beta structure. An asparagine hinge couples the active site motif to a helix-turn-helix (HTH) motif implicated in DNA binding. The reactive cysteine environment, its position within a groove adjacent to the alkyl-binding cavity and mutational analyses characterize DNA-damage recognition and inhibitor specificity, support a structure-based dealkylation mechanism and suggest a molecular basis for destabilization of the alkylated protein. These results support damaged nucleotide flipping facilitated by an arginine finger within the HTH motif to stabilize the extrahelical O(6)-alkylguanine without the protein conformational change originally proposed from the empty Ada structure. Cysteine alkylation sterically shifts the HTH recognition helix to evidently mechanistically couple release of repaired DNA to an opening of the protein fold to promote the biological turnover of the alkylated protein.


Subject(s)
O(6)-Methylguanine-DNA Methyltransferase/chemistry , O(6)-Methylguanine-DNA Methyltransferase/metabolism , Alkylation , Amino Acid Sequence , Base Sequence , Binding Sites/genetics , Catalytic Domain/genetics , Crystallography, X-Ray , DNA/genetics , DNA/metabolism , Enzyme Activation , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Helix-Loop-Helix Motifs , Humans , In Vitro Techniques , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , O(6)-Methylguanine-DNA Methyltransferase/genetics , Protein Conformation , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Substrate Specificity , Zinc/chemistry
4.
Nature ; 403(6768): 451-6, 2000 Jan 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10667800

ABSTRACT

Non-coding apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites in DNA are continually created in cells both spontaneously and by damage-specific DNA glycosylases. The biologically critical human base excision repair enzyme APE1 cleaves the DNA sugar-phosphate backbone at a position 5' of AP sites to prime DNA repair synthesis. Here we report three co-crystal structures of human APE1 bound to abasic DNA which show that APE1 uses a rigid, pre-formed, positively charged surface to kink the DNA helix and engulf the AP-DNA strand. APE1 inserts loops into both the DNA major and minor grooves and binds a flipped-out AP site in a pocket that excludes DNA bases and racemized beta-anomer AP sites. Both the APE1 active-site geometry and a complex with cleaved AP-DNA and Mn2+ support a testable structure-based catalytic mechanism. Alanine substitutions of the residues that penetrate the DNA helix unexpectedly show that human APE1 is structurally optimized to retain the cleaved DNA product. These structural and mutational results show how APE1 probably displaces bound glycosylases and retains the nicked DNA product, suggesting that APE1 acts in vivo to coordinate the orderly transfer of unstable DNA damage intermediates between the excision and synthesis steps of DNA repair.


Subject(s)
Aminopeptidases/chemistry , DNA Repair , DNA/chemistry , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins , Aminopeptidases/genetics , Aminopeptidases/metabolism , Crystallography, X-Ray , DNA/metabolism , Humans , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Mutation , Protein Binding , Protein Conformation , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Substrate Specificity
5.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10410797

ABSTRACT

Recent structural and biochemical studies have begun to illuminate how cells solve the problems of recognizing and removing damaged DNA bases. Bases damaged by environmental, chemical, or enzymatic mechanisms must be efficiently found within a large excess of undamaged DNA. Structural studies suggest that a rapid damage-scanning mechanism probes for both conformational deviations and local deformability of the DNA base stack. At susceptible lesions, enzyme-induced conformational changes lead to direct interactions with specific damaged bases. The diverse array of damaged DNA bases are processed through a two-stage pathway in which damage-specific enzymes recognize and remove the base lesion, creating a common abasic site intermediate that is processed by damage-general repair enzymes to restore the correct DNA sequence.


Subject(s)
DNA Damage , DNA Glycosylases , DNA Repair , DNA/genetics , DNA/metabolism , Animals , Base Pair Mismatch , DNA/chemistry , Humans , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/chemistry , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/metabolism , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Protein Conformation , Ultraviolet Rays , Uracil-DNA Glycosidase
6.
J Mol Biol ; 287(2): 331-46, 1999 Mar 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10080896

ABSTRACT

Uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG), which is a critical enzyme in DNA base-excision repair that recognizes and removes uracil from DNA, is specifically and irreversably inhibited by the thermostable uracil-DNA glycosylase inhibitor protein (Ugi). A paradox for the highly specific Ugi inhibition of UDG is how Ugi can successfully mimic DNA backbone interactions for UDG without resulting in significant cross-reactivity with numerous other enzymes that possess DNA backbone binding affinity. High-resolution X-ray crystal structures of Ugi both free and in complex with wild-type and the functionally defective His187Asp mutant Escherichia coli UDGs reveal the detailed molecular basis for duplex DNA backbone mimicry by Ugi. The overall shape and charge distribution of Ugi most closely resembles a midpoint in a trajectory between B-form DNA and the kinked DNA observed in UDG:DNA product complexes. Thus, Ugi targets the mechanism of uracil flipping by UDG and appears to be a transition-state mimic for UDG-flipping of uracil nucleotides from DNA. Essentially all the exquisite shape, electrostatic and hydrophobic complementarity for the high-affinity UDG-Ugi interaction is pre-existing, except for a key flip of the Ugi Gln19 carbonyl group and Glu20 side-chain, which is triggered by the formation of the complex. Conformational changes between unbound Ugi and Ugi complexed with UDG involve the beta-zipper structural motif, which we have named for the reversible pairing observed between intramolecular beta-strands. A similar beta-zipper is observed in the conversion between the open and closed forms of UDG. The combination of extremely high levels of pre-existing structural complementarity to DNA binding features specific to UDG with key local conformational changes in Ugi resolves the UDG-Ugi paradox and suggests a potentially general structural solution to the formation of very high affinity DNA enzyme-inhibitor complexes that avoid cross- reactivity.


Subject(s)
DNA Glycosylases , Escherichia coli/enzymology , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/chemistry , Viral Proteins/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Binding Sites , Crystallography, X-Ray , DNA-Binding Proteins/chemistry , Enzyme Inhibitors/chemistry , Hydrogen Bonding , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/genetics , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Protein Binding , Protein Conformation , Protein Structure, Secondary , Sequence Alignment , Uracil-DNA Glycosidase
7.
Curr Opin Struct Biol ; 9(1): 37-47, 1999 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10047578

ABSTRACT

Recent breakthroughs integrate individual DNA repair enzyme structures, biochemistry and biology to outline the structural cell biology of the DNA base excision repair pathways that are essential to genome integrity. Thus, we are starting to envision how the actions, movements, steps, partners and timing of DNA repair enzymes, which together define their molecular choreography, are elegantly controlled by both the nature of the DNA damage and the structural chemistry of the participating enzymes and the DNA double helix.


Subject(s)
DNA Glycosylases , DNA Ligases/chemistry , DNA Ligases/metabolism , DNA Repair/physiology , Thymine DNA Glycosylase , Base Pair Mismatch , Carbon-Oxygen Lyases/chemistry , Carbon-Oxygen Lyases/metabolism , DNA Polymerase beta/chemistry , DNA Polymerase beta/metabolism , DNA-(Apurinic or Apyrimidinic Site) Lyase , Deoxyribonuclease IV (Phage T4-Induced) , Endodeoxyribonucleases/chemistry , Endodeoxyribonucleases/metabolism , Flap Endonucleases , Humans , Models, Molecular , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/chemistry , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/metabolism , Protein Conformation , Uracil-DNA Glycosidase
8.
Nat Struct Biol ; 5(12): 1058-64, 1998 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9846876

ABSTRACT

The DNA glycosylase MutY, which is a member of the Helix-hairpin-Helix (HhH) DNA glycosylase superfamily, excises adenine from mispairs with 8-oxoguanine and guanine. High-resolution crystal structures of the MutY catalytic core (cMutY), the complex with bound adenine, and designed mutants reveal the basis for adenine specificity and glycosyl bond cleavage chemistry. The two cMutY helical domains form a positively-charged groove with the adenine-specific pocket at their interface. The Watson-Crick hydrogen bond partners of the bound adenine are substituted by protein atoms, confirming a nucleotide flipping mechanism, and supporting a specific DNA binding orientation by MutY and structurally related DNA glycosylases.


Subject(s)
Adenine/metabolism , DNA Repair , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Base Pair Mismatch , Catalytic Domain/genetics , Crystallography, X-Ray , DNA/metabolism , DNA Glycosylases , Guanine/analogs & derivatives , Guanine/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/chemistry , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/genetics , Protein Conformation , Substrate Specificity
9.
Cell ; 95(1): 135-46, 1998 Oct 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9778254

ABSTRACT

Flap endonuclease (FEN-1) removes 5' overhanging flaps in DNA repair and processes the 5' ends of Okazaki fragments in lagging strand DNA synthesis. The crystal structure of Pyrococcus furiosus FEN-1, active-site metal ions, and mutational information indicate interactions for the single- and double-stranded portions of the flap DNA substrate and identify an unusual DNA-binding motif. The enzyme's active-site structure suggests that DNA binding induces FEN-1 to clamp onto the cleavage junction to form the productive complex. The conserved FEN-1 C terminus binds proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and positions FEN-1 to act primarily as an exonuclease in DNA replication, in contrast to its endonuclease activity in DNA repair. FEN-1 mutations altering PCNA binding should reduce activity during replication, likely causing DNA repeat expansions as seen in some cancers and genetic diseases.


Subject(s)
DNA Repair , DNA Replication , Endodeoxyribonucleases/chemistry , Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Binding Sites , Catalysis , DNA/metabolism , Endodeoxyribonucleases/metabolism , Endonucleases/chemistry , Endonucleases/metabolism , Exodeoxyribonuclease V , Exodeoxyribonucleases/chemistry , Exonucleases/chemistry , Exonucleases/metabolism , Flap Endonucleases , Ions , Magnesium , Molecular Sequence Data , Protein Conformation , Pyrococcus furiosus/enzymology
10.
EMBO J ; 17(17): 5214-26, 1998 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9724657

ABSTRACT

Three high-resolution crystal structures of DNA complexes with wild-type and mutant human uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG), coupled kinetic characterizations and comparisons with the refined unbound UDG structure help resolve fundamental issues in the initiation of DNA base excision repair (BER): damage detection, nucleotide flipping versus extrahelical nucleotide capture, avoidance of apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site toxicity and coupling of damage-specific and damage-general BER steps. Structural and kinetic results suggest that UDG binds, kinks and compresses the DNA backbone with a 'Ser-Pro pinch' and scans the minor groove for damage. Concerted shifts in UDG simultaneously form the catalytically competent active site and induce further compression and kinking of the double-stranded DNA backbone only at uracil and AP sites, where these nucleotides can flip at the phosphate-sugar junction into a complementary specificity pocket. Unexpectedly, UDG binds to AP sites more tightly and more rapidly than to uracil-containing DNA, and thus may protect cells sterically from AP site toxicity. Furthermore, AP-endonuclease, which catalyzes the first damage-general step of BER, enhances UDG activity, most likely by inducing UDG release via shared minor groove contacts and flipped AP site binding. Thus, AP site binding may couple damage-specific and damage-general steps of BER without requiring direct protein-protein interactions.


Subject(s)
DNA Glycosylases , DNA Repair , DNA/chemistry , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/chemistry , Oligodeoxyribonucleotides/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Binding Sites , Crystallography, X-Ray , DNA/metabolism , Humans , Models, Genetic , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/genetics , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/metabolism , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Oligodeoxyribonucleotides/metabolism , Peptide Fragments/metabolism , Protein Binding , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Uracil-DNA Glycosidase
11.
EMBO J ; 16(21): 6548-58, 1997 Nov 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9351835

ABSTRACT

The structure of the major human apurinic/ apyrimidinic endonuclease (HAP1) has been solved at 2.2 A resolution. The enzyme consists of two symmetrically related domains of similar topology and has significant structural similarity to both bovine DNase I and its Escherichia coli homologue exonuclease III (EXOIII). A structural comparison of these enzymes reveals three loop regions specific to HAP1 and EXOIII. These loop regions apparently act in DNA abasic site (AP) recognition and cleavage since DNase I, which lacks these loops, correspondingly lacks AP site specificity. The HAP1 structure furthermore suggests a mechanism for AP site binding which involves the recognition of the deoxyribose moiety in an extrahelical conformation, rather than a 'flipped-out' base opposite the AP site.


Subject(s)
Carbon-Oxygen Lyases , DNA-(Apurinic or Apyrimidinic Site) Lyase , Endonucleases/chemistry , Nuclear Proteins/chemistry , Protein Conformation , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Binding Sites , Cattle , Crystallography, X-Ray , DNA/metabolism , DNA Repair , Deoxyribonuclease I/chemistry , Escherichia coli/chemistry , Exodeoxyribonucleases/chemistry , Humans , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Oxidation-Reduction , Protein Binding , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/chemistry , Sequence Alignment , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
12.
Structure ; 5(12): 1543-50, 1997 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9438868

ABSTRACT

DNA base excision repair (BER) is essential to preserving the integrity of the genome. Recent crystallographic studies of representatives from each enzyme class required for BER reveal clues to the structural basis of an entire DNA repair pathway.


Subject(s)
DNA Repair , Enzymes/chemistry , Enzymes/genetics , Animals , Base Composition , Crystallography, X-Ray , Enzymes/metabolism , Humans , Models, Molecular , Multigene Family , Structure-Activity Relationship
13.
Nature ; 384(6604): 87-92, 1996 Nov 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8900285

ABSTRACT

Any uracil bases in DNA, a result of either misincorporation or deamination of cytosine, are removed by uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG), one of the most efficient and specific of the base-excision DNA-repair enzymes. Crystal structures of human and viral UDGs complexed with free uracil have indicated that the enzyme binds an extrahelical uracil. Such binding of undamaged extrahelical bases has been seen in the structures of two bacterial methyltransferases and bacteriophage T4 endonuclease V. Here we characterize the DNA binding and kinetics of several engineered human UDG mutants and present the crystal structure of one of these, which to our knowledge represents the first structure of any eukaryotic DNA repair enzyme in complex with its damaged, target DNA. Electrostatic orientation along the UDG active site, insertion of an amino acid (residue 272) into the DNA through the minor groove, and compression of the DNA backbone flanking the uracil all result in the flipping-out of the damaged base from the DNA major groove, allowing specific recognition of its phosphate, deoxyribose and uracil moieties. Our structure thus provides a view of a productive complex specific for cleavage of uracil from DNA and also reveals the basis for the enzyme-assisted nucleotide flipping by this critical DNA-repair enzyme.


Subject(s)
DNA Glycosylases , DNA Repair , DNA/metabolism , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/metabolism , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Protein Conformation , Uracil/metabolism , Crystallography, X-Ray , DNA/chemistry , DNA/genetics , Electrochemistry , Humans , Kinetics , Models, Molecular , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/chemistry , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/genetics , Protein Binding , Structure-Activity Relationship , Uracil/chemistry , Uracil-DNA Glycosidase
14.
Structure ; 4(9): 1077-92, 1996 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8805593

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The essential enzyme dUTP pyrophosphatase (dUTPase) is exquisitely specific for dUTP and is critical for the fidelity of DNA replication and repair. dUTPase hydrolyzes dUTP to dUMP and pyrophosphate, simultaneously reducing dUTP levels and providing the dUMP for dTTP biosynthesis. A high cellular dTTP: dUTP ratio is essential to avoid uracil incorporation into DNA, which would lead to strand breaks and cell death. We report the first detailed atomic-resolution structure of a eukaryotic dUTPase, human dUTPase, and complexes with the uracil-containing deoxyribonucleotides, dUMP, dUDP and dUTP. RESULTS: The crystal structure reveals that each subunit of the dUTPase trimer folds into an eight-stranded jelly-roll beta barrel, with the C-terminal beta strands interchanged among the subunits. The structure is similar to that of the E. coli enzyme, despite low sequence homology between the two enzymes. The nucleotide complexes reveal a simple and elegant way for a beta hairpin to recognize specific nucleic acids: uracil is inserted into a distorted antiparallel beta hairpin and hydrogen bonds entirely to main-chain atoms. This interaction mimics DNA base pairing, selecting uracil over cytosine and sterically precluding thymine and ribose binding. Residues from the second subunit interact with the phosphate groups and a glycine-rich C-terminal tail of the third subunit caps the substrate-bound active site, causing total complementary enclosure of substrate. To our knowledge, this is the first documented instance of all three subunits of a trimeric enzyme supplying residues that are critical to enzyme function and catalysis. CONCLUSIONS: The dUTPase nucleotide-binding sites incorporate some features of other nucleotide-binding proteins and protein kinases, but seem distinct in sequence and architecture. The novel nucleic acid base recognition motif appears ancient; higher order structures, such as the ribosome, may have evolved from a motif of this kind. These uracil-beta-hairpin interactions are an obvious way for peptides to become early coenzymes in an RNA world, providing a plausible link to the protein-DNA world. Within the beta hairpin, there is a tyrosine corner motif that normally specifies beta-arch connections; this tyrosine motif was apparently recruited to discriminate against ribonucleotides, more recently than the evolution of the beta hairpin itself.


Subject(s)
Pyrophosphatases/metabolism , Uracil/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Binding Sites , Escherichia coli/genetics , Humans , Hydrolysis , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Protein Conformation , Pyrophosphatases/chemistry , Pyrophosphatases/genetics
15.
EMBO J ; 15(13): 3442-7, 1996 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8670846

ABSTRACT

Uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG) protects the genome by removing mutagenic uracil residues resulting from deamination of cytosine. Uracil binds in a rigid pocket at the base of the DNA-binding groove of human UDG and the specificity for uracil over the structurally related DNA bases thymine and cytosine is conferred by shape complementarity, as well as by main chain and Asn204 side chain hydrogen bonds. Here we show that replacement of Asn204 by Asp or Tyr147 by Ala, Cys or Ser results in enzymes that have cytosine-DNA glycosylase (CDG) activity or thymine-DNA glycosylase (TDG) activity, respectively. CDG and the TDG all retain some UDG activity. CDG and TDG have kcat values in the same range as typical multisubstrate-DNA glycosylases, that is at least three orders of magnitude lower than that of the highly selective and efficient wild-type UDG. Expression of CDG or TDG in Escherichia coli causes 4- to 100-fold increases in the yield of rifampicin-resistant mutants. Thus, single amino acid substitutions in UDG result in less selective DNA glycosylases that release normal pyrimidines and confer a mutator phenotype upon the cell. Three of the four new pyrimidine-DNA glycosylases resulted from single nucleotide substitutions, events that may also happen in vivo.


Subject(s)
Cytosine , DNA Glycosylases , DNA/genetics , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/metabolism , Thymine , Binding Sites , Escherichia coli/cytology , Humans , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Mutagens/metabolism , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/genetics , Uracil-DNA Glycosidase
16.
Cell ; 82(5): 701-8, 1995 Sep 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7671300

ABSTRACT

Uracil-DNA glycosylase inhibitor (Ugi) is a B. subtilis bacteriophage protein that protects the uracil-containing phage DNA by irreversibly inhibiting the key DNA repair enzyme uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG). The 1.9 A crystal structure of Ugi complexed to human UDG reveals that the Ugi structure, consisting of a twisted five-stranded antiparallel beta sheet and two alpha helices, binds by inserting a beta strand into the conserved DNA-binding groove of the enzyme without contacting the uracil specificity pocket. The resulting interface, which buries over 1200 A2 on Ugi and involves the entire beta sheet and an alpha helix, is polar and contains 22 water molecules. Ugi binds the sequence-conserved DNA-binding groove of UDG via shape and electrostatic complementarity, specific charged hydrogen bonds, and hydrophobic packing enveloping Leu-272 from a protruding UDG loop. The apparent mimicry by Ugi of DNA interactions with UDG provides both a structural mechanism for UDG binding to DNA, including the enzyme-assisted expulsion of uracil from the DNA helix, and a crystallographic basis for the design of inhibitors with scientific and therapeutic applications.


Subject(s)
DNA Glycosylases , DNA Repair/physiology , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/chemistry , Viral Proteins/metabolism , Binding Sites/genetics , Crystallography , DNA/metabolism , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/antagonists & inhibitors , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/ultrastructure , Protein Binding/physiology , Protein Conformation , Uracil/metabolism , Uracil-DNA Glycosidase , Viral Proteins/ultrastructure
17.
Nat Struct Biol ; 2(7): 561-8, 1995 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7664124

ABSTRACT

All organisms express dedicated repair enzymes for counteracting the cytotoxic and mutagenic potential of apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) lesions, which would otherwise pose a serious threat to genome integrity. We present the predicted three-dimensional structure of the major human AP site-specific DNA repair endonuclease, HAP1, and show that an aspartate/histidine pair, in conjunction with a metal ion-coordinating glutamate residue, are critical for catalyzing the multiple repair activities of HAP1. We suggest that this catalytic mechanism is conserved in certain reverse transcriptases, but is distinct from the two metal ion-mediated mechanism defined for other hydrolytic nucleases.


Subject(s)
Carbon-Oxygen Lyases , DNA Repair , DNA-(Apurinic or Apyrimidinic Site) Lyase , Nuclear Proteins/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Base Sequence , Binding Sites , Catalysis , Crystallography, X-Ray , DNA Primers/chemistry , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Exodeoxyribonucleases/chemistry , Exodeoxyribonucleases/ultrastructure , Humans , Metalloproteins/chemistry , Metalloproteins/ultrastructure , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Nuclear Proteins/ultrastructure , Sequence Alignment , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Structure-Activity Relationship , Substrate Specificity
18.
Nature ; 374(6520): 381-6, 1995 Mar 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7885481

ABSTRACT

The repair of DNA requires the removal of abasic sites, which are constantly generated in vivo both spontaneously and by enzymatic removal of uracil, and of bases damaged by active oxygen species, alkylating agents and ionizing radiation. The major apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) DNA-repair endonuclease in Escherichia coli is the multifunctional enzyme exonuclease III, which also exhibits 3'-repair diesterase, 3'-->5' exonuclease, 3'-phosphomonoesterase and ribonuclease activities. We report here the 1.7 A resolution crystal structure of exonuclease III which reveals a 2-fold symmetric, four-layered alpha beta fold with similarities to both deoxyribonuclease I and RNase H. In the ternary complex determined at 2.6 A resolution, Mn2+ and dCMP bind to exonuclease III at one end of the alpha beta-sandwich, in a region dominated by positive electrostatic potential. Residues conserved among AP endonucleases from bacteria to man cluster within this active site and appear to participate in phosphate-bond cleavage at AP sites through a nucleophilic attack facilitated by a single bound metal ion.


Subject(s)
DNA Repair/physiology , Exodeoxyribonucleases/chemistry , Exodeoxyribonucleases/physiology , Amino Acid Sequence , Computer Graphics , Crystallography, X-Ray , Deoxycytidine Monophosphate/chemistry , Deoxyribonuclease I/chemistry , Electrochemistry , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Humans , Manganese/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Protein Conformation , Protein Structure, Secondary , Ribonuclease H/chemistry , Structure-Activity Relationship
19.
Cell ; 80(6): 869-78, 1995 Mar 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7697717

ABSTRACT

Crystal structures of the DNA repair enzyme human uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG), combined with mutational analysis, reveal the structural basis for the specificity of the enzyme. Within the classic alpha/beta fold of UDG, sequence-conserved residues form a positively charged, active-site groove the width of duplex DNA, at the C-terminal edge of the central four-stranded parallel beta sheet. In the UDG-6-aminouracil complex, uracil binds at the base of the groove within a rigid preformed pocket that confers selectivity for uracil over other bases by shape complementary and by main chain and Asn-204 side chain hydrogen bonds. Main chain nitrogen atoms are positioned to stabilize the oxyanion intermediate generated by His-268 acting via nucleophilic attack or general base mechanisms. Specific binding of uracil flipped out from a DNA duplex provides a structural mechanism for damaged base recognition.


Subject(s)
DNA Glycosylases , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/chemistry , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/metabolism , Protein Conformation , Protein Folding , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Asparagine , Binding Sites , Catalysis , Cloning, Molecular , Crystallography, X-Ray/methods , DNA Damage , DNA Mutational Analysis , DNA Repair , Escherichia coli , Histidine , Humans , Hydrogen Bonding , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/biosynthesis , Protein Biosynthesis , Protein Structure, Secondary , Rabbits , Recombinant Proteins/biosynthesis , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Reticulocytes/metabolism , Substrate Specificity , Uracil-DNA Glycosidase
20.
Ann N Y Acad Sci ; 726: 223-34; discussion 234-5, 1994 Jul 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8092679

ABSTRACT

The three-dimensional structure of exonuclease III, the major AP DNA repair endonuclease of Escherichia coli, has been determined using x-ray crystallographic methods at 2.7 A resolution. The atomic model was fit to an electron density map calculated with phases obtained from three isomorphous heavy atom derivatives. The overall chain fold of exonuclease III is that of a compact alpha,beta-protein of dimensions 55 by 50 by 45 A. The pair of extended beta-pleated sheets pack against each other in an approximately parallel fashion to form the hydrophobic core of a four-layered sandwich structure. These beta sheets are flanked by four alpha-helices that form the outer two layers of the fold. The individual strands of the beta-sheets are in a mostly antiparallel configuration and are linked by extensive loop regions that connect adjoining strands. The structure contains internal symmetry with the two extended beta-sheets and four alpha-helices related by a pseudo-twofold axis running approximately down the center of the two sheets. This internal symmetry is not mirrored in the structure of the loop regions, nor is it detectable within the amino acid sequence. There is a "groove" between the beta-sheets at one end of the molecule that is bordered by several of the exposed loop regions and may be significant for DNA binding.


Subject(s)
DNA Repair , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Exodeoxyribonucleases/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Crystallography, X-Ray , Exodeoxyribonucleases/metabolism , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , Protein Conformation , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Structure-Activity Relationship
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