6wh2
From Proteopedia
Structure of the C-terminal BRCT domain of human XRCC1
Structural highlights
FunctionXRCC1_HUMAN Corrects defective DNA strand-break repair and sister chromatid exchange following treatment with ionizing radiation and alkylating agents. Publication Abstract from PubMedThe XRCC1-DNA ligase IIIalpha complex (XL) is critical for DNA single-strand break repair, a key target for PARP inhibitors in cancer cells deficient in homologous recombination. Here, we combined biophysical approaches to gain insights into the shape and conformational flexibility of the XL as well as XRCC1 and DNA ligase IIIalpha (LigIIIalpha) alone. Structurally-guided mutational analyses based on the crystal structure of the human BRCT-BRCT heterodimer identified the network of salt bridges that together with the N-terminal extension of the XRCC1 C-terminal BRCT domain constitute the XL molecular interface. Coupling size exclusion chromatography with small angle X-ray scattering and multiangle light scattering (SEC-SAXS-MALS), we determined that the XL is more compact than either XRCC1 or LigIIIalpha, both of which form transient homodimers and are highly disordered. The reduced disorder and flexibility allowed us to build models of XL particles visualized by negative stain electron microscopy that predict close spatial organization between the LigIIIalpha catalytic core and both BRCT domains of XRCC1. Together our results identify an atypical BRCT-BRCT interaction as the stable nucleating core of the XL that links the flexible nick sensing and catalytic domains of LigIIIalpha to other protein partners of the flexible XRCC1 scaffold. An atypical BRCT-BRCT interaction with the XRCC1 scaffold protein compacts human DNA Ligase IIIalpha within a flexible DNA repair complex.,Hammel M, Rashid I, Sverzhinsky A, Pourfarjam Y, Tsai MS, Ellenberger T, Pascal JM, Kim IK, Tainer JA, Tomkinson AE Nucleic Acids Res. 2020 Dec 16. pii: 6039925. doi: 10.1093/nar/gkaa1188. PMID:33330937[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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