Vibriophage phiVC8 DpoZ

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The structure from Czernecki et al contains two conformations: <scene name='90/909993/Exo_open/2'>thumb-exo open</scene> and <scene name='90/909993/Exo_closed/1'>thumb-exo closed</scene>. These conformations involve movement of the thumb and exonuclease domains. The residues <scene name='90/909993/Lys162/1'>K162</scene> and <scene name='90/909993/Gly276/1'>Gly276</scene> appear to have the largest positional shifts between the two conformations.
The structure from Czernecki et al contains two conformations: <scene name='90/909993/Exo_open/2'>thumb-exo open</scene> and <scene name='90/909993/Exo_closed/1'>thumb-exo closed</scene>. These conformations involve movement of the thumb and exonuclease domains. The residues <scene name='90/909993/Lys162/1'>K162</scene> and <scene name='90/909993/Gly276/1'>Gly276</scene> appear to have the largest positional shifts between the two conformations.
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When aligned with other PolA polymerases, three unique insertions in the polymerase domain are present. The first ranges from the residues <scene name='90/909993/Insertion1/1'>349-353</scene> in the palm subdomain. The second is in helix O in the fingers subdomain from residues 442-448 (scene). The third is between helices O1 and P on the tip of the fingers, from residues 473-491 (scene). The longest of these insertions is very flexible, not being well defined on the electron density map (scene?) and indicating that DNA binding may be necessary for stabilization of that loop. The first and third insertions likely interact with dsDNA, though solving a ternary complex structure is required to confirm this. The second insertion (residues 442-448 (scene)) adds a loop in the helix structure that normally interacts with dNTPs.
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When aligned with other PolA polymerases, three unique insertions in the polymerase domain are present. The first ranges from the residues <scene name='90/909993/Insertion1/2'>349-353</scene> in the palm subdomain. The second is adjacent to <scene name='90/909993/Insertion_2/1'>helix O in the fingers subdomain from residues 442-448</scene>, with this insertion disrupting a part of motif B containing helix O. The third is between helices O1 and P on the tip of the fingers, from <scene name='90/909993/Insertion_3/1'>residues 473-491</scene>. The longest of these insertions (3) is very flexible, not being well defined on the electron density map, indicating that DNA binding may be necessary for stabilization of that loop. The first and third insertions likely interact with dsDNA, though solving a ternary complex structure is required to confirm this. The second insertion (residues 442-448 (scene)) adds a loop in the helix structure that normally interacts with dNTPs.
The exonuclease domain is larger and contains noncanonical alpha helices compared to other members of the PolA family. These helices are referred to as E1 and E2 (scene). This domain also contains an insertion between helices alpha4 and alpha5 (scene) present in other phages such as T7 and implicated in shuttling the 3' end of the DNA primer between the polymerase and exonuclease sites. Some critical residues for catalysis such as a universally conserved HD catalytic dyad (scene) are present in ΦVC8 DpoZ, as these are required for polymerase activity. Some crucial residues are lacking in the structure, which may result in loss or alteration of some proofreading activity of the enzyme. However, the critical arginine residue responsible for stabilizing the gamma phosphate of incoming dNTPs is present at position 440 (scene). The enzyme also includes point mutations present in other DpoZ including L455, F459, and G548 (scene). These residues are present near or in the polymerase domain active site, and residues corresponding to these exist in PolA polymerases that do not incorporate Z. L455 and G548 (scene) do not appear in any known Wayne-like DpoZ subfamily structures, though the F459 (scene) residue is present. F459 is normally a tyrosine residue that acts as a steric gate for distinguishing dNTPs from NTPs(6), though this function may be conserved as was shown for T7 phage with a Tyr-->Phe mutation. In any case, these individual changes from other polymerases may help account for specificity in Z nucleobase recognition, as it is likely that it is not a single mutation in the enzyme that accounts for the selectivity.
The exonuclease domain is larger and contains noncanonical alpha helices compared to other members of the PolA family. These helices are referred to as E1 and E2 (scene). This domain also contains an insertion between helices alpha4 and alpha5 (scene) present in other phages such as T7 and implicated in shuttling the 3' end of the DNA primer between the polymerase and exonuclease sites. Some critical residues for catalysis such as a universally conserved HD catalytic dyad (scene) are present in ΦVC8 DpoZ, as these are required for polymerase activity. Some crucial residues are lacking in the structure, which may result in loss or alteration of some proofreading activity of the enzyme. However, the critical arginine residue responsible for stabilizing the gamma phosphate of incoming dNTPs is present at position 440 (scene). The enzyme also includes point mutations present in other DpoZ including L455, F459, and G548 (scene). These residues are present near or in the polymerase domain active site, and residues corresponding to these exist in PolA polymerases that do not incorporate Z. L455 and G548 (scene) do not appear in any known Wayne-like DpoZ subfamily structures, though the F459 (scene) residue is present. F459 is normally a tyrosine residue that acts as a steric gate for distinguishing dNTPs from NTPs(6), though this function may be conserved as was shown for T7 phage with a Tyr-->Phe mutation. In any case, these individual changes from other polymerases may help account for specificity in Z nucleobase recognition, as it is likely that it is not a single mutation in the enzyme that accounts for the selectivity.

Revision as of 17:28, 30 April 2022

Vibriophage ΦVC8 DNA polymerase DpoZ deposited under the PDB ID 7pbk.

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References

1. Czernecki, D., Hu, H., Romoli, F., & Delarue, M. (2021). Structural dynamics and determinants of 2-aminoadenine specificity in DNA polymerase DpoZ of vibriophage VC8. Nucleic Acids Research, 49(20), 11974–11985. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkab955

2. Zhou, Y., Xu, X., Wei, Y., Cheng, Y., Guo, Y., Khudyakov, I., Liu, F., He, P., Song, Z., Li, Z., Gao, Y., Ang, E. L., Zhao, H., Zhang, Y., & Zhao, S. (2021). A widespread pathway for substitution of adenine by diaminopurine in phage genomes. Science, 372(6541), 512–516. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abe4882

3. Weigele, P., & Raleigh, E. A. (2016). Biosynthesis and Function of Modified Bases in Bacteria and Their Viruses. Chemical Reviews, 116(20), 12655–12687. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemrev.6b00114

4. Miller, B.R., Beese,L.S., Parish, C.A. and Wu,E.Y. (2015) The closing mechanism of DNA polymerase I at atomic resolution. Structure, 23,1609–1620. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.str.2015.06.016

5. Juarez-Quintero, V., Peralta-Castro, A., Benítez Cardoza, C. G., Ellenberger, T. & Brieba, L. G. (2021). Structure of an open conformation of T7 DNA polymerase reveals novel structural features regulating primer-template stabilization at the polymerization active site. Biochemical Journal, 478, 2665–2679https://doi.org/10.1042/BCJ20200922

6. Tabor, S., & Richardson, C. C. (1995). A single residue in DNA polymerases of the Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I family is critical for distinguishing between deoxy- and dideoxyribonucleotides. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 92(14), 6339–6343. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.92.14.6339

7. Suzuki, M., Baskin, D., Hood, L., & Loeb, L. A. (1996). Random mutagenesis of Thermus aquaticus DNA polymerase I: concordance of immutable sites in vivo with the crystal structure. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 93(18), 9670–9675. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.93.18.9670

8. Samson, C., Legrand,P., Tekpinar,M., Rozenski,J., Abramov,M., Holliger,P., Pinheiro,V.B., Herdewijn, P. and Delarue,M. (2020) Structural studies of HNA substrate specificity in mutants of an archaeal DNA polymerase obtained by directed evolution. Biomolecules, 10, 1647.

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