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==DNA Mismatch Repair by MutH==
==DNA Mismatch Repair by MutH==
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<StructureSection load='2AOQ' size='340' side='right'caption='[[2AOQ]], [[Resolution|resolution]] 2.70&Aring;' scene=''>
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<StructureSection load='2AOR' size='340' side='right'caption='[[2AOR]], [[Resolution|resolution]] 2.70&Aring;' scene=''>
DNA Mismatch Repair (MMR) occurs when a mismatch of DNA bases occurs during DNA replication that is not corrected by the polymerases. This mismatch can be at a single nucleotide or an insertion or deletion of up to 4 bases. An integral protein in MMR is <scene name='92/925551/2x_muth/1'>MutH</scene>. MutH is an endonuclease, which means it is an enzyme that can digest DNA in the middle of the sequence. However, it is a weak endonuclease so it will only cause a single stranded nick upstream or downstream of the damaged daughter strand and not the correct parent strand. This allows it to be re-replicated by DNA polymerases. Homodimers of MutS and MutL bind the mismatched DNA and create a loop that MutH can bind to. In order to maintain the correct sequence and repair the damage without mutations, MutH must be able to differentiate the incorrect daughter strand from the correct parent strand. In bacteria, the freshly replicated DNA is hemimethylated, meaning that the parent strand is methylated and the daughter strand has not yet been methylated by methyltransferases. MutH then nicks the phosphodiester bond 5' of a GATC palindrome on the umethylated daughter strand. The GATC palindrome can be upstream or downstream of the damaged DNA site by up to 1000 nucleotides. This allows the damaged strand to be destroyed by exonucleases and re-replicated by DNA polymerase.
DNA Mismatch Repair (MMR) occurs when a mismatch of DNA bases occurs during DNA replication that is not corrected by the polymerases. This mismatch can be at a single nucleotide or an insertion or deletion of up to 4 bases. An integral protein in MMR is <scene name='92/925551/2x_muth/1'>MutH</scene>. MutH is an endonuclease, which means it is an enzyme that can digest DNA in the middle of the sequence. However, it is a weak endonuclease so it will only cause a single stranded nick upstream or downstream of the damaged daughter strand and not the correct parent strand. This allows it to be re-replicated by DNA polymerases. Homodimers of MutS and MutL bind the mismatched DNA and create a loop that MutH can bind to. In order to maintain the correct sequence and repair the damage without mutations, MutH must be able to differentiate the incorrect daughter strand from the correct parent strand. In bacteria, the freshly replicated DNA is hemimethylated, meaning that the parent strand is methylated and the daughter strand has not yet been methylated by methyltransferases. MutH then nicks the phosphodiester bond 5' of a GATC palindrome on the umethylated daughter strand. The GATC palindrome can be upstream or downstream of the damaged DNA site by up to 1000 nucleotides. This allows the damaged strand to be destroyed by exonucleases and re-replicated by DNA polymerase.

Revision as of 03:56, 11 October 2022

DNA Mismatch Repair by MutH

PDB ID 2AOR

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References

Ban, C., & Yang, W. (1998). Structural basis for MutH activation in E.coli mismatch repair and relationship of MutH to restriction endonucleases. The EMBO journal, 17(5), 1526–1534. https://doi.org/10.1093/emboj/17.5.1526

Lee, J. Y., Chang, J., Joseph, N., Ghirlando, R., Rao, D. N., & Yang, W. (2005). MutH complexed with hemi- and unmethylated DNAs: coupling base recognition and DNA cleavage. Molecular cell, 20(1), 155–166. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molcel.2005.08.019

Voet, D., Voet, J. G., & Pratt, C. W. (2013). Fundamentals of Biochemistry: Life at the molecular level. Wiley.

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