DNA Repair
From Proteopedia
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Once a RecA filament has properly formed and coordinated with ssDNA, a complementary DNA strand must be located. Once a complementary strand is located, the donor <scene name='92/925552/Strand_exchange_2/4'>dsDNA</scene> is wound into the filament complex where the ssDNA and dsDNA form a temperate three-stranded DNA intermediate. Another protein complex, RecBCD, not modeled here, helps resolve the strand exchange process via the formation of a holiday junction. The process of strand exchange is heavily mediated through traditional Watson-Crick base pairing rules, but also by a few residues located within the RecA filament complex. Specifically, Ser 162 on each RecA monomer contacts the phosphate groups near the nucleotide triplet. Additionally, Met 164 increases the spacing between nucleotide triplets by inserting itself into the gap between them. This insertion allows for more strict base pairing stabilization. The final residue implicated in strand exchange appears to have a proofreading mechanism similar to that of DNA polymerases. This residue is <scene name='92/925552/Arg_169/2'>Arg 169</scene> and has been implicated in having base-pairing proofreading abilities by hydrogen bonding with O2 groups in thymidine bases (DT 7-9). This interaction is able to check for proper Watson-Crick base pairing because the bond lengths associated with proper base pairing will allow for proper interactions between Arg 169 and thymidine. Incorrect base pairing will cause thymidine residues to shift position preventing necessary Arg 169 interactions. This functionality has been shown through the mutation of Arg 169 to Histidine resulting in ultraviolet sensitivity and increased mismatched base pairing. However, this proofreading mechanism is not completely understood and this functionality may be a fragment of Arg 169 being able to interact with subsequent thymidine bases used in the crystalized DNA structure. | Once a RecA filament has properly formed and coordinated with ssDNA, a complementary DNA strand must be located. Once a complementary strand is located, the donor <scene name='92/925552/Strand_exchange_2/4'>dsDNA</scene> is wound into the filament complex where the ssDNA and dsDNA form a temperate three-stranded DNA intermediate. Another protein complex, RecBCD, not modeled here, helps resolve the strand exchange process via the formation of a holiday junction. The process of strand exchange is heavily mediated through traditional Watson-Crick base pairing rules, but also by a few residues located within the RecA filament complex. Specifically, Ser 162 on each RecA monomer contacts the phosphate groups near the nucleotide triplet. Additionally, Met 164 increases the spacing between nucleotide triplets by inserting itself into the gap between them. This insertion allows for more strict base pairing stabilization. The final residue implicated in strand exchange appears to have a proofreading mechanism similar to that of DNA polymerases. This residue is <scene name='92/925552/Arg_169/2'>Arg 169</scene> and has been implicated in having base-pairing proofreading abilities by hydrogen bonding with O2 groups in thymidine bases (DT 7-9). This interaction is able to check for proper Watson-Crick base pairing because the bond lengths associated with proper base pairing will allow for proper interactions between Arg 169 and thymidine. Incorrect base pairing will cause thymidine residues to shift position preventing necessary Arg 169 interactions. This functionality has been shown through the mutation of Arg 169 to Histidine resulting in ultraviolet sensitivity and increased mismatched base pairing. However, this proofreading mechanism is not completely understood and this functionality may be a fragment of Arg 169 being able to interact with subsequent thymidine bases used in the crystalized DNA structure. | ||
- | == References == | + | === References === |
1. Chen, Z., Yang, H., & Pavletich, N. P. (2008). Mechanism of homologous recombination from the RecA-ssDNA/dsDNA structures. Nature, 453(7194), 489–494. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature06971 | 1. Chen, Z., Yang, H., & Pavletich, N. P. (2008). Mechanism of homologous recombination from the RecA-ssDNA/dsDNA structures. Nature, 453(7194), 489–494. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature06971 | ||
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Helicases were found in the 1970’s to be DNA-dependent ATPases, meaning that they use ATP hydrolysis to complete its interactions with the different types of nucleic acids it comes into contact with. Helicase II, also called UvrD is the founding member of SF1, one group of six superfamiliies used to identify helicases. SF1 and SF2 members share seven conserved sequence motifs that are involved in ATP Binding <ref name="ATP Binding">PMID:17190599</ref>. UvrD is important in replication, recombination, and repair from ultraviolet damage and mismatched base pairs. Nucleotide excision repair in a normal cell is supposed to correct pyrimidine dimers and other DNA lesions when bases are displaced from their normal positions. UvrD pairs up with the UvrABC endonuclease system, which works to displace the DNA. This is then repaired by PolI and DNA ligase <ref>Voet, D., Voet, J., & Pratt, C. (2015). Fundamentals of Biochemistry: Life at the Molecular Level (4th ed.). Wiley</ref>. | Helicases were found in the 1970’s to be DNA-dependent ATPases, meaning that they use ATP hydrolysis to complete its interactions with the different types of nucleic acids it comes into contact with. Helicase II, also called UvrD is the founding member of SF1, one group of six superfamiliies used to identify helicases. SF1 and SF2 members share seven conserved sequence motifs that are involved in ATP Binding <ref name="ATP Binding">PMID:17190599</ref>. UvrD is important in replication, recombination, and repair from ultraviolet damage and mismatched base pairs. Nucleotide excision repair in a normal cell is supposed to correct pyrimidine dimers and other DNA lesions when bases are displaced from their normal positions. UvrD pairs up with the UvrABC endonuclease system, which works to displace the DNA. This is then repaired by PolI and DNA ligase <ref>Voet, D., Voet, J., & Pratt, C. (2015). Fundamentals of Biochemistry: Life at the Molecular Level (4th ed.). Wiley</ref>. | ||
- | == UvrD Motifs == | + | === UvrD Motifs === |
There are<scene name='92/925553/Uvrd_labeled_motifs_complete/3'> 16 binding motifs</scene> for UvrD, which are conserved in other homologous structures. The homologous structures mentioned are Helicase 2 homologs, which appear in different species. These conserved motifs are important to maintain the function of UvrD. There are 4 domains that these motifs fit into (not shown). The domains are 1A, 1B, 2A, and 2B. Motifs I, Ia, II-VI are involved in ATP binding. Motifs Ia, III, and V are involved in ssDNA binding. Motif IV is reported to be unique in SF1. They found in their paper, seven new sequence motifs conserved among UvrD homologs. They are Ib, Ic, Id, IVb, IVc, Va, and VIa. These conserved residues are involved in DNA binding or domain 1B and 2B interactions <ref name="ATP_Binding" />. | There are<scene name='92/925553/Uvrd_labeled_motifs_complete/3'> 16 binding motifs</scene> for UvrD, which are conserved in other homologous structures. The homologous structures mentioned are Helicase 2 homologs, which appear in different species. These conserved motifs are important to maintain the function of UvrD. There are 4 domains that these motifs fit into (not shown). The domains are 1A, 1B, 2A, and 2B. Motifs I, Ia, II-VI are involved in ATP binding. Motifs Ia, III, and V are involved in ssDNA binding. Motif IV is reported to be unique in SF1. They found in their paper, seven new sequence motifs conserved among UvrD homologs. They are Ib, Ic, Id, IVb, IVc, Va, and VIa. These conserved residues are involved in DNA binding or domain 1B and 2B interactions <ref name="ATP_Binding" />. | ||
- | == Separation Pin == | + | |
+ | === Separation Pin === | ||
The "<scene name='92/925553/Pin_complex/2'>separation pin</scene>" is a part of the 2B domain and is responsible for unwinding the DNA. This uses a 2 step power stroke, one stroke when ATP is bound and another stroke when ADP and P<sub>i</sub> are released. The GIG motif and separation pin work together to unwind the DNA and move it out of the way so UvrD can unwind more DNA. The separation pin also prevents ssDNA once unwound from moving backwards and from reannealing. The proposed method is called the wrench-and-inchworm method, which is when the enzyme binds DNA and attaches at different points and then moves 1 nucleotide per ATP molecule.After an ATP molecule is released, UvrD is then ready to proceed forward to the next nucleotide <ref name="ATP_Binding" />. | The "<scene name='92/925553/Pin_complex/2'>separation pin</scene>" is a part of the 2B domain and is responsible for unwinding the DNA. This uses a 2 step power stroke, one stroke when ATP is bound and another stroke when ADP and P<sub>i</sub> are released. The GIG motif and separation pin work together to unwind the DNA and move it out of the way so UvrD can unwind more DNA. The separation pin also prevents ssDNA once unwound from moving backwards and from reannealing. The proposed method is called the wrench-and-inchworm method, which is when the enzyme binds DNA and attaches at different points and then moves 1 nucleotide per ATP molecule.After an ATP molecule is released, UvrD is then ready to proceed forward to the next nucleotide <ref name="ATP_Binding" />. | ||
- | == UvrD Binding Site for ATP analog (AMPPNP) == | + | |
+ | === UvrD Binding Site for ATP analog (AMPPNP) === | ||
When determining the structure of UvrD, an ATP analog was used. They used an <scene name='92/925553/Atp_analog/6'>ATP analog</scene> so that the last phosphate can't be cleaved. Using the unhydrolyzable analog is beneficial in locking in the structure to observe.The green ion shown in the ATP analog scene is a Mg<sup>2+</sup> ion, which is essential for ATP hydrolysis and interacts with the β and γ phosphates. The magnesium ion is surrounded by essential residues that when altered, have been shown to have reduced ATPase activity <ref name="ATP_Binding" />. | When determining the structure of UvrD, an ATP analog was used. They used an <scene name='92/925553/Atp_analog/6'>ATP analog</scene> so that the last phosphate can't be cleaved. Using the unhydrolyzable analog is beneficial in locking in the structure to observe.The green ion shown in the ATP analog scene is a Mg<sup>2+</sup> ion, which is essential for ATP hydrolysis and interacts with the β and γ phosphates. The magnesium ion is surrounded by essential residues that when altered, have been shown to have reduced ATPase activity <ref name="ATP_Binding" />. | ||
- | == UvrD Binding Site for ATP analog (ADP•MgF<sub>3</sub>) == | + | |
+ | === UvrD Binding Site for ATP analog (ADP•MgF<sub>3</sub>) === | ||
To capture the UvrD-DNA-ADP complex, a new crystal structure used ADP•MgF<sub>3</sub> after NaF was added to help improve crystal growth. This structure is believed to be a more authentic transition state analog, which differs from the AMPPNP analog slightly. The <scene name='92/925553/Adp_analog_complete/1'>ADP analog</scene> has a <scene name='92/925553/Adp_e566_and_gol/2'>GOL region</scene>, which is a glycerol molecule, which has hydrogen bonding similar to interactions that E566 has to a 3' OH of the ribose. The DNA isn't actually bound in the crystal structure, but can be used to visualize what hydrogen bonding might look like when connected to the backbone in DNA. <scene name='92/925553/Adp_e566_and_gol_hbonding_comp/2'>This glycerol molecule hydrogen bonds with E566</scene>, which typically would bind to the 3' OH of the ribose of DNA. Another residue, R37 (Not Shown), binds to the 2' OH of ribose, which has weaker hydrogen bonding. This is a structural component that allows UvrD to bind both ATP and dATP<ref name="ATP_Binding" />. | To capture the UvrD-DNA-ADP complex, a new crystal structure used ADP•MgF<sub>3</sub> after NaF was added to help improve crystal growth. This structure is believed to be a more authentic transition state analog, which differs from the AMPPNP analog slightly. The <scene name='92/925553/Adp_analog_complete/1'>ADP analog</scene> has a <scene name='92/925553/Adp_e566_and_gol/2'>GOL region</scene>, which is a glycerol molecule, which has hydrogen bonding similar to interactions that E566 has to a 3' OH of the ribose. The DNA isn't actually bound in the crystal structure, but can be used to visualize what hydrogen bonding might look like when connected to the backbone in DNA. <scene name='92/925553/Adp_e566_and_gol_hbonding_comp/2'>This glycerol molecule hydrogen bonds with E566</scene>, which typically would bind to the 3' OH of the ribose of DNA. Another residue, R37 (Not Shown), binds to the 2' OH of ribose, which has weaker hydrogen bonding. This is a structural component that allows UvrD to bind both ATP and dATP<ref name="ATP_Binding" />. | ||
- | </StructureSection> | ||
- | |||
- | For more structures, please see [[DNA Replication, Repair, and Recombination]] | ||
- | |||
- | ==References== | ||
- | |||
- | <references /> | ||
==DNA Repair Mechanism; URACIL-DNA GLYCOSYLASE== | ==DNA Repair Mechanism; URACIL-DNA GLYCOSYLASE== | ||
- | + | ||
== Introduction == | == Introduction == | ||
Glycosylase is an enzyme. Its main function is in Base Excision Repair(BER). Base Excision Repair is a DNA repair mechanism that fixes the most common type of DNA damage. BER corrects DNA damage that occurs from oxidation and methylation. BER removes and repairs damaged bases usually these are single-stranded DNA breaks. It also corrects DNA damage that results from small leisures that do not disrupt the double helix<ref>PMID:25252105</ref>. | Glycosylase is an enzyme. Its main function is in Base Excision Repair(BER). Base Excision Repair is a DNA repair mechanism that fixes the most common type of DNA damage. BER corrects DNA damage that occurs from oxidation and methylation. BER removes and repairs damaged bases usually these are single-stranded DNA breaks. It also corrects DNA damage that results from small leisures that do not disrupt the double helix<ref>PMID:25252105</ref>. | ||
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The structure of Glycosylase has a couple of different forms in terms of its general structure there is Adenine and Uracil Glycosylase. DNA Uracil-Glycosylase specifically looks for any Uracil in the double-stranded DNA. It looks for Uracil in dsDNA because uracil is only found in RNA. So if a Uracil is found in dsDNA then that means one of the strands has been damaged and needs repair. The dsDNA in the 3D model contains a U G base pair mismatch. When Uracil-DNA Glycosylase finds the <scene name='92/927197/Uracil/4'>Uracil</scene> site it binds to it. Then a nucleotide-flipping mechanism flips the site of repair out of the double helix. The<scene name='92/927197/Active_site/7'>Active Site</scene> of Uracil Glycosylase; D145, Y147, F158, N204, H268, L272 is what binds to the double-stranded DNA with the damaged lesion. This is what allows the <scene name='92/927197/Uracil_glycolysis_interaction/5'>Uracil_Glycosylase interaction</scene> and flipping of the damaged site out of the double helix. ASN 204 and HIS 268 are responsible for catalyzing the cleavage of the glycosidic bond. TYR 147, PHE 158, and ASN 204 all aid in Uracil excision and replacement with Thymine. When flipped the damaged bases out of the helix <scene name='92/927197/Arg_side_chain/1'>ARG 272 side chain</scene> takes its place in the minor groove since AP sites can be mutagenic<ref>PMID:8900285</ref>. The Uracil is then replaced with a Thymine. This is because Uracil and Thymine have identical base pairing properties. Thymine happens to have greater resistance to photochemical mutations which is why we see it in dsDNA and not Uracil. | The structure of Glycosylase has a couple of different forms in terms of its general structure there is Adenine and Uracil Glycosylase. DNA Uracil-Glycosylase specifically looks for any Uracil in the double-stranded DNA. It looks for Uracil in dsDNA because uracil is only found in RNA. So if a Uracil is found in dsDNA then that means one of the strands has been damaged and needs repair. The dsDNA in the 3D model contains a U G base pair mismatch. When Uracil-DNA Glycosylase finds the <scene name='92/927197/Uracil/4'>Uracil</scene> site it binds to it. Then a nucleotide-flipping mechanism flips the site of repair out of the double helix. The<scene name='92/927197/Active_site/7'>Active Site</scene> of Uracil Glycosylase; D145, Y147, F158, N204, H268, L272 is what binds to the double-stranded DNA with the damaged lesion. This is what allows the <scene name='92/927197/Uracil_glycolysis_interaction/5'>Uracil_Glycosylase interaction</scene> and flipping of the damaged site out of the double helix. ASN 204 and HIS 268 are responsible for catalyzing the cleavage of the glycosidic bond. TYR 147, PHE 158, and ASN 204 all aid in Uracil excision and replacement with Thymine. When flipped the damaged bases out of the helix <scene name='92/927197/Arg_side_chain/1'>ARG 272 side chain</scene> takes its place in the minor groove since AP sites can be mutagenic<ref>PMID:8900285</ref>. The Uracil is then replaced with a Thymine. This is because Uracil and Thymine have identical base pairing properties. Thymine happens to have greater resistance to photochemical mutations which is why we see it in dsDNA and not Uracil. | ||
+ | </StructureSection> | ||
- | == References == | + | |
- | <references/> | + | For more structures, please see [[DNA Replication, Repair, and Recombination]] |
+ | |||
+ | ==References== | ||
+ | |||
+ | <references /> |
Revision as of 00:50, 19 October 2022
The discussion on this page is targeted at genetics students, so familiarity with DNA structure, DNA Replication and Basics of Protein Structure is assumed.
DNA Repair is necessary to maintain genome fidelity. Errors in DNA can arise from many different sources. Errors introduced in the replication process are the simplest source. This leads to non-Watson-Crick base pairs and local distortions in the helix. Bases can also be damaged by oxidizing agents, alkylating agents or UV light. This page will discuss different strategies for repairing these types of DNA damage.
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For more structures, please see DNA Replication, Repair, and Recombination
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Lee JY, Yang W. UvrD helicase unwinds DNA one base pair at a time by a two-part power stroke. Cell. 2006 Dec 29;127(7):1349-60. PMID:17190599 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2006.10.049
- ↑ Voet, D., Voet, J., & Pratt, C. (2015). Fundamentals of Biochemistry: Life at the Molecular Level (4th ed.). Wiley
- ↑ Schormann N, Ricciardi R, Chattopadhyay D. Uracil-DNA glycosylases-structural and functional perspectives on an essential family of DNA repair enzymes. Protein Sci. 2014 Dec;23(12):1667-85. doi: 10.1002/pro.2554. Epub 2014 Oct 25. PMID:25252105 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pro.2554
- ↑ Parikh SS, Mol CD, Slupphaug G, Bharati S, Krokan HE, Tainer JA. Base excision repair initiation revealed by crystal structures and binding kinetics of human uracil-DNA glycosylase with DNA. EMBO J. 1998 Sep 1;17(17):5214-26. PMID:9724657 doi:10.1093/emboj/17.17.5214
- ↑ Slupphaug G, Mol CD, Kavli B, Arvai AS, Krokan HE, Tainer JA. A nucleotide-flipping mechanism from the structure of human uracil-DNA glycosylase bound to DNA. Nature. 1996 Nov 7;384(6604):87-92. PMID:8900285 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/384087a0
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