User:Marcos Ngo/Sandbox 1

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hNTHL1 consists of <scene name='10/1077482/Two_domains/2'>two alpha-helical domains</scene> connected by two linkers. <scene name='10/1077482/Ncfedomain1/5'>Domain 1</scene> has the iron sulfur cluster, N- and C-termini, and a catalytic residue ('''Asp 239'''). <scene name='10/1077482/Domain2features/3'>Domain 2</scene> has six helical barrels, helix-hairpin-helix, and the other catalytic residue ('''Lys 220'''). The <scene name='10/1077482/Proglyhhh/1'>HhH</scene> motif has a characteristic glycine and proline-rich loop. The HhH allows for hydrogen bond interactions with the DNA backbone <ref>PMID:12840008</ref><ref>https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2160&context=graddis</ref><ref>PMID:1283262</ref>.
hNTHL1 consists of <scene name='10/1077482/Two_domains/2'>two alpha-helical domains</scene> connected by two linkers. <scene name='10/1077482/Ncfedomain1/5'>Domain 1</scene> has the iron sulfur cluster, N- and C-termini, and a catalytic residue ('''Asp 239'''). <scene name='10/1077482/Domain2features/3'>Domain 2</scene> has six helical barrels, helix-hairpin-helix, and the other catalytic residue ('''Lys 220'''). The <scene name='10/1077482/Proglyhhh/1'>HhH</scene> motif has a characteristic glycine and proline-rich loop. The HhH allows for hydrogen bond interactions with the DNA backbone <ref>PMID:12840008</ref><ref>https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2160&context=graddis</ref><ref>PMID:1283262</ref>.
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This structure is captured in an <scene name='10/1077482/Open_conformation/1'>open conformation</scene> where the catalytic residues Lys220 and Asp239 are positioned approximately 25 Å apart, which is too far for catalysis. This implies that a conformational change is required to assemble the active site. To find the closed conformation, an engineered chimera was made by swapping the <scene name='10/1077482/Linker1/1'>flexible interdomain linker</scene> in human NTHL1 with a shorter, more rigid linker from a bacterial homolog. The <scene name='10/1077482/Chimera/1'>hNTHL1Δ63 chimera</scene> structure adopts a closed conformation where Lys220 and Asp239 are approximately 5 Å apart, which mimics the configuration seen in catalytically active homologs. The linker is not fully modeled due to disorder in the electron density map <ref>PMID:34871433</ref>.
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This structure is captured in an <scene name='10/1077482/Open_conformation/1'>open conformation</scene> where the catalytic residues Lys220 and Asp239 are positioned approximately 25 Å apart, which is too far for catalysis. This implies that a conformational change is required to assemble the active site. To find the closed conformation, an engineered chimera was made by swapping the <scene name='10/1077482/Linker1/1'>flexible interdomain linker</scene> in human NTHL1 with a shorter, more rigid linker from a bacterial homolog. The [https://proteopedia.org/wiki/index.php/7rdt hNTHL1 chimera] structure adopts a <scene name='10/1077482/Chimera/1'>closed conformation</scene> where Lys220 and Asp239 are approximately 5 Å apart, which mimics the configuration seen in catalytically active homologs. The linker is not fully modeled due to disorder in the electron density map <ref>PMID:34871433</ref>.
The role of the <scene name='10/1077482/Fes_proper/4'>FeS Cluster</scene> is highly debated. One of the views is that the cluster is involved in scanning for lesions. Researchers found that oxidizing the FeS cluster in hNTHL1 from [4Fe-4S]^2+ to [4Fe-4S]^3+ increases its binding to DNA. When a mismatch such as C:A is introduced, this can disrupt DNA charge transport not allowing electrons to travel along the helix. This could stop the reduction of [4Fe-4S]^3+ to [4Fe-4S]^2+, leaving Nth bound until all lesions are removed. Another view is that the FeS cluster plays a role as a structural scaffold to stabilize the interaction of the protein with the DNA. A <scene name='10/1077482/Cys_and_fes/1'>Cys-Xaa6-Cys-Xaa2-Cys-Xaa5-Cys</scene> motif binds the iron sulfur cluster <ref>PMID:19720997</ref><ref>PMID:28817778</ref><ref>DOI:https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2022/cc/d2cc03643f</ref><ref>PMID:8990169</ref>.
The role of the <scene name='10/1077482/Fes_proper/4'>FeS Cluster</scene> is highly debated. One of the views is that the cluster is involved in scanning for lesions. Researchers found that oxidizing the FeS cluster in hNTHL1 from [4Fe-4S]^2+ to [4Fe-4S]^3+ increases its binding to DNA. When a mismatch such as C:A is introduced, this can disrupt DNA charge transport not allowing electrons to travel along the helix. This could stop the reduction of [4Fe-4S]^3+ to [4Fe-4S]^2+, leaving Nth bound until all lesions are removed. Another view is that the FeS cluster plays a role as a structural scaffold to stabilize the interaction of the protein with the DNA. A <scene name='10/1077482/Cys_and_fes/1'>Cys-Xaa6-Cys-Xaa2-Cys-Xaa5-Cys</scene> motif binds the iron sulfur cluster <ref>PMID:19720997</ref><ref>PMID:28817778</ref><ref>DOI:https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2022/cc/d2cc03643f</ref><ref>PMID:8990169</ref>.

Revision as of 01:48, 28 April 2025

Human NTHL1

PDB ID 7rds

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Marcos Ngo

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