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From Proteopedia
RecA Protein Structure and Function
RecA is one of the many proteins that is involved in recombination cross over events and during recombination repair in response to single strand DNA breaks. RecA is a rather small monomer protein that can multiplex with itself up to thousands of RecA proteins in order to associate with either dsDNA or ssDNA. The structure of RecA was determined through x-ray crystallography and each monomer contains very distinct structural components. These components are a largely helical 30-residue N-terminal region, a 240-residue α/ß ATPase core, and a 64-residue C-terminal globular domain. The process of recruiting new RecA monomers is carried out an ATP dependent process. This occurs through the binding of ATP to two different α/ß ATPase cores on subsequent RecA monomers. "INSERT HERE HOW ATP IS COORDINATED". Once several RecA monomers have coordinated to one another, they coordinate with ssDNA to form a a repeating structure that contains exactly three nucleotides for every RecA monomer. However, this does not mean that each nucleotide triplet only interacts with a single RecA monomer. In reality, each RecA monomer spans three nucleotides, but the nucleotide triplet interacts with the other two RecA surrounding it on both the 5' and 3' sides. Essentialy, each nucleotide triplet is interacting with three different RecA monomers. When ssDNA is bound to RecA in this manner it take a unique conformation becoming very similar to normal B-DNA structure, however, the bound DNA is stretched slightly from normal parameters.For example, normal B-DNA has a 36° twist while bound ssDNA appears to have a 42° twist from the first to second base and then a 60° twist from the second to third base.
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