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2r9a

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Revision as of 13:27, 4 May 2008 by OCA (Talk | contribs)
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Template:STRUCTURE 2r9a

Crystal structure of human XLF


Overview

DNA double-strand breaks represent one of the most severe forms of DNA damage in mammalian cells. One pathway for repairing these breaks occurs via nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) and depends on XRCC4, LigaseIV, and Cernunnos, also called XLF. Although XLF stimulates XRCC4/LigaseIV to ligate mismatched and noncohesive DNA ends, the mechanistic basis for this function remains unclear. Here we report the structure of a partially functional 224 residue N-terminal fragment of human XLF. Despite only weak sequence similarity, XLF(1-170) shares structural homology with XRCC4(1-159). However, unlike the highly extended 130 A helical domain observed in XRCC4, XLF adopts a more compact, folded helical C-terminal region involving two turns and a twist, wrapping back to the structurally conserved N terminus. Mutational analysis of XLF and XRCC4 reveals a potential interaction interface, suggesting a mechanism for how XLF stimulates the ligation of mismatched ends.

About this Structure

2R9A is a Single protein structure of sequence from Homo sapiens. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.

Reference

Crystal structure of human XLF: a twist in nonhomologous DNA end-joining., Andres SN, Modesti M, Tsai CJ, Chu G, Junop MS, Mol Cell. 2007 Dec 28;28(6):1093-101. PMID:18158905 Page seeded by OCA on Sun May 4 16:27:24 2008

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