Structural highlights
Publication Abstract from PubMed
The highly mutagenic A:oxoG base-pair in DNA most frequently arises by aberrant replication of the primary oxidative lesion C:oxoG. This lesion is particularly insidious, because neither of its constituent nucleobases faithfully transmit genetic information from the original C:G base-pair. Repair of A:oxoG is initiated by adenine DNA glycosylase which catalyzes hydrolytic cleavage of the aberrant A nucleobase from the DNA backbone. These enzymes, MutY in bacteria and hMYH in humans, scrupulously avoid processing of C:oxoG, because cleavage of the C residue in C:oxoG would actually promote mutagenic conversion to A:oxoG. Here we analyze the structural basis for rejection of C:oxoG by MutY, using a synthetic crystallography approach to capture the enzyme in the process of inspecting the C:oxoG anti-substrate, with which it ordinarily binds only fleetingly. We find that MutY uses two distinct strategies to avoid presentation of C to the enzyme active site. Firstly, MutY possesses an exo-site that serves as a decoy for C, and secondly, repulsive forces with a key active site residue prevent stable insertion of C into the nucleobase-recognition pocket within the enzyme active site.
Structural Basis for Avoidance of Promutagenic DNA Repair by MutY Adenine DNA Glycosylase.,Wang L, Lee SJ, Verdine G J Biol Chem. 2015 May 20. pii: jbc.M115.657866. PMID:25995449[1]
From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
See Also
References
- ↑ Wang L, Lee SJ, Verdine G. Structural Basis for Avoidance of Promutagenic DNA Repair by MutY Adenine DNA Glycosylase. J Biol Chem. 2015 May 20. pii: jbc.M115.657866. PMID:25995449 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M115.657866