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Crystal structure of human thymine DNA glycosylase bound to DNA elucidates sequence-specific mismatch recognition.
- Source :
-
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America [Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A] 2008 Jul 01; Vol. 105 (26), pp. 8890-5. Date of Electronic Publication: 2008 Jun 27. - Publication Year :
- 2008
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Abstract
- Cytosine methylation at CpG dinucleotides produces m(5)CpG, an epigenetic modification that is important for transcriptional regulation and genomic stability in vertebrate cells. However, m(5)C deamination yields mutagenic G.T mispairs, which are implicated in genetic disease, cancer, and aging. Human thymine DNA glycosylase (hTDG) removes T from G.T mispairs, producing an abasic (or AP) site, and follow-on base excision repair proteins restore the G.C pair. hTDG is inactive against normal A.T pairs, and is most effective for G.T mispairs and other damage located in a CpG context. The molecular basis of these important catalytic properties has remained unknown. Here, we report a crystal structure of hTDG (catalytic domain, hTDG(cat)) in complex with abasic DNA, at 2.8 A resolution. Surprisingly, the enzyme crystallized in a 2:1 complex with DNA, one subunit bound at the abasic site, as anticipated, and the other at an undamaged (nonspecific) site. Isothermal titration calorimetry and electrophoretic mobility-shift experiments indicate that hTDG and hTDG(cat) can bind abasic DNA with 1:1 or 2:1 stoichiometry. Kinetics experiments show that the 1:1 complex is sufficient for full catalytic (base excision) activity, suggesting that the 2:1 complex, if adopted in vivo, might be important for some other activity of hTDG, perhaps binding interactions with other proteins. Our structure reveals interactions that promote the stringent specificity for guanine versus adenine as the pairing partner of the target base and interactions that likely confer CpG sequence specificity. We find striking differences between hTDG and its prokaryotic ortholog (MUG), despite the relatively high (32%) sequence identity.
- Subjects :
- Base Pairing
Base Sequence
CpG Islands genetics
Crystallography, X-Ray
DNA genetics
Dimerization
Guanine metabolism
Humans
Kinetics
Models, Molecular
Molecular Sequence Data
Substrate Specificity
Thermodynamics
Base Pair Mismatch
DNA metabolism
Thymine DNA Glycosylase chemistry
Thymine DNA Glycosylase metabolism
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1091-6490
- Volume :
- 105
- Issue :
- 26
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 18587051
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0711061105