Hendershot Jenna M, O'Brien Patrick J
From the Department of Biological Chemistry, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0600.
From the Department of Biological Chemistry, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0600
J Biol Chem. 2017 Sep 29;292(39):16070-16080. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M117.782813. Epub 2017 Jul 26.
DNA repair enzymes recognize and remove damaged bases that are embedded in the duplex. To gain access, most enzymes use nucleotide flipping, whereby the target nucleotide is rotated 180° into the active site. In human alkyladenine DNA glycosylase (AAG), the enzyme that initiates base excision repair of alkylated bases, the flipped-out nucleotide is stabilized by intercalation of the side chain of tyrosine 162 that replaces the lesion nucleobase. Previous kinetic studies provided evidence for the formation of a transient complex that precedes the stable flipped-out complex, but it is not clear how this complex differs from nonspecific complexes. We used site-directed mutagenesis and transient-kinetic approaches to investigate the timing of Tyr intercalation for AAG. The tryptophan substitution (Y162W) appeared to be conservative, because the mutant protein retained a highly favorable equilibrium constant for flipping the 1,-ethenoadenine (ϵA) lesion, and the rate of -glycosidic bond cleavage was identical to that of the wild-type enzyme. We assigned the tryptophan fluorescence signal from Y162W by removing two native tryptophan residues (W270A/W284A). Stopped-flow experiments then demonstrated that the change in tryptophan fluorescence of the Y162W mutant is extremely rapid upon binding to either damaged or undamaged DNA, much faster than the lesion-recognition and nucleotide flipping steps that were independently determined by monitoring the ϵA fluorescence. These observations suggest that intercalation by this aromatic residue is one of the earliest steps in the search for DNA damage and that this interaction is important for the progression of AAG from nonspecific searching to specific-recognition complexes.
DNA修复酶能够识别并去除双链中嵌入的受损碱基。为了接近目标碱基,大多数酶会采用核苷酸翻转的方式,即将目标核苷酸旋转180°使其进入活性位点。在人类烷基腺嘌呤DNA糖基化酶(AAG)中,该酶启动烷基化碱基的碱基切除修复过程,翻转出的核苷酸通过酪氨酸162的侧链插入来稳定,该侧链取代了损伤的核碱基。先前的动力学研究提供了证据,表明在稳定的翻转复合物形成之前会形成一个瞬态复合物,但尚不清楚该复合物与非特异性复合物有何不同。我们采用定点诱变和瞬态动力学方法来研究AAG中酪氨酸插入的时间。色氨酸替代(Y162W)似乎是保守的,因为突变蛋白在翻转1-乙烯腺嘌呤(εA)损伤时保留了非常有利的平衡常数,并且糖苷键断裂的速率与野生型酶相同。我们通过去除两个天然色氨酸残基(W270A/W284A)来确定Y162W的色氨酸荧光信号。随后的停流实验表明,Y162W突变体与受损或未受损DNA结合时,色氨酸荧光的变化极其迅速,比通过监测εA荧光独立确定的损伤识别和核苷酸翻转步骤要快得多。这些观察结果表明,这种芳香族残基的插入是寻找DNA损伤的最早步骤之一,并且这种相互作用对于AAG从非特异性搜索到特异性识别复合物的进展很重要。