Uracil-DNA glycosylase-DNA substrate and product structures: conformational strain promotes catalytic efficiency by coupled stereoelectronic effects. (49/1309)

Enzymatic transformations of macromolecular substrates such as DNA repair enzyme/DNA transformations are commonly interpreted primarily by active-site functional-group chemistry that ignores their extensive interfaces. Yet human uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG), an archetypical enzyme that initiates DNA base-excision repair, efficiently excises the damaged base uracil resulting from cytosine deamination even when active-site functional groups are deleted by mutagenesis. The 1.8-A resolution substrate analogue and 2.0-A resolution cleaved product cocrystal structures of UDG bound to double-stranded DNA suggest enzyme-DNA substrate-binding energy from the macromolecular interface is funneled into catalytic power at the active site. The architecturally stabilized closing of UDG enforces distortions of the uracil and deoxyribose in the flipped-out nucleotide substrate that are relieved by glycosylic bond cleavage in the product complex. This experimentally defined substrate stereochemistry implies the enzyme alters the orientation of three orthogonal electron orbitals to favor electron transpositions for glycosylic bond cleavage. By revealing the coupling of this anomeric effect to a delocalization of the glycosylic bond electrons into the uracil aromatic system, this structurally implicated mechanism resolves apparent paradoxes concerning the transpositions of electrons among orthogonal orbitals and the retention of catalytic efficiency despite mutational removal of active-site functional groups. These UDG/DNA structures and their implied dissociative excision chemistry suggest biology favors a chemistry for base-excision repair initiation that optimizes pathway coordination by product binding to avoid the release of cytotoxic and mutagenic intermediates. Similar excision chemistry may apply to other biological reaction pathways requiring the coordination of complex multistep chemical transformations.  (+info)

Two glycosylase/abasic lyases from Neisseria mucosa that initiate DNA repair at sites of UV-induced photoproducts. (50/1309)

Diverse organisms ranging from Escherichia coli to humans contain a variety of DNA repair proteins that function in the removal of damage caused by shortwave UV light. This study reports the identification, purification, and biochemical characterization of two DNA glycosylases with associated abasic lyase activity from Neisseria mucosa. These enzymes, pyrimidine dimer glycosylase I and II (Nmu-pdg I and Nmu-pdg II), were purified 30,000- and 10,000-fold, respectively. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis indicated that Nmu-pdg I is approximately 30 kDa, whereas Nmu-pdg II is approximately 19 kDa. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of Nmu-pdg II exhibits 64 and 66% identity with E. coli and Hemophilus parainfluenzae endonuclease III, respectively. Both Nmu-pdg I and Nmu-pdg II were found to have broad substrate specificities, as evidenced by their ability to incise DNA containing many types of UV and some types of oxidative damage. Consistent with other glycosylase/abasic lyases, the existence of a covalent enzyme-DNA complex could be demonstrated for both Nmu-pdg I and II when reactions were carried out in the presence of sodium borohydride. These data indicate the involvement of an amino group in the catalytic reaction mechanism of both enzymes.  (+info)

Comparative repair of the endogenous lesions 8-oxo-7, 8-dihydroguanine (8-oxoG), uracil and abasic site by mammalian cell extracts: 8-oxoG is poorly repaired by human cell extracts. (51/1309)

The repair of the endogenous lesions 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (8-oxoG), uracil (U) and natural abasic site (AP site) was investigated using an in vitro base excision repair assay in which a plasmid substrate containing a single lesion at a defined position was repaired by mammalian cell extracts. Repair replication of an 8-oxoG/cytosine base pair performed by normal human cell extracts was approximately 5-fold less efficient than repair of a U/adenine base pair and, in turn, the latter was repaired approximately 10-fold less efficiently than an AP site placed in front of an adenine. A similar pattern of repair capacity for the three lesions was observed in Chinese hamster extracts. Repair of 8-oxoG was performed by the one nucleotide insertion pathway only. The lower repair replication ability of 8-oxoG with respect to U was linked to a lower DNA glycosylase (base removal) activity rather than to inability to process the beta-elimination cleaved strand left by the AP lyase activity associated with human oxoguanine DNA glycosylase 1. The data show that DNA repair of 8-oxoG is poor in human cells in comparison with other frequent endogenous lesions.  (+info)

Hyperrecombination in Streptococcus pneumoniae depends on an atypical mutY homologue. (52/1309)

The unusual behavior of the mutation ami36, which generates hyperrecombination in two point crosses, was previously attributed to a localized conversion process changing A/G mispairs into CG pairs. Although the mechanism was found to be dependent on the DNA polymerase I, the specific function responsible for this correction was still unknown. Analysis of the pneumococcal genome sequence has revealed the presence of an open reading frame homologous to the gene mutY of Escherichia coli. The gene mutY encodes an adenine glycosylase active on A/G and A/7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-OxoG) mismatches, inducing their repair to CG and C/8-OxoG, respectively. Here we report that disrupting the pneumococcal mutY homologue abolishes the hyperrecombination induced by ami36 and leads to a mutator phenotype specifically enhancing AT-to-CG transversions. The deduced amino acid sequence of the pneumococcal MutY protein reveals the absence of four cysteines, highly conserved in the endonuclease III/MutY glycosylase family, which ligate a [4Fe-4S](2+) cluster. The actual function of this cluster is still intriguing, inasmuch as we show that the pneumococcal gene complements a mutY strain of E. coli.  (+info)

3-Methyladenine-DNA glycosylase (MPG protein) interacts with human RAD23 proteins. (53/1309)

Human 3-methyladenine-DNA glycosylase (MPG protein) initiates base excision repair by severing the glycosylic bond of numerous damaged bases. In comparison, homologues of the Rad23 proteins (hHR23) and the hXPC protein are involved in the recognition of damaged bases in global genome repair, a subset of nucleotide excision repair. In this report, we show that the hHR23A and -B also interact with the MPG protein and can serve as accessory proteins for DNA damage recognition in base excision repair. Furthermore, the MPG.hHR23 protein complex elevates the rate of MPG protein-catalyzed excision from hypoxanthine-containing substrates. This increased excision rate is correlated with a greater binding affinity of the MPG protein-hHR23 protein complex for damaged DNA. These data suggest that the hHR23 proteins function as universal DNA damage recognition accessory proteins in both of these major excision repair pathways.  (+info)

Analysis of uracil-DNA glycosylases from the murine Ung gene reveals differential expression in tissues and in embryonic development and a subcellular sorting pattern that differs from the human homologues. (54/1309)

The murine UNG: gene encodes both mitochondrial (Ung1) and nuclear (Ung2) forms of uracil-DNA glyco-sylase. The gene contains seven exons organised like the human counterpart. While the putative Ung1 promoter (P(B)) and the human P(B) contain essentially the same, although differently organised, transcription factor binding elements, the Ung2 promoter (P(A)) shows limited homology to the human counterpart. Transient transfection of chimaeric promoter-luciferase constructs demonstrated that both promoters are functional and that P(B) drives transcription more efficiently than P(A). mRNAs for Ung1 and Ung2 are found in all adult tissues analysed, but they are differentially expressed. Furthermore, transcription of both mRNA forms, particularly Ung2, is induced in mid-gestation embryos. Except for a strong conservation of the 26 N-terminal residues in Ung2, the subcellular targeting sequences in the encoded proteins have limited homology. Ung2 is transported exclusively to the nucleus in NIH 3T3 cells as expected. In contrast, Ung1 was sorted both to nuclei and mitochondria. These results demonstrate that although the catalytic domain of uracil-DNA glycosylase is highly conserved in mouse and man, regulatory elements in the gene and subcellular sorting sequences in the proteins differ both structurally and functionally, resulting in altered contribution of the isoforms to total uracil-DNA glycosylase activity.  (+info)

4-Aminopyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine (4-APP) as a novel inhibitor of the RNA and DNA depurination induced by Shiga toxin 1. (55/1309)

Shiga toxin 1 (Stx1) catalyses the removal of a unique and specific adenine from 28S RNA in ribosomes (RNA-N-glycosidase activity) and the release of multiple adenines from DNA (DNA glycosylase activity). Added adenine behaves as an uncompetitive inhibitor of the RNA-N-glycosidase reaction binding more tightly to the Stx1-ribosome complex than to the free enzyme. Several purine derivatives and analogues have now been assayed as inhibitors of Stx1. Most of the compounds showed only minor differences in the rank order of activity on the two enzymatic reactions catalysed by Stx1. The survey highlights the importance of the amino group in the 6-position of the pyrimidine ring of adenine. Shifting (2-aminopurine) or substituting (hypoxanthine, 6-mercapto-purine, 6-methylpurine) the group greatly decreases the inhibitory power. The presence of a second ring, besides the pyrimidine one, is strictly required. Substitution, by introducing an additional nitrogen, of the imidazole ring of adenine with triazole leads to loss of inhibitory power, while rearrangement of the nitrogen atoms of the ring from the imidazole to the pyrazole configuration greatly enhances the inhibitory power. Thus 4-aminopyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine (4-APP), the isomer of adenine with the five-membered ring in the pyrazole configuration, is by far the most potent inhibitor of both enzymatic reactions catalysed by Stx1. This finding opens perspectives on therapeutic strategies to protect endothelial renal cells once endocytosis of Stx1 has occurred (haemolytic uraemic syndrome). In the RNA-N-glycosidase reaction 4-APP binds, as adenine, predominantly to the Stx1-ribosome complex (uncompetitive inhibition), while inhibition of the DNA glycosylase activity by both inhibitors is of the mixed type.  (+info)

Base excision repair of DNA in mammalian cells. (56/1309)

Base excision repair (BER) of DNA corrects a number of spontaneous and environmentally induced genotoxic or miscoding base lesions in a process initiated by DNA glycosylases. An AP endonuclease cleaves at the 5' side of the abasic site and the repair process is subsequently completed via either short patch repair or long patch repair, which largely require different proteins. As one example, the UNG gene encodes both nuclear (UNG2) and mitochondrial (UNG1) uracil DNA glycosylase and prevents accumulation of uracil in the genome. BER is likely to have a major role in preserving the integrity of DNA during evolution and may prevent cancer.  (+info)