A single residue unique to DinB-like proteins limits formation of the polymerase IV multiprotein complex in Escherichia coli
Autor: | Veronica G. Godoy, Thomas J. Rands, Pamela A. Rudnicki, Tiziana M. Cafarelli, Ryan W. Benson, Ida Lin |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
Models
Molecular Multiprotein complex DNA polymerase beta Plasma protein binding DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase medicine.disease_cause Microbiology chemistry.chemical_compound Protein structure medicine Escherichia coli Amino Acid Sequence Molecular Biology Polymerase DNA Polymerase beta biology Escherichia coli Proteins Articles Protein tertiary structure Protein Structure Tertiary Rec A Recombinases Biochemistry chemistry Amino Acid Substitution Multiprotein Complexes biology.protein Homologous recombination Sequence Alignment Protein Binding |
Zdroj: | Journal of bacteriology. 195(6) |
ISSN: | 1098-5530 |
Popis: | The activity of DinB is governed by the formation of a multiprotein complex (MPC) with RecA and UmuD. We identified two highly conserved surface residues in DinB, cysteine 66 (C66) and proline 67 (P67). Mapping on the DinB tertiary structure suggests these are noncatalytic, and multiple-sequence alignments indicate that they are unique among DinB-like proteins. To investigate the role of the C66-containing surface in MPC formation, we constructed the dinB(C66A) derivative. We found that DinB(C66A) copurifies with its interacting partners, RecA and UmuD, to a greater extent than DinB. Notably, copurification of RecA with DinB is somewhat enhanced in the absence of UmuD and is further increased for DinB(C66A). In vitro pulldown assays also indicate that DinB(C66A) binds RecA and UmuD better than DinB. We note that the increased affinity of DinB(C66A) for UmuD is RecA dependent. Thus, the C66-containing binding surface appears to be critical to modulate interaction with UmuD, and particularly with RecA. Expression of dinB(C66A) from the chromosome resulted in detectable differences in dinB-dependent lesion bypass fidelity and homologous recombination. Study of this DinB derivative has revealed a key surface on DinB, which appears to modulate the strength of MPC binding, and has suggested a binding order of RecA and UmuD to DinB. These findings will ultimately permit the manipulation of these enzymes to deter bacterial antibiotic resistance acquisition and to gain insights into cancer development in humans. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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