Title: MutY ADENINE DNA GLYCOSYLASE
1Mut-Y ADENINE DNA GLYCOSYLASE
2What are DNA GLYCOSYLASES?
- They are a class of enzymes which are responsible
for the Base-excision repair of DNA. - Base excision repair is the mechanism by which
nucleotide residues in DNA with chemically
altered nitrogen bases can be removed and
replaced. - The sugar phosphate backbone is intact.
- Found in every cell.
- They recognize common DNA lesions and remove the
affected base by cleaving the N-glycosyl bond and
they generate an abasic or AP site
(apurinic/apyrimidinic). - These AP sites are recognised by AP endonuclease
enzymes which complete the rest of the repair.
3FORMATION OF THE ABASIC SITE
4General Mechanism of action of DNA glycosylase
- Recognition of damaged base.
- Cleavage between deoxy -ribose backbone and base.
- AP endonuclease cleaves phosphodiester backbone
near AP site. - DNA polymerase initiates repair synthesis from
the free 3 OH (with its 5 to 3exonuclease
activity) replaces it with undamaged DNA. - The nick remaining is sealed by the DNA ligase.
5Interesting facts about DNA Glycosylases
- They locate and excise the damaged DNA
nucleobases in a 1 million fold excess of
undamaged DNA. - When the enzyme encounters an 8-oxo guanine it
flips the base out of the DNA helix into its
active site in order to remove it. - The enzyme flips the base into a gateway pocket
that regulates entry to the active site, allowing
the undamaged guanines that enter to return to
the helix unharmed.
68- oxo guanine (oxoG)
- It is a genotoxic product .
- Formed due to the oxidation of guanine in aerobic
organisms.
guanine
Oxidation at position 8
7Pathway for oxidation and repair of guanine in DNA
Normal DNA
8-oxo guanine. c complex
Abasic site/AP site
8Major goals
- To work out a strategy to catch the DNA
glycosylases in the act of searching the haystack
for damaged DNA nucleobases. - To develop a powerful cross linking system to
help crystallize the otherwise un-crystallizable
complexes of DNA repair proteins bound to short
stretches of DNA.
9Developed method
- A powerful crosslinking system was developed in
which thiol groups are strategically installed in
both the protein and the DNA substrate . - They are then tethered via a disulphide bond
,making it possible to isolate the normally
fleeting protein-DNA complexes.
10Crystallized full-length MutY (mol wt 41000)
interacting with DNA
- The MutY glycosylase consists of 3 major regions
- Catalytic domain
- 6- helix barrel module
- C-terminal domain
OXO-G
?-STRANDS
DNA
ADENINE
HELICES
90 deg rotated towards the reader
11- 1) Catalytic domain It has a helix hairpin
helix element, a gly/pro rich loop, - and a catalytically essential aspartate residue (
HhH -GPD motif). - It bears resemblence to endonuclease III
including the 4 Fe-4S cluster . - This domain interacts with the adenine residue.
- The substrate adenine is completely extruded
from the DNA helix and is - Inserted into an extra helical pocket in the
catalytic domain , a feature - shared by all known DNA Glycosylases that act on
single base lesions. - 2) 6- helix barrel module It directly contacts
the backbone of complementary - Oxo G containing strand.
- The DNA substrate is bent by 55 deg (similar to
the endonuclease III) - The bend is localized to the lesion and the
normal unbent B form of - DNA projects from either side.
- 3) C- Terminal domain It is thought to be
responsible for the OxoG recognition - as the removal of this region leads to the loss
of discrimination between the - A.oxoG and the A. G .
- This domain is linked to the catalytic domain by
disordered linker of 10 amino - acids (rich in lys -228,230,231,235) that
traverses major groove near the lesion.
12Resemblence of Mut Y with MutT and the Endo
IIIDNA complex
- Mut T sanitizes the the
- Nucleotide precursor pool by
- hydrolysing oxo-dGTP to
- Oxo-d GMP and inorganic
- Phosphate
13Molecular surface representation of enzyme bound
to DNA
- The enzyme encircles the DNA duplex burying 1530
angstrom square of DNA surface area. - MutY deeply penetrates DNA helix ,interrupts
helical stacking on both strands . - It enforces a sharp bend in the DNA and
extrahelical extrusion of adenine. - The oxo-G lesion lies in the DNA helix.
- The lesion recognition causes no conformational
change in the catalytic domain of the enzyme.
14Ball and stick representation of the actual
interaction
- The oxo G has a an anti glycosidic bond
conformation when bound to MutY and is in syn
conformation when bound to the adenine. - The oxo-G swivels 180 deg to drive the extrusion
of adenine out of the helix. - The aromatic ring of Tyr 88 from the enzyme
intercalates into 5side of oxo-Guanine. - Now the Gln 48 inserts into the helical space
vacated by the adenine to form p-stacking
interactions under the 3-neighbouring base and
simultaneous hydrogen bonds with the 3
phosphate of adenine.
15Various interactions stabilizing the oxo-G
- (1. )The watson and crick face of oxo-G is
contacted by - Gln 48(amide carbonyl)
- Thr 49(hydroxyl )
- (2.) The minor groove face of
- oxo-G makes its contact with
- Leu 86(hydrogen bonding)
- (3.) The hoogstein face of oxo-G is stabilized by
- Ser 308(which is inturn stabilized by the tyr88
hydroxyl)
16Catalytic strategy used by Mut Y to remove the
adenine
- DNA glycosylases act by nucleophillic SN-1 attack
by water in discrete steps. - Two water molecules and the Glu43 are involved in
the reaction where Glu43 is - responsible to lower the transition energy
during base excision. - The N7 of adenine is replaced wth the c7-h yeild
a substrate product that cannot be - Cleaved and binds to the MutY .
- All this is possible only when the adenine is in
syn configuration.
17 Conclusions drawn
- The results suggests the molecular basis for
MutYs preferential recognition of oxo G versus
thymine even though T.A is 100000- 1000000 fold
greater than that of oxoG.A. - The oxo-G recognition mode of Mut Y is different
than that of MutT though they have similar C
terminal domains . - The enzyme shows greater than a 6-fold preference
for A.oxoG over A.G in which Ser 308 (binds to o8
of oxo-G not possible with G) primarily
responsible for discriminating between oxoG and
guanine.
18Relevance to the field of science
- The disulphide cross linking technique is used
- To reveal how a bacterial DNA repair enzyme
(Mut-Y) uses a hydrophobic probe residue to
examine the intact DNA helix for 8-oxoguanine. - To figure out how the human version of this
enzyme (hMYH) ensures that only the 8-oxoguanine
is flipped into the active site and removed. - In mechanistic crystallography.
- To capture mechanistically revealing snapshots
of voltage gated ion channels.
19Methods used
- MutY preparation It is prepared from Bacillus
stearothermophilus. - The gene is cloned into the PET 228 expression
vector. - The Asp144Asn and Pro164cys mutation is generated
using mutagenesis kit . - The cells are lysed by sonification to remove the
enzyme. - DNA ,complex formation and disulphide trapping
The DNA oligomers 5-TGTCCAXGTCT-3(X-ABASIC
SITE),5-AAGACYTGGAC-3(Y-OXOG) were synthesized. - A-stands for the modified nucleoside introduced
for disulphide linking.
20- The complexes were crystallized by hanging drop
method at room temperature in - 100mM Tris ,14PEG,500mM calcium acetate and 5mM
ß- ME. - Crystals appeared after several days and were
allowed to grow for several weeks. - Frozen in liquid nitrogen for the x-ray data
collection.
21Summary
- MutY is a adenine Glycosylase enzyme.
- Mut Y is very selective for oxo G .A complex.
- The adenine is removed by nucleophillic attack by
water. - The crystalline structure was studied by making
use of disulphide crosslinking.
22References
- J.christopher Fromme1,Anirban banerjee2,Susan
J.Huang 1 GregoryL.Verdine 1,2.(Department of
molecular and Celllular biology and department
of chemistry and chemical biology,Harvard
university,cambridge,,Massachusetts 02138) - 2007 ACS national award winners, CEN ,pg 32, feb
5 ,2007 - Principles of Biochemistry, Lehninger, David
M.Nelson ,Michael M. Cox ,chapter 25.
23Acknowledgements
24ANY QUESTIONS