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Kinetic gating mechanism of DNA damage.pdf (1.69 MB)

Kinetic gating mechanism of DNA damage recognition by Rad4/XPC

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posted on 2016-09-12, 00:00 authored by Xuejing Chen, Yogambigai Velmurugu, Guanqun Zheng, Beomseok Park, Yoonjung Shim, Youngchang Kim, Lili Liu
The xeroderma pigmentosum C (XPC) complex initiates nucleotide excision repair by recognizing DNA lesions before recruiting downstream factors. How XPC detects structurally diverse lesions embedded within normal DNA is unknown. Here we present a crystal structure that captures the yeast XPC orthologue (Rad4) on a single register of undamaged DNA. The structure shows that a disulphide-tethered Rad4 flips out normal nucleotides and adopts a conformation similar to that seen with damaged DNA. Contrary to many DNA repair enzymes that can directly reject non-target sites as structural misfits, our results suggest that Rad4/XPC uses a kinetic gating mechanism whereby lesion selectivity arises from the kinetic competition between DNA opening and the residence time of Rad4/XPC per site. This mechanism is further supported by measurements of Rad4-induced lesion-opening times using temperature-jump perturbation spectroscopy. Kinetic gating may be a general mechanism used by site-specific DNA-binding proteins to minimize time-consuming interrogations of non-target sites.

Funding

This work was funded by the Chicago Biomedical Consortium with support from the Searle Funds at The Chicago Community Trust (to C.H. and J.-H.M.), NIH grants GM071440 (to C.H.) and 1R01ES019566 (to B.V.H.), NSF grants MCB-0721937 and MCB-1158217 (to A.A.), the Chancellor’s Discovery Fund (to A.A. and J.-H.M.) and a startup fund from the University of Illinois at Chicago (to J.-H.M.).

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Publisher Statement

This is a copy of an article published in the Nature Communications. © The Authors. © 2015 Macmillan Publishers. DOI: 10.1038/ncomms6849. http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Language

  • en_US

Issue date

2015-01-06

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