TY - JOUR
T1 - Replication Protein A Enhances Kinetics of Uracil DNA Glycosylase on ssDNA and Across DNA Junctions
T2 - Explored with a DNA Repair Complex Produced with SpyCatcher/SpyTag Ligation
AU - Greenwood, Sharon N.
AU - Kulkarni, Rashmi S.
AU - Mikhail, Michel
AU - Weiser, Brian P.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Wiley-VCH GmbH.
PY - 2023/5/16
Y1 - 2023/5/16
N2 - DNA repair proteins participate in extensive protein−protein interactions that promote the formation of DNA repair complexes. To understand how complex formation affects protein function during base excision repair, we used SpyCatcher/SpyTag ligation to produce a covalent complex between human uracil DNA glycosylase (UNG2) and replication protein A (RPA). Our covalent “RPA−Spy−UNG2” complex could identify and excise uracil bases in duplex areas next to ssDNA−dsDNA junctions slightly faster than the wild-type proteins, but this was highly dependent on DNA structure, as the turnover of the RPA−Spy−UNG2 complex slowed at DNA junctions where RPA tightly engaged long ssDNA sections. Conversely, the enzymes preferred uracil sites in ssDNA where RPA strongly enhanced uracil excision by UNG2 regardless of ssDNA length. Finally, RPA was found to promote UNG2 excision of two uracil sites positioned across a ssDNA−dsDNA junction, and dissociation of UNG2 from RPA enhanced this process. Our approach of ligating together RPA and UNG2 to reveal how complex formation affects enzyme function could be applied to examine other assemblies of DNA repair proteins.
AB - DNA repair proteins participate in extensive protein−protein interactions that promote the formation of DNA repair complexes. To understand how complex formation affects protein function during base excision repair, we used SpyCatcher/SpyTag ligation to produce a covalent complex between human uracil DNA glycosylase (UNG2) and replication protein A (RPA). Our covalent “RPA−Spy−UNG2” complex could identify and excise uracil bases in duplex areas next to ssDNA−dsDNA junctions slightly faster than the wild-type proteins, but this was highly dependent on DNA structure, as the turnover of the RPA−Spy−UNG2 complex slowed at DNA junctions where RPA tightly engaged long ssDNA sections. Conversely, the enzymes preferred uracil sites in ssDNA where RPA strongly enhanced uracil excision by UNG2 regardless of ssDNA length. Finally, RPA was found to promote UNG2 excision of two uracil sites positioned across a ssDNA−dsDNA junction, and dissociation of UNG2 from RPA enhanced this process. Our approach of ligating together RPA and UNG2 to reveal how complex formation affects enzyme function could be applied to examine other assemblies of DNA repair proteins.
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U2 - 10.1002/cbic.202200765
DO - 10.1002/cbic.202200765
M3 - Article
C2 - 36883884
AN - SCOPUS:85152969578
SN - 1439-4227
VL - 24
JO - ChemBioChem
JF - ChemBioChem
IS - 10
M1 - e202200765
ER -