DNA mismatch repair is central to the maintenance of genomic stability. It is initiated by the recognition of base-base mismatches and insertion͞deletion loops by the family of MutS proteins. Subsequently, ATP induces a unique conformational change in the MutS-mismatch complex but not in the MutS-homoduplex complex that sets off the cascade of events that leads to repair. To gain insight into the mechanism by which MutS discriminates between mismatch and homoduplex DNA, we have examined the conformations of specific and nonspecific MutS-DNA complexes by using atomic force microscopy. Interestingly, MutS-DNA complexes exhibit a single population of conformations, in which the DNA is bent at homoduplex sites, but two populations of conformations, bent and unbent, at mismatch sites. These results suggest that the specific recognition complex is one in which the DNA is unbent. Combining our results with existing biochemical and crystallographic data leads us to propose that MutS: (i) binds to DNA nonspecifically and bends it in search of a mismatch; (ii) on specific recognition of a mismatch, undergoes a conformational change to an initial recognition complex in which the DNA is kinked, with interactions similar to those in the published crystal structures; and (iii) finally undergoes a further conformational change to the ultimate recognition complex in which the DNA is unbent. Our results provide a structural explanation for the long-standing question of how MutS achieves mismatch repair specificity. D NA mismatch repair (MMR) is a highly conserved repair pathway targeting mismatched bases that arise through DNA replication errors and during homologous recombination (1-3). Inactivation of MMR genes results in a significant increase in the spontaneous mutation rate and, in humans, a predisposition to cancer (4). Escherichia coli provides the best-understood MMR system and serves as a prototype for the more complicated but homologous eukaryotic systems (5). In E. coli, the proteins MutS, MutL, and MutH are responsible for the initiation of MMR (6). MutS and MutL function as dimers and have intrinsic ATPase activities that are essential for MMR (7,8). MMR is initiated by the binding of MutS to either a mismatch or a short insertion͞deletion loop (IDL). Subsequently, ATP induces a conformational change in the MutS-mismatch complex and promotes its interaction with MutL. Assembly of the MutS-MutL-heteroduplex complex activates the endonuclease activity of MutH, which incises the newly synthesized (unmethylated) strand at a d(GATC) site. This incision confers strand specificity of MMR, directing repair exclusively to the newly synthesized strand containing the error. Excision repair completes the process.Crystal structures of E. coli and Thermus aquaticus (Taq) MutS dimers complexed with a G͞T base-base mismatch and a 1T-bulge, respectively, shed light on the structural components of mismatch recognition (9-11). Specific interactions include an aromatic ring stack of a conserved phenylalanine (Phe-39 in Taq or Phe-36 in...
Immunoglobulin class switch recombination joins a new constant (C) region to the rearranged and expressed heavy chain variable (VDJ) region in antigen-activated B cells (Figure 1A) (reviewed in [1, 2]). Switch recombination is activated by transcription of intronic, G-rich and repetitive switch (S) regions and produces junctions that are heterogeneous in sequence and position in the S regions. Switch recombination depends upon the B cell-specific cytidine deaminase, AID, and conserved DNA repair factors, including the mismatch repair heterodimer, MutSalpha (MSH2/MSH6). In mice, ablation of Msh2 or Msh6, but not Msh3, decreases levels of switch recombination and diminishes heterogeneity of switch junctions [3-7]. Here, we demonstrate that MSH2 associates with transcribed S regions in primary murine B cells activated for switch recombination. Electron microscopic imaging reveals that MutSalpha binds in vitro to DNA structures formed within transcribed S regions and mediates their synapsis. MutSalpha binds with high affinity to G4 DNA formed upon transcription of the S regions and also binds to U.G mismatches, initial products of DNA deamination by AID. These results suggest that MutSalpha interacts with the S regions in switching B cells to promote DNA synapsis and recombination.
Meiotic silencing by unpaired DNA (MSUD) is a process that detects unpaired regions between homologous chromosomes and silences them for the duration of sexual development. While the phenomenon of MSUD is well recognized, the process that detects unpaired DNA is poorly understood. In this report, we provide two lines of evidence linking unpaired DNA detection to a physical search for DNA homology. First, we have found that a putative SNF2-family protein (SAD-6) is required for efficient MSUD in Neurospora crassa. SAD-6 is closely related to Rad54, a protein known to facilitate key steps in the repair of double-strand breaks by homologous recombination. Second, we have successfully masked unpaired DNA by placing identical transgenes at slightly different locations on homologous chromosomes. This masking falls apart when the distance between the transgenes is increased. We propose a model where unpaired DNA detection during MSUD is achieved through a spatially constrained search for DNA homology. The identity of SAD-6 as a Rad54 paralog suggests that this process may be similar to the searching mechanism used during homologous recombination. MEIOSIS is fundamental to sexual reproduction. During meiosis, chromosomes are replicated, aligned, recombined, and segregated to nuclei that will develop into gametes. Two of these key processes, alignment and recombination, likely require a search for DNA homology between chromosomes (Barzel and Kupiec 2008;Moore and Shaw 2009). Such homology searching is necessary because sexual organisms inherit a copy of each chromosome from each of its parents. These chromosomes, referred to as homologs, must somehow find each other so that alignment, recombination, and segregation can occur.Although recent research has improved our understanding of homology search mechanisms (Forget and Kowalczykowski 2012;Renkawitz et al. 2013), there are many questions that remain unanswered. The filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa may be useful for investigating the unknowns of homology searching because it possesses a genetically tractable phenomenon called meiotic silencing by unpaired DNA (MSUD) (Aramayo and Selker 2013;Billmyre et al. 2013). MSUD scans pairs of homologs for segments of DNA that are not accurately paired between them. If improper pairing (i.e., unpairing) is identified, the offending sequences are silenced for the duration of sexual development. For example, if a hypothetical gene called "gene A" is on the left arm of one chromosome but on the right arm of its homolog, it will be silenced. The same holds true if gene A has been lost from one of the homologs.A functional MSUD response can be easily detected with alleles that affect ascospore (sexual spore) color or shape. Indeed, MSUD was discovered during studies of ascospore maturation-1 (asm-1), a gene required for the production of pigmented (black) ascospores . A cross between an asm-1 + strain and an asm-1 D strain produces mostly unpigmented (white) ascospores. This is because MSUD silences the unpaired asm-1 + all...
MRE11/RAD50/NBS1 (MRN) is a ubiquitous complex that participates in the response to DNA damage and in immunoglobulin (Ig) gene diversification. Ig gene diversification is initiated by deamination of cytosine to uracil, followed by removal of uracil to create an abasic (AP) site. We find that MRE11 associates specifically with rearranged Ig genes in hypermutating B cells, whereas APE1, the major AP-endonuclease in faithful base excision repair, does not. We show that purified, recombinant MRE11/RAD50 can cleave DNA at AP sites and that this AP-lyase activity is conserved from humans to Archaea. MRE11/RAD50 cleaves at AP sites within single-stranded regions of DNA, suggesting that at transcribed Ig genes, cleavage may be coordinated with deamination by AID and deglycosylation by UNG2 to produce single-strand breaks (SSBs) that undergo subsequent mutagenic repair and recombination. These results identify MRN with DNA cleavage in the AID-initiated pathway of Ig gene diversification.
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