Oxidative DNA damage is generated by a variety of environmental and endogenous agents, including ionizing radiation, certain chemicals, and products of aerobic metabolism (1). 8-oxoG 1 is one of the most abundant forms of oxidative DNA damage (2). Due to its ability to form a Hoogstein-type base pair with adenine (3), 8-oxoG is miscoding (4) and mutagenic, resulting in G3 T transversions in bacterial and eukaryotic cells (5, 6). The potential harmful effects of this lesion are avoided by base excision repair. In Escherichia coli, formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase (Fpg, EC 3.2.2.23) removes 8-oxoG, Me-FaPy, and several structurally related lesions from damaged DNA (7,8). Fpg is a component of the "GO system" that includes MutY, a mismatch adenine-DNA glycosylase, and MutT, an 8-oxodGTPase (9, 10); E. coli strains deficient in any of these genes are strong mutators (11).Fpg shares significant sequence homology with endonuclease VIII (Nei) of E. coli (12). Both proteins belong to a family unrelated by sequence or tertiary structure to a larger family of DNA glycosylases, for which the prototype is endonuclease III (Nth) (13,14). The substrate specificity of Fpg differs significantly from Nei (7, 8, 15) but closely resembles that of the eukaryotic 8-oxoguanine-DNA glycosylase, Ogg1, a member of the Nth family (14,16,17). Fpg also possesses AP lyase activity, nicking the phosphodiester backbone of DNA at the site of the lesion. Base excision by Fpg is followed immediately by two -elimination steps, resulting in a single nucleotide gap flanked by phosphate termini (7). A Schiff base intermediate, involving Pro-1 of the enzyme and C1Ј of the damaged nucleotide, forms early in the reaction sequence and can be reductively trapped by treatment with NaBH 4 forming a stable covalent complex (18,19). The mechanism of cleavage is similar to that of Nei (15,20), but not to that of Ogg1 where only one -elimination occurs, and the efficiency of the elimination step is very low compared with base excision (16,17).Comparing the structures of Fpg, Nei, and Ogg1 provides a unique opportunity to analyze features of damage recognition and catalysis common to DNA glycosylases/AP lyases. The presence of DNA enhances the analytic power of the model by revealing the precise nature of enzyme-DNA interactions. The structure of the human Ogg1 catalytic domain complexed to DNA has been solved (21, 22), as has the structure of E. coli Nei covalently cross-linked to DNA by NaBH 4 (23). The structure of Fpg from Thermus thermophilus HB8 (Tth-Fpg) has recently been solved in the absence of DNA (24). Although mechanisms for lesion recognition and catalysis by Fpg have been suggested on the basis of this structure and on earlier biochemical studies of E. coli Fpg (8,18,24,25), many questions remain unanswered regarding the mode of Fpg-DNA interactions and the catalytic reaction mechanism of this important DNA repair protein.To investigate the mechanisms of Fpg-DNA interactions, we have utilized NaBH 4 reduction of the Schiff base intermediate t...
contributed equally to this work Endonuclease VIII (Nei) of Escherichia coli is a DNA repair enzyme that excises oxidized pyrimidines from DNA. Nei shares with formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase (Fpg) sequence homology and a similar mechanism of action: the latter involves removal of the damaged base followed by two sequential b-elimination steps. However, Nei differs signi®cantly from Fpg in substrate speci®city. We determined the structure of Nei covalently crosslinked to a 13mer oligodeoxynucleotide duplex at 1.25 A Ê resolution. The crosslink is derived from a Schiff base intermediate that precedes b-elimination and is stabilized by reduction with NaBH 4 . Nei consists of two domains connected by a hinge region, creating a DNA binding cleft between domains. DNA in the complex is sharply kinked, the deoxyribitol moiety is bound covalently to Pro1 and everted from the duplex into the active site. Amino acids involved in substrate binding and catalysis are identi®ed. Molecular modeling and analysis of amino acid conservation suggest a site for recognition of the damaged base. Based on structural features of the complex and site-directed mutagenesis studies, we propose a catalytic mechanism for Nei.
The FTIR spectra of pure and isotopically diluted (H/D and D/H) polycrystalline L-glutamine, L-hystidine, L-tyrosine, DL-serine, L-threonine, di-, tri-glycine and di-glycine x HCl x H2O salt were measured in the range 4000-2000 cm(-1) at temperatures from 300 to 10 K. The frequencies of decoupled proton stretching mode bands upsilon1, which can be observed only at low temperature, were used for estimation of the of upsilon1-bands red shift, which occurs upon formation of H-bonds involving ionized NH3+ and/or peptide HN-CO groups. The empirical correlation between the red shift and H-bond length, which was found previously for binary gas phase H-bonded complexes, carbohydrates and nucleosides [M. Rozenberg, A. Loewenschuss and Y. Marcus, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2000, 2, 2699-2702; M. Rozenberg, C. Jung and G. Shoham, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2003, 5, 1533-1535], was now extended to H-bonded networks in polycrystalline amino acids and peptides. The energies of the different H-bonds present in the crystalline structures could also be successfully estimated from the well-established empirical correlation [A. V. Iogansen, Spectrochim. Acta, 1999, A55, 1585-1612] between this property and the red shifts of the corresponding upsilon1 mode bands.
Streptomyces griseus aminopeptidase (SGAP) is a double-zinc exopeptidase with a high preference toward large hydrophobic amino-terminus residues. It is a monomer of a relatively low molecular weight (30 kDa), it is heat stable, it displays a high and efficient catalytic turnover, and its activity is modulated by calcium ions. The small size, high activity, and heat stability make SGAP a very attractive enzyme for various biotechnological applications, among which is the processing of recombinant DNA proteins and fusion protein products. Several free amino acids, such as phenylalanine, leucine, and methionine, were found to act as weak inhibitors of SGAP and hence were chosen for structural studies. These inhibitors can potentially be regarded as product analogs because one of the products obtained in a normal enzymatic reaction is the cleaved amino terminal amino acid of the substrate. The current study includes the X-ray crystallographic analysis of the SGAP complexes with methionine (1.53 A resolution), leucine (1.70 A resolution), and phenylalanine (1.80 A resolution). These three high-resolution structures have been used to fully characterize the SGAP active site and to identify some of the functional groups of the enzyme that are involved in enzyme-substrate and enzyme-product interactions. A unique binding site for the terminal amine group of the substrate (including the side chains of Glu131 and Asp160, as well as the carbonyl group of Arg202) is indicated to play an important role in the binding and orientation of both the substrate and the product of the catalytic reaction. These studies also suggest that Glu131 and Tyr246 are directly involved in the catalytic mechanism of the enzyme. Both of these residues seem to be important for substrate binding and orientation, as well as the stabilization of the tetrahedral transition state of the enzyme-substrate complex. Glu131 is specifically suggested to function as a general base during catalysis by promoting the nucleophilic attack of the zinc-bound water/hydroxide on the substrate carbonyl carbon. The structures of the three SGAP complexes are compared with recent structures of three related aminopeptidases: Aeromonas proteolytica aminopeptidase (AAP), leucine aminopeptidase (LAP), and methionine aminopeptidase (MAP) and their complexes with corresponding inhibitors and analogs. These structural results have been used for the simulation of several species along the reaction coordinate and for the suggestion of a general scheme for the proteolytic reaction catalyzed by SGAP.
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