Deinococcus radiodurans (Dr) has one of the most robust DNA repair systems, which is capable of withstanding extreme doses of ionizing radiation and other sources of DNA damage. DrRecA, a central enzyme of recombinational DNA repair, is essential for extreme radioresistance. In the presence of ATP, DrRecA forms nucleoprotein filaments on DNA, similar to other bacterial RecA and eukaryotic DNA strand exchange proteins. However, DrRecA catalyzes DNA strand exchange in a unique reverse pathway. Here, we study the dynamics of DrRecA filaments formed on individual molecules of duplex and single-stranded DNA, and we follow conformational transitions triggered by ATP hydrolysis. Our results reveal that ATP hydrolysis promotes rapid DrRecA dissociation from duplex DNA, whereas on single-stranded DNA, DrRecA filaments interconvert between stretched and compressed conformations, which is a behavior shared by E. coli RecA and human Rad51. This indicates a high conservation of conformational switching in nucleoprotein filaments and suggests that additional factors might contribute to an inverse pathway of DrRecA strand exchange.
RecA protein mediates homologous recombination repair in bacteria through assembly of long helical filaments on single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) in an ATP dependent manner. RecX, an important negative regulator of RecA, is known to inhibit RecA activity by stimulating the disassembly of RecA nucleoprotein filaments. Here we use a single-molecule approach to address the regulation of (E. coli) RecA-ssDNA filaments by RecX (E. coli) within the framework of distinct conformational states of RecA-ssDNA filament. Our findings revealed that RecX effectively binds the inactive conformation of RecA-ssDNA filaments and slows down the transition to the active state. Results of this work provide new mechanistic insights into the RecX-RecA interactions and highlight the importance of conformational transitions of RecA filaments as an additional level of regulation of its biological activity.
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