6 research outputs found
Self-Assembly of \u3cem\u3eEscherichia coli\u3c/em\u3e MutL and Its Complexes with DNA
The Escherichia coli MutL protein regulates the activity of several enzymes, including MutS, MutH, and UvrD, during methyl-directed mismatch repair of DNA. We have investigated the self-association properties of MutL and its binding to DNA using analytical sedimentation velocity and equilibrium. Self-association of MutL is quite sensitive to solution conditions. At 25 Ā°C in Tris at pH 8.3, MutL assembles into a heterogeneous mixture of large multimers. In the presence of potassium phosphate at pH 7.4, MutL forms primarily stable dimers, with the higher-order assembly states suppressed. The weight-average sedimentation coefficient of the MutL dimer in this buffer (sĢ
20,w) is equal to 5.20 Ā± 0.08 S, suggesting a highly asymmetric dimer (f/fo = 1.58 Ā± 0.02). Upon binding the nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue, AMPPNP/Mg2+, the MutL dimer becomes more compact (sĢ
20,w = 5.71 Ā± 0.08 S; f/fo = 1.45 Ā± 0.02), probably reflecting reorganization of the N-terminal ATPase domains. A MutL dimer binds to an 18 bp duplex with a 3ā²-(dT20) single-stranded flanking region, with apparent affinity in the micromolar range. AMPPNP binding to MutL increases its affinity for DNA by a factor of ā¼10. These results indicate that the presence of phosphate minimizes further MutL oligomerization beyond a dimer and that differences in solution conditions likely explain apparent discrepancies in previous studies of MutL assembly
General Methods for Analysis of Sequential ān-stepā Kinetic Mechanisms: Application to Single Turnover Kinetics of Helicase-Catalyzed DNA Unwinding
Helicase-catalyzed DNA unwinding is often studied using āall or noneā assays that detect only the final product of fully unwound DNA. Even using these assays, quantitative analysis of DNA unwinding time courses for DNA duplexes of different lengths, L, using ān-stepā sequential mechanisms, can reveal information about the number of intermediates in the unwinding reaction and the ākinetic step sizeā, m, defined as the average number of basepairs unwound between two successive rate limiting steps in the unwinding cycle. Simultaneous nonlinear least-squares analysis using ān-stepā sequential mechanisms has previously been limited by an inability to float the number of āunwinding stepsā, n, and m, in the fitting algorithm. Here we discuss the behavior of single turnover DNA unwinding time courses and describe novel methods for nonlinear least-squares analysis that overcome these problems. Analytic expressions for the time courses, f(ss)(t), when obtainable, can be written using gamma and incomplete gamma functions. When analytic expressions are not obtainable, the numerical solution of the inverse Laplace transform can be used to obtain f(ss)(t). Both methods allow n and m to be continuous fitting parameters. These approaches are generally applicable to enzymes that translocate along a lattice or require repetition of a series of steps before product formation