10 research outputs found

    Structure of the Endonuclease Domain of MutL: Unlicensed to Cut

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    DNA mismatch repair corrects errors that have escaped polymerase proofreading, increasing replication fidelity 100- to 1000-fold in organisms ranging from bacteria to humans. The MutL protein plays a central role in mismatch repair by coordinating multiple protein-protein interactions that signal strand removal upon mismatch recognition by MutS. Here we report the crystal structure of the endonuclease domain of Bacillus subtilis MutL. The structure is organized in dimerization and regulatory subdomains connected by a helical lever spanning the conserved endonuclease motif. Additional conserved motifs cluster around the lever and define a Zn2+-binding site that is critical for MutL function in vivo. The structure unveils a powerful inhibitory mechanism to prevent undesired nicking of newly replicated DNA and allows us to propose a model describing how the interaction with MutS and the processivity clamp could license the endonuclease activity of MutL. The structure also provides a molecular framework to propose and test additional roles of MutL in mismatch repair.American Cancer Society (Research Professor)Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC scholarship)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (CA21615)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (GM45190)Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC, 288295)Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (FR-1495/4-1)University of Michigan (Start-up funds

    Higher-Order Assembly of BRCC36-KIAA0157 Is Required for DUB Activity and Biological Function

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    BRCC36 is a Zn²⁺-dependent deubiquitinating enzyme (DUB) that hydrolyzes lysine-63-linked ubiquitin chains as part of distinct macromolecular complexes that participate in either interferon signaling or DNA-damage recognition. The MPN⁺ domain protein BRCC36 associates with pseudo DUB MPN⁻ proteins KIAA0157 or Abraxas, which are essential for BRCC36 enzymatic activity. To understand the basis for BRCC36 regulation, we have solved the structure of an active BRCC36-KIAA0157 heterodimer and an inactive BRCC36 homodimer. Structural and functional characterizations show how BRCC36 is switched to an active conformation by contacts with KIAA0157. Higher-order association of BRCC36 and KIAA0157 into a dimer of heterodimers (super dimers) was required for DUB activity and interaction with targeting proteins SHMT2 and RAP80. These data provide an explanation of how an inactive pseudo DUB allosterically activates a cognate DUB partner and implicates super dimerization as a new regulatory mechanism underlying BRCC36 DUB activity, subcellular localization, and biological function

    Trapping and visualizing intermediate steps in the mismatch repair pathway in vivo

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/101876/1/mmi12389-sup-0001-si.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/101876/2/mmi12389.pd
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