• Title of article

    Crystal Structure of the First Eubacterial Mre11 Nuclease Reveals Novel Features that May Discriminate Substrates During DNA Repair

  • Author/Authors

    Debanu Das and Millie M. Georgiadis، نويسنده , , Davide Moiani، نويسنده , , Herbert L. Axelrod، نويسنده , , Mitchell D. Miller، نويسنده , , Daniel McMullan، نويسنده , , Kevin K. Jin، نويسنده , , Polat Abdubek، نويسنده , , Tamara Astakhova، نويسنده , , Prasad Burra، نويسنده , , Dennis Carlton، نويسنده , , Hsiu-Ju Chiu، نويسنده , , Thomas Clayton، نويسنده , , Marc C. Deller، نويسنده , , Lian Duan، نويسنده , , Dustin Ernst، نويسنده , , Julie Feuerhelm، نويسنده , , Joanna C. Grant، نويسنده , , Anna Grzechnik، نويسنده , , Slawomir K. Grzechnik، نويسنده , , Gye Won Han، نويسنده , , Lukasz Jaroszewski، نويسنده , , et al.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
  • Pages
    17
  • From page
    647
  • To page
    663
  • Abstract
    Mre11 nuclease plays a central role in the repair of cytotoxic and mutagenic DNA double-strand breaks. As X-ray structural information has been available only for the Pyrococcus furiosus enzyme (PfMre11), the conserved and variable features of this nuclease across the domains of life have not been experimentally defined. Our crystal structure and biochemical studies demonstrate that TM1635 from Thermotoga maritima, originally annotated as a putative nuclease, is an Mre11 endo/exonuclease (TmMre11) and the first such structure from eubacteria. TmMre11 and PfMre11 display similar overall structures, despite sequence identity in the twilight zone of only ∼20%. However, they differ substantially in their DNA-specificity domains and in their dimeric organization. Residues in the nuclease domain are highly conserved, but those in the DNA-specificity domain are not. The structural differences likely affect how Mre11 from different organisms recognize and interact with single-stranded DNA, double-stranded DNA and DNA hairpin structures during DNA repair. The TmMre11 nuclease active site has no bound metal ions, but is conserved in sequence and structure with the exception of a histidine that is important in PfMre11 nuclease activity. Nevertheless, biochemical characterization confirms that TmMre11 possesses both endonuclease and exonuclease activities on single-stranded and double-stranded DNA substrates, respectively.
  • Keywords
    Mre11 , nuclease , DNA repair , crystal structure , structural genomics
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Serial Year
    2010
  • Journal title
    Journal of Molecular Biology
  • Record number

    1251447