4.6 Article

E2-mediated Small Ubiquitin-like Modifier (SUMO) Modification of Thymine DNA Glycosylase Is Efficient but Not Selective for the Enzyme-Product Complex

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 22, Pages 15810-15819

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M114.572081

Keywords

Base Excision Repair (BER); DNA Methylation; DNA Repair; Enzyme Turnover; Post-translational Modification (PTM); Small Ubiquitin-like Modifier (SUMO); Sumoylation; Ubiquitin-conjugating Enzyme (E2 Enzyme)

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [S10-OD011969]

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Thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG) initiates the repair of GT mismatches that arise by deamination of 5-methylcytosine (mC), and it excises 5-formylcytosine and 5-carboxylcytosine, oxidized forms of mC. TDG functions in active DNA demethylation and is essential for embryonic development. TDG forms a tight enzyme-product complex with abasic DNA, which severely impedes enzymatic turnover. Modification of TDG by small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) proteins weakens its binding to abasic DNA. It was proposed that sumoylation of product-bound TDG regulates product release, with SUMO conjugation and deconjugation needed for each catalytic cycle, but this model remains unsubstantiated. We examined the efficiency and specificity of TDG sumoylation using in vitro assays with purified E1 and E2 enzymes, finding that TDG is modified efficiently by SUMO-1 and SUMO-2. Remarkably, we observed similar modification rates for free TDG and TDG bound to abasic or undamaged DNA. To examine the conjugation step directly, we determined modification rates (k(obs)) using preformed E2 approximate to SUMO-1 thioester. The hyperbolic dependence of k(obs) on TDG concentration gives k(max) = 1.6 min(-1) and K-1/2 = 0.55 m, suggesting that E2 approximate to SUMO-1 has higher affinity for TDG than for the SUMO targets RanGAP1 and p53 (peptide). Whereas sumoylation substantially weakens TDG binding to DNA, TDG approximate to SUMO-1 still binds relatively tightly to AP-DNA (K-d approximate to 50 nm). Although E2 approximate to SUMO-1 exhibits no specificity for product-bound TDG, the relatively high conjugation efficiency raises the possibility that E2-mediated sumoylation could stimulate product release in vivo. This and other implications for the biological role and mechanism of TDG sumoylation are discussed.

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