4.8 Article

Encounter and extrusion of an intrahelical lesion by a DNA repair enzyme

Journal

NATURE
Volume 462, Issue 7274, Pages 762-U79

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/nature08561

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [GM044853, GM047467, CA100742, GM030804]
  2. the National Science Foundation
  3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  4. National Cancer Center

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How living systems detect the presence of genotoxic damage embedded in a million-fold excess of undamaged DNA is an unresolved question in biology. Here we have captured and structurally elucidated a base-excision DNA repair enzyme, MutM, at the stage of initial encounter with a damaged nucleobase, 8-oxoguanine (oxoG), nested within a DNA duplex. Three structures of intrahelical oxoG-encounter complexes are compared with sequence-matched structures containing a normal G base in place of an oxoG lesion. Although the protein-DNA interfaces in the matched complexes differ by only two atoms-those that distinguish oxoG from G-their pronounced structural differences indicate that MutM can detect a lesion in DNA even at the earliest stages of encounter. All-atom computer simulations show the pathway by which encounter of the enzyme with the lesion causes extrusion from the DNA duplex, and they elucidate the critical free energy difference between oxoG and G along the extrusion pathway.

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