4.7 Article

A natural occurring bifunctional CPD/(6-4)-photolyase from the Antarctic bacterium Sphingomonas sp. UV9

Journal

APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 104, Issue 16, Pages 7037-7050

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00253-020-10734-5

Keywords

Photolyase; Antarctica; Sphingomonas; DNA damage; Photorepair

Funding

  1. PEDECIBA (Programa de Desarrollo de las Ciencias Basicas)
  2. CSIC [C667]
  3. ANII [FMV_3_2016_1_1226654]
  4. Comison Honoraria de Lucha Contra el Cancer
  5. ANII
  6. CAP (Comision Academica de Posgrado, UdelaR)
  7. ANII (Agencia Nacional de Investigacion e Innovacion) [PAT_X_2017_1_140739]
  8. CSIC (Comision Sectorial de Investigacion Cientifica)

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Photolyases are flavoproteins that repair ultraviolet-induced DNA lesions (cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer or CPD, and pyrimidine (6-4) pyrimidone photoproducts or (6-4)-PPs), using blue light as an energy source. These enzymes are substrate specific, meaning that a specific photolyase repairs either a CPD or a (6-4)-PP. In this work, we produced a class II CPD-photolyase (called as PhrSph98) from the Antarctic bacteriumSphingomonassp. UV9 by recombinant DNA technology and we purified the enzyme using immobilized metal affinity chromatography. By using an immunochemistry assay, with monoclonal antibodies against CPD and (6-4)-PP, we found that PhrSph98 repairs both DNA lesions. The result was confirmed by immunocytochemistry using immortalized non-tumorigenic human keratinocytes. Results from structure prediction, pocket computation, and molecular docking analyses showed that PhrSph98 has the two expected protein domains (light-harvesting antenna and a catalytic domain), a larger catalytic site as compared with photolyases produced by mesophilic organisms, and that both substrates fit the catalytic domain. The results obtained from predicted homology modeling suggest that the electron transfer pathway may occur following this pathway: Y389-W369-W390-F376-W381/FAD. The evolutionary reconstruction of PhrSph98 suggests that this is a missing link that reflects the transition of (6-4)-PP repair into the CPD repair ability for the class II CPD-photolyases. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of a naturally occurring bifunctional, CPD and (6-4)-PP, repairing enzyme.

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