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Understanding APE1 cellular functions by the structural preference of exonuclease activities

Journal

COMPUTATIONAL AND STRUCTURAL BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 19, Issue -, Pages 3682-3691

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.csbj.2021.06.036

Keywords

APE1; Exonuclease; APE1-dsDNA complex; DNA repair

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) of Taiwan [MOST 109-2113-M-009-023, MOST 1072628B009001, MOST 1082636B009004, MOST 1092636B009004, MOST 110-2636-B-009-009]
  2. Center For Intelligent Drug Systems and Smart Bio-devices (IDS2B)
  3. Smart Platform of Dynamic Systems Biology for Therapeutic Development project from The Featured Areas Research Center Program within Ministry of Education (MOE) in Taiwan
  4. NCTU-KMU JOINT RESEARCH PROJECT, Kaohsiung Medical University [NCTUKMU108DR01]

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Mammalian apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease 1 (APE1) has versatile enzymatic functions related to DNA repair, cancer cell growth, and drug resistance. The exonucleolytic cleavage of APE1 exhibits complex substrate selection patterns, with factors such as the structure formed by the RM bridge providing substrate selectivity.
Mammalian apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease 1 (APE1) has versatile enzymatic functions, including redox, endonuclease, and exonuclease activities. APE1 is thus broadly associated with pathways in DNA repair, cancer cell growth, and drug resistance. Unlike its AP site-specific endonuclease activity in Base excision repair (BER), the 3'-5' exonucleolytic cleavage of APE1 using the same active site exhibits complex substrate selection patterns, which are key to the biological functions. This work aims to integrate molecular structural information and biocatalytic properties to deduce the substrate recognition mechanism of APE1 as an exonuclease and make connection to its diverse functionalities in the cell. In particular, an induced space-filling model emerges in which a bridge-like structure is formed by Arg177 and Met270 (RM bridge) upon substrate binding, causing the active site to adopt a long and narrow product pocket for hosting the leaving group of an AP site or the 3'-end nucleotide. Rather than distinguishing bases as other exonucleases, the hydrophobicity and steric hindrance due to the APE1 product pocket provides selectivity for substrate structures, such as matched or mismatched blunt-ended dsDNA, recessed dsDNA, gapped dsDNA, and nicked dsDNA with 3'-end overhang shorter than 2 nucleotides. These dsDNAs are similar to the native substrates in BER proofreading, BER for trinucleotide repeats (TNR), Nucleotide incision repair (NIR), DNA single-strand breaks (SSB), SSB with damaged bases, and apoptosis. Integration of in vivo studies, in vitro biochemical assays, and structural analysis is thus essential for linking the APE1 exonuclease activity to the specific roles in cellular functions. (C) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of Research Network of Computational and Structural Biotechnology.

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