4.8 Article

Crystal structures of an archaeal class II DNA photolyase and its complex with UV-damaged duplex DNA

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 30, Issue 21, Pages 4437-4449

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1038/emboj.2011.313

Keywords

archaea; DNA repair; electron transfer; UV lesion; water cluster

Funding

  1. Volkswagen-Stiftung
  2. DFG [BA 985/10-3]

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Class II photolyases ubiquitously occur in plants, animals, prokaryotes and some viruses. Like the distantly related microbial class I photolyases, these enzymes repair UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) lesions within duplex DNA using blue/near-UV light. Methanosarcina mazei Mm0852 is a class II photolyase of the archaeal order of Methanosarcinales, and is closely related to plant and metazoan counterparts. Mm0852 catalyses light-driven DNA repair and photoreduction, but in contrast to class I enzymes lacks a high degree of binding discrimination between UV-damaged and intact duplex DNA. We solved crystal structures of Mm0852, the first one for a class II photolyase, alone and in complex with CPD lesion-containing duplex DNA. The lesion-binding mode differs from other photolyases by a larger DNA-binding site, and an unrepaired CPD lesion is found flipped into the active site and recognized by a cluster of five water molecules next to the bound 30-thymine base. Different from other members of the photolyase-cryptochrome family, class II photolyases appear to utilize an unusual, conserved tryptophane dyad as electron transfer pathway to the catalytic FAD cofactor. The EMBO Journal (2011) 30, 4437-4449. doi:10.1038/emboj.2011.313; Published online 2 September 2011

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