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Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (
ATPase
)
65,361
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
cDNA corresponding to OsRad51 protein was isolated from cDNA library of rice flowers (Oryza sativa, Indica cultivar group) and cloned in to pET28a expression vector. The protein was over expressed in E. coli BL21 (DE3) and purified. Purified OsRad51 could bind single and double stranded DNA, however it showed higher affinity for single stranded DNA. Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) studies of OsRad51-DNA complexes showed that this protein formed ring like structures and bound DNA forming filaments. OsRad51 protein promoted renaturation of complementary single strands in to duplex DNA molecules and also showed
ATPase
activity, which was stimulated by single strand DNA. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) assays revealed that OsRad51 promoted homology dependent renaturation as well as strand exchange reactions. Renaturation activity was ATP dependent; however strand exchange activity was ATP independent. This is the first report on in vitro characterization of
Rad51
protein from crop plants.
...
PMID:Homologous recombination properties of OsRad51, a recombinase from rice. 1869 45
Human
Rad51
(HsRad51) catalyzes the strand exchange reaction, a crucial step in homologous recombination, by forming a filamentous complex with DNA. The structure of this filament is modified by ATP, which is required and hydrolyzed for the reaction. We analyzed the structure and the ATP-promoted conformational change of this filament. We systematically replaced aromatic residues in the protein, one at a time, with tryptophan, a fluorescent probe, and examined its effect on the activities (DNA binding,
ATPase
, ATP-promoted conformational change, and strand exchange reaction) and the fluorescence changes upon binding of ATP and DNA. Some residues were also replaced with alanine. We thus obtained structural information about various positions of the protein in solution. All the proteins conserved, at least partially, their activities. However, the replacement of histidine at position 294 (H294) and phenylalanine at 129 (F129) affected the ATP-induced conformational change of the DNA-HsRad51 filament, although it did not prevent DNA binding. F129 is considered to be close to the ATP-binding site and to H294 of a neighboring subunit. ATP probably modifies the structure around F129 and affects the subunit/subunit contact around H294 and the structure of the DNA-binding site. The replacement also reduced the DNA-dependent
ATPase
activity, suggesting that these residues are also involved in the transmission of the allosteric effect of DNA to the ATP-binding site, which is required for the stimulation of
ATPase
activity by DNA. The fluorescence analyses supported the structural change of the DNA-binding site by ATP and that of the ATP-binding site by DNA. This information will be useful to build a molecular model of the
Rad51
-DNA complex and to understand the mechanism of activation of
Rad51
by ATP and that of the
Rad51
-promoted strand exchange reaction.
...
PMID:Structural analysis of the human Rad51 protein-DNA complex filament by tryptophan fluorescence scanning analysis: transmission of allosteric effects between ATP binding and DNA binding. 1876 48
The BRCA2 tumor suppressor is important in maintaining genomic stability. BRCA2 is proposed to control the availability, cellular localization and DNA binding activity of the central homologous recombination protein, RAD51, with loss of BRCA2 resulting in defective homologous recombination. Nevertheless, the roles of BRCA2 in regulating RAD51 and how other proteins implicated in RAD51 regulation, such as RAD52 and RAD54 function relative to BRCA2 is not known. In this study, we tested whether defective homologous recombination in Brca2-depleted mouse hybridoma cells could be rectified by expression of mouse
Rad51
or the
Rad51
-interacting mouse proteins, Rad52 and Rad54. In the Brca2-depleted cells, defective homologous recombination can be restored by over-expression of wild-type mouse
Rad51
, but not mouse Rad52 or Rad54. Correction of the homologous recombination defect requires
Rad51
ATPase
activity. A sizeable fraction ( approximately 50%) of over-expressed wild-type
Rad51
is nuclear localized. The restoration of homologous recombination in the presence of a low (i.e., non-functional) level of Brca2 by wild-type
Rad51
over-expression is unexpected. We suggest that
Rad51
may access the nuclear compartment in a Brca2-independent manner and when
Rad51
is over-expressed, the normal requirement for Brca2 control over
Rad51
function in homologous recombination is dispensable. Our studies support loss of
Rad51
function as a critical underlying factor in the homologous recombination defect in the Brca2-depleted cells.
...
PMID:Recovery of deficient homologous recombination in Brca2-depleted mouse cells by wild-type Rad51 expression. 1899 72
Recombinases of the highly conserved RecA/
Rad51
family play central roles in homologous recombination and DNA double-stranded break repair. RecA/
Rad51
enzymes form presynaptic filaments on single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) that are allosterically activated to catalyze
ATPase
and DNA strand-exchange reactions. Information is conveyed between DNA- and ATP-binding sites, in part, by a highly conserved glutamine residue (Gln194 in Escherichia coli RecA) that acts as an allosteric switch. The T4 UvsX protein is a divergent RecA ortholog and contains histidine (His195) in place of glutamine at the allosteric switch position. UvsX and RecA catalyze similar strand-exchange reactions, but differ in other properties. UvsX produces both ADP and AMP as products of its ssDNA-dependent
ATPase
activity--a property that is unique among characterized recombinases. Details of the kinetics of ssDNA-dependent ATP hydrolysis reactions indicate that UvsX-ssDNA presynaptic filaments are asymmetric and contain two classes of
ATPase
active sites: one that generates ADP, and another that generates AMP. Active-site asymmetry is reduced by mutations at the His195 position, since UvsX-H195Q and UvsX-H195A mutants both exhibit stronger ssDNA-dependent
ATPase
activity, with lower cooperativity and markedly higher ADP/AMP product ratios, than wild-type UvsX. Reduced active-site asymmetry correlates strongly with reduced ssDNA-binding affinity and DNA strand-exchange activity in both H195Q and H195A mutants. These and other results support a model in which allosteric switch residue His195 controls the formation of an asymmetric conformation of UvsX-ssDNA filaments that is active in DNA strand exchange. The implications of our findings for UvsX recombination functions, and for RecA functions in general, are discussed.
...
PMID:Role of allosteric switch residue histidine 195 in maintaining active-site asymmetry in presynaptic filaments of bacteriophage T4 UvsX recombinase. 1902 26
Previous studies showed that the K342E substitution in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Rad51
protein increases the interaction with Rad54 protein in the two-hybrid system, leads to increased sensitivity to the alkylating agent MMS and hyper-recombination in an oligonucleotide-mediated gene targeting assay. K342 localizes in loop 2, a region of
Rad51
whose function is not well understood. Here, we show that
Rad51
-K342E displays DNA-independent and DNA-dependent
ATPase
activities, owing to its ability to form filaments in the absence of a DNA lattice. These filaments exhibit a compressed pitch of 81 A, whereas filaments of wild-type
Rad51
and
Rad51
-K342E on DNA form extended filaments with a 97 A pitch.
Rad51
-K342E shows near normal binding to ssDNA, but displays a defect in dsDNA binding, resulting in less stable protein-dsDNA complexes. The mutant protein is capable of catalyzing the DNA strand exchange reaction and is insensitive to inhibition by the early addition of dsDNA. Wild-type
Rad51
protein is inhibited under such conditions, because of its ability to bind dsDNA. No significant changes in the interaction between
Rad51
-K342E and Rad54 could be identified. These findings suggest that loop 2 contributes to the primary DNA-binding site in
Rad51
, controlling filament formation and
ATPase
activity.
...
PMID:Loop 2 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rad51 protein regulates filament formation and ATPase activity. 1903 58
Rad51
is the central catalyst of homologous recombination in eukaryotes and is thus critical for maintaining genomic integrity. Recent crystal structures of filaments formed by
Rad51
and the closely related archeal RadA and eubacterial RecA proteins place the
ATPase
site at the protomeric interface. To test the relevance of this feature, we mutated conserved residues at this interface and examined their effects on key activities of
Rad51
: ssDNA-stimulated ATP hydrolysis, DNA binding, polymerization on DNA substrates and catalysis of strand-exchange reactions. Our results show that the interface seen in the crystal structures is very important for nucleoprotein filament formation. H352 and R357 of yeast
Rad51
are essential for assembling the catalytically competent form of the enzyme on DNA substrates and coordinating its activities. However, contrary to some previous suggestions, neither of these residues is critical for ATP hydrolysis.
...
PMID:Inter-subunit interactions that coordinate Rad51's activities. 1906 3
Rad51
is a key protein in homologous recombination performing homology search and DNA strand invasion. After DNA strand exchange
Rad51
protein is stuck on the double-stranded heteroduplex DNA product of DNA strand invasion. This is a problem, because DNA polymerase requires access to the invading 3'-OH end to initiate DNA synthesis. Here we show that, the Saccharomyces cerevisiae dsDNA motor protein Rad54 solves this problem by dissociating yeast
Rad51
protein bound to the heteroduplex DNA after DNA strand invasion. The reaction required species-specific interaction between both proteins and the
ATPase
activity of Rad54 protein. This mechanism rationalizes the in vivo requirement of Rad54 protein for the turnover of
Rad51
foci and explains the observed dependence of the transition from homologous pairing to DNA synthesis on Rad54 protein in vegetative and meiotic yeast cells.
...
PMID:RAD54 controls access to the invading 3'-OH end after RAD51-mediated DNA strand invasion in homologous recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 1907 97
Rad54 protein is a key member of the RAD52 epistasis group required for homologous recombination in eukaryotes. Rad54 is a duplex DNA translocase that remodels both DNA and protein-DNA complexes, and functions at multiple steps in the recombination process. Here we use biochemical criteria to demonstrate the existence of this important protein in a prokaryotic organism. The Sulfolobus solfataricus Rad54 (SsoRad54) protein is a double-strand DNA-dependent
ATPase
that can alter the topology of duplex DNA. Like its eukaryotic homolog, it interacts directly with the S. solfataricus
Rad51
homologue, SsoRadA, to stimulate DNA strand exchange. Confirmation of this protein as an authentic Rad54 homolog establishes an essential phylogenetic bridge for identifying Rad54 homologs in the archaeal and bacterial domains.
...
PMID:An archaeal Rad54 protein remodels DNA and stimulates DNA strand exchange by RadA. 1928 50
Rad51
is the core component of the eukaryotic homologous recombination machinery and assembles into elongated nucleoprotein filaments on DNA. We have used total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy and a DNA curtain assay to investigate the dynamics of individual Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Rad51
nucleoprotein filaments. For these experiments the DNA molecules were end-labeled with single fluorescent semiconducting nanocrystals. The assembly and disassembly of the
Rad51
nucleoprotein filaments were visualized by tracking the location of the labeled DNA end in real time. Using this approach, we have analyzed yeast
Rad51
under a variety of different reaction conditions to assess parameters that impact the stability of the nucleoprotein filament. We show that
Rad51
readily dissociates from DNA in the presence of ADP or in the absence of nucleotide cofactor, but that free ATP in solution confers a fivefold increase in the stability of the nucleoprotein filaments. We also probe how protein dissociation is coupled to ATP binding and hydrolysis by examining the effects of ATP concentration, and by the use of the nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue adenosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imido) triphosphate and
ATPase
active-site mutants. Finally, we demonstrate that the
Rad51
gain-of-function mutant I345T dissociates from DNA with kinetics nearly identical to that of wild-type
Rad51
, but assembles 30% more rapidly. Together, these results provide a framework for studying the biochemical behaviors of S. cerevisiae
Rad51
nucleoprotein filaments at the single-molecule level.
...
PMID:Visualizing the disassembly of S. cerevisiae Rad51 nucleoprotein filaments. 1932 67
DNA recombinases (RecA in bacteria,
Rad51
in eukarya and RadA in archaea) catalyse strand exchange between homologous DNA molecules, the central reaction of homologous recombination, and are among the most conserved DNA repair proteins known. RecA is the sole protein responsible for this reaction in bacteria, whereas there are several
Rad51
paralogs that cooperate to catalyse strand exchange in eukaryotes. All archaea have at least one (and as many as four) RadA paralog, but their function remains unclear. Herein, we show that the three RadA paralogs encoded by the Sulfolobus solfataricus genome are expressed under normal growth conditions and are not UV inducible. We demonstrate that one of these proteins, Sso2452, which is representative of the large archaeal RadC subfamily of archaeal RadA paralogs, functions as an
ATPase
that binds tightly to single-stranded DNA. However, Sso2452 is not an active recombinase in vitro and inhibits D-loop formation by RadA. We present the high-resolution crystal structure of Sso2452, which reveals key structural differences from the canonical RecA family recombinases that may explain its functional properties. The possible roles of the archaeal RadA paralogs in vivo are discussed.
...
PMID:Structural and functional characterisation of a conserved archaeal RadA paralog with antirecombinase activity. 1941 20
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