Crystal structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis O 6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase protein clusters assembled on to damaged DNA

Mycobacterium tuberculosis O 6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MtOGT) contributes to protect the bacterial GC-rich genome against the pro-mutagenic potential of O6-methylated guanine in DNA. Several strains of M. tuberculosis found worldwide encode a point-mutated O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltra...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biochemical journal 2016-01, Vol.473 (2), p.123-133
Hauptverfasser: Miggiano, Riccardo, Perugino, Giuseppe, Ciaramella, Maria, Serpe, Mario, Rejman, Dominik, Páv, Ondřej, Pohl, Radek, Garavaglia, Silvia, Lahiri, Samarpita, Rizzi, Menico, Rossi, Franca
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Mycobacterium tuberculosis O 6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MtOGT) contributes to protect the bacterial GC-rich genome against the pro-mutagenic potential of O6-methylated guanine in DNA. Several strains of M. tuberculosis found worldwide encode a point-mutated O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (OGT) variant (MtOGT-R37L), which displays an arginine-to-leucine substitution at position 37 of the poorly functionally characterized N-terminal domain of the protein. Although the impact of this mutation on the MtOGT activity has not yet been proved in vivo, we previously demonstrated that a recombinant MtOGT-R37L variant performs a suboptimal alkylated-DNA repair in vitro, suggesting a direct role for the Arg37-bearing region in catalysis. The crystal structure of MtOGT complexed with modified DNA solved in the present study reveals details of the protein–protein and protein–DNA interactions occurring during alkylated-DNA binding, and the protein capability also to host unmodified bases inside the active site, in a fully extrahelical conformation. Our data provide the first experimental picture at the atomic level of a possible mode of assembling three adjacent MtOGT monomers on the same monoalkylated dsDNA molecule, and disclose the conformational flexibility of discrete regions of MtOGT, including the Arg37-bearing random coil. This peculiar structural plasticity of MtOGT could be instrumental to proper protein clustering at damaged DNA sites, as well as to protein–DNA complexes disassembling on repair.
ISSN:0264-6021
1470-8728
DOI:10.1042/BJ20150833