Role of a BRCT domain in the interaction of DNA ligase III-α with the DNA repair protein XRCC1

The BRCT domain (for BRCA1 carboxyl terminus) is a protein motif of unknown function, comprising approximately 100 amino acids in five conserved blocks denoted A–E. BRCT domains are present in the tumour suppressor protein BRCA1 [1–3], and the domain is found in over 40 other proteins, defining a su...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current biology 1998-07, Vol.8 (15), p.877-880
Hauptverfasser: Taylor, Richard M., Wickstead, Bill, Cronin, Sam, Caldecott, Keith W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The BRCT domain (for BRCA1 carboxyl terminus) is a protein motif of unknown function, comprising approximately 100 amino acids in five conserved blocks denoted A–E. BRCT domains are present in the tumour suppressor protein BRCA1 [1–3], and the domain is found in over 40 other proteins, defining a superfamily that includes DNA ligase III-α and the essential human DNA repair protein XRCC1. DNA ligase III-α and XRCC1 interact via their carboxyl termini, close to or within regions that contain a BRCT domain [4]. To examine whether the primary role of the carboxy-terminal BRCT domain of XRCC1 (denoted BRCT II) is to mediate the interaction with DNA ligase III-α, we identified the regions of the domain that are required and sufficient for the interaction. An XRCC1 protein in which the conserved D-block tryptophan was disrupted by point mutation retained the ability to interact with DNA ligase III-α, so this tryptophan must mediate a different, although conserved, role. XRCC1 in which the weakly conserved C-block was mutated lost the ability to interact with DNA ligase III-α. Moreover, 20 amino acids spanning the C-block of BRCT II conferred full DNA ligase III-α binding activity upon an unrelated polypeptide. An XRCC1 protein in which this 20mer was deleted could not maintain normal levels of DNA ligase III-α in transfected rodent cells, a phenotype associated with defective repair [5]. In summary, these data demonstrate that a BRCT domain can mediate a biologically important protein–protein interaction, and support the existence of additional roles.
ISSN:0960-9822
1879-0445
DOI:10.1016/S0960-9822(07)00350-8