Physical and Functional Mapping of the Replication Protein A Interaction Domain of the Werner and Bloom Syndrome Helicases
The single-stranded DNA-binding protein replication protein A (RPA) interacts with several human RecQ DNA helicases that have important roles in maintaining genomic stability; however, the mechanism for RPA stimulation of DNA unwinding is not well understood. To map regions of Werner syndrome helica...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 2005-08, Vol.280 (33), p.29494-29505 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The single-stranded DNA-binding protein replication protein A (RPA) interacts with several human RecQ DNA helicases that have
important roles in maintaining genomic stability; however, the mechanism for RPA stimulation of DNA unwinding is not well
understood. To map regions of Werner syndrome helicase (WRN) that interact with RPA, yeast two-hybrid studies, WRN affinity
pull-down experiments and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays with purified recombinant WRN protein fragments were performed.
The results indicated that WRN has two RPA binding sites, a high affinity N-terminal site, and a lower affinity C-terminal
site. Based on results from mapping studies, we sought to determine if the WRN N-terminal region harboring the high affinity
RPA interaction site was important for RPA stimulation of WRN helicase activity. To accomplish this, we tested a catalytically
active WRN helicase domain fragment (WRN H-R ) that lacked the N-terminal RPA interaction site for its ability to unwind long DNA duplex substrates, which the wild-type
enzyme can efficiently unwind only in the presence of RPA. WRN H-R helicase activity was significantly reduced on RPA-dependent partial duplex substrates compared with full-length WRN despite
the presence of RPA. These results clearly demonstrate that, although WRN H-R had comparable helicase activity to full-length WRN on short duplex substrates, its ability to unwind RPA-dependent WRN helicase
substrates was significantly impaired. Similarly, a Bloom syndrome helicase (BLM) domain fragment, BLM 642â1290 , that lacked its N-terminal RPA interaction site also unwound short DNA duplex substrates similar to wild-type BLM, but was
severely compromised in its ability to unwind long DNA substrates that full-length BLM helicase could unwind in the presence
of RPA. These results suggest that the physical interaction between RPA and WRN or BLM helicases plays an important role in
the mechanism for RPA stimulation of helicase-catalyzed DNA unwinding. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1074/jbc.M500653200 |