Literature DB >> 18767160

Insights into the DNA cleavage mechanism of human LINE-1 retrotransposon endonuclease.

Kostas Repanas1, Gloria Fuentes, Serge X Cohen, Alexandre M J J Bonvin, Anastassis Perrakis.   

Abstract

The human LINE-1 endonuclease (L1-EN) contributes in defining the genomic integration sites of the abundant human L1 and Alu retrotransposons. LINEs have been considered as possible vehicles for gene delivery and understanding the mechanism of L1-EN could help engineering them as genetic tools. We tested the in vitro activity of point mutants in three L1-EN residues--Asp145, Arg155, Ile204--that are key for DNA cleavage, and determined their crystal structures. The L1-EN structure remains overall unaffected by the mutations, which change the enzyme activity but leave DNA cleavage sequence specificity mostly unaffected. To better understand the mechanism of L1-EN, we performed molecular dynamics simulations using as model the structures of wild type EN-L1, of two betaB6-betaB5 loop exchange mutants we have described previously to be important for DNA recognition, of the R155A mutant from this study, and of the homologous TRAS1 endonuclease: all confirm a rigid scaffold. The simulations crucially indicate that the betaB6-betaB5 loop shows an anticorrelated motion with the surface loops betaA6-betaA5 and betaB3-alphaB1. The latter loop harbors N118, a residue that alters DNA cleavage specificity in homologous endonucleases, and implies that the plasticity and correlated motion of these loops has a functional importance in DNA recognition and binding. To further explore how these loops are possibly involved in DNA binding, we docked computationally two DNA substrates to our structure, one involving a flipped-out nucleotide downstream the scissile phosphodiester; and one not. The models for both scenarios are feasible and agree with the hypotheses derived from the dynamic simulations. The reduced cleavage activity we have observed for the I204Y mutant above however, favors the flipped out nucleotide model.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 18767160     DOI: 10.1002/prot.22201

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proteins        ISSN: 0887-3585


  2 in total

1.  Affinity proteomics reveals human host factors implicated in discrete stages of LINE-1 retrotransposition.

Authors:  Martin S Taylor; John LaCava; Paolo Mita; Kelly R Molloy; Cheng Ran Lisa Huang; Donghui Li; Emily M Adney; Hua Jiang; Kathleen H Burns; Brian T Chait; Michael P Rout; Jef D Boeke; Lixin Dai
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2013-11-21       Impact factor: 41.582

2.  Structural dissection of sequence recognition and catalytic mechanism of human LINE-1 endonuclease.

Authors:  Ian Miller; Max Totrov; Lioubov Korotchkina; Denis N Kazyulkin; Andrei V Gudkov; Sergey Korolev
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2021-11-08       Impact factor: 16.971

  2 in total

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