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The role of filamentation in activation and DNA sequence specificity of the sequence-specific endonuclease SgrAI

Filament formation by metabolic, biosynthetic, and other enzymes has recently come into focus as a mechanism to fine-tune enzyme activity in the cell. Filamentation is key to the function of SgrAI, a sequence-specific DNA endonuclease that has served as a model system to provide some of the deepest...

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Autores principales: Lyumkis, Dmitry, Horton, Nancy C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Portland Press Ltd. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9788392/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36398769
http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/BST20220547
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author Lyumkis, Dmitry
Horton, Nancy C.
author_facet Lyumkis, Dmitry
Horton, Nancy C.
author_sort Lyumkis, Dmitry
collection PubMed
description Filament formation by metabolic, biosynthetic, and other enzymes has recently come into focus as a mechanism to fine-tune enzyme activity in the cell. Filamentation is key to the function of SgrAI, a sequence-specific DNA endonuclease that has served as a model system to provide some of the deepest insights into the biophysical characteristics of filamentation and its functional consequences. Structure-function analyses reveal that, in the filamentous state, SgrAI stabilizes an activated enzyme conformation that leads to accelerated DNA cleavage activity and expanded DNA sequence specificity. The latter is thought to be mediated by sequence-specific DNA structure, protein–DNA interactions, and a disorder-to-order transition in the protein, which collectively affect the relative stabilities of the inactive, non-filamentous conformation and the active, filamentous conformation of SgrAI bound to DNA. Full global kinetic modeling of the DNA cleavage pathway reveals a slow, rate-limiting, second-order association rate constant for filament assembly, and simulations of in vivo activity predict that filamentation is superior to non-filamenting mechanisms in ensuring rapid activation and sequestration of SgrAI's DNA cleavage activity on phage DNA and away from the host chromosome. In vivo studies demonstrate the critical requirement for accelerated DNA cleavage by SgrAI in its biological role to safeguard the bacterial host. Collectively, these data have advanced our understanding of how filamentation can regulate enzyme structure and function, while the experimental strategies used for SgrAI can be applied to other enzymatic systems to identify novel functional roles for filamentation.
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spelling pubmed-97883922023-01-06 The role of filamentation in activation and DNA sequence specificity of the sequence-specific endonuclease SgrAI Lyumkis, Dmitry Horton, Nancy C. Biochem Soc Trans Review Articles Filament formation by metabolic, biosynthetic, and other enzymes has recently come into focus as a mechanism to fine-tune enzyme activity in the cell. Filamentation is key to the function of SgrAI, a sequence-specific DNA endonuclease that has served as a model system to provide some of the deepest insights into the biophysical characteristics of filamentation and its functional consequences. Structure-function analyses reveal that, in the filamentous state, SgrAI stabilizes an activated enzyme conformation that leads to accelerated DNA cleavage activity and expanded DNA sequence specificity. The latter is thought to be mediated by sequence-specific DNA structure, protein–DNA interactions, and a disorder-to-order transition in the protein, which collectively affect the relative stabilities of the inactive, non-filamentous conformation and the active, filamentous conformation of SgrAI bound to DNA. Full global kinetic modeling of the DNA cleavage pathway reveals a slow, rate-limiting, second-order association rate constant for filament assembly, and simulations of in vivo activity predict that filamentation is superior to non-filamenting mechanisms in ensuring rapid activation and sequestration of SgrAI's DNA cleavage activity on phage DNA and away from the host chromosome. In vivo studies demonstrate the critical requirement for accelerated DNA cleavage by SgrAI in its biological role to safeguard the bacterial host. Collectively, these data have advanced our understanding of how filamentation can regulate enzyme structure and function, while the experimental strategies used for SgrAI can be applied to other enzymatic systems to identify novel functional roles for filamentation. Portland Press Ltd. 2022-12-16 2022-11-18 /pmc/articles/PMC9788392/ /pubmed/36398769 http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/BST20220547 Text en © 2022 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article published by Portland Press Limited on behalf of the Biochemical Society and distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC BY) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) . Open access for this article was enabled by the participation of the University of Arizona in an all-inclusive Read & Publish agreement with Portland Press and the Biochemical Society.
spellingShingle Review Articles
Lyumkis, Dmitry
Horton, Nancy C.
The role of filamentation in activation and DNA sequence specificity of the sequence-specific endonuclease SgrAI
title The role of filamentation in activation and DNA sequence specificity of the sequence-specific endonuclease SgrAI
title_full The role of filamentation in activation and DNA sequence specificity of the sequence-specific endonuclease SgrAI
title_fullStr The role of filamentation in activation and DNA sequence specificity of the sequence-specific endonuclease SgrAI
title_full_unstemmed The role of filamentation in activation and DNA sequence specificity of the sequence-specific endonuclease SgrAI
title_short The role of filamentation in activation and DNA sequence specificity of the sequence-specific endonuclease SgrAI
title_sort role of filamentation in activation and dna sequence specificity of the sequence-specific endonuclease sgrai
topic Review Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9788392/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36398769
http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/BST20220547
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