Summary information and primary citation
- PDB-id
-
1zqr;
SNAP-derived features in text and
JSON formats
- Class
- transferase-DNA
- Method
- X-ray (3.7 Å)
- Summary
- DNA polymerase beta (e.c.2.7.7.7)-DNA complex, soaked
in the presence of nicl2
- Reference
-
Pelletier H, Sawaya MR (1996): "Characterization
of the metal ion binding helix-hairpin-helix motifs in
human DNA polymerase beta by X-ray structural
analysis." Biochemistry,
35, 12778-12787. doi: 10.1021/bi960790i.
- Abstract
- X-ray crystallographic studies have shown that DNA
binding by human polymerase beta (pol beta) occurs
primarily through two structurally and sequentially
homologous helix-hairpin-helix (HhH) motifs, one in the
fingers subdomain and the other in the 8-kDa domain
[Pelletier, H., Sawaya, M. R., Wolfle, W., Wilson, S. H., &
Kraut, J. (1996a) Biochemistry 35, 12742-12761]. In that
DNA binding by each HhH motif is facilitated by a metal
ion, we set out to determine the identity of the metal ion
that most likely binds to the HhH motif in vivo. Crystal
soaking experiments were performed on human pol beta-DNA
cocrystals with Mg2+, Ca2+, Na+, and K+, the four most
prevalent metal ions in the cell, and in each case a data
set was collected and the resulting structure was refined.
Under the conditions tested, the HhH motifs of pol beta
have an affinity for these biologically prevalent metal
ions in the order Mg2+ < Ca2+ < Na+ < K+, with K+
displaying the strongest binding. Crystals soaked in the
presence of Tl+, a commonly used spectroscopic probe for
K+, were too X-ray-sensitive to establish the binding
behavior of Tl+, but soaking experiments with Ba2+ and Cs+
resulted in relatively stable crystals that gave evidence
of metal ion binding in both HhH motifs, confirming that
larger monovalent and divalent metal ions are capable of
binding to the HhH metal sites. Although Mn2+, which has
been categorized as a potent polymerase mutagen, binds to
the HhH motifs with a greater affinity than Mg2+, Mn2+ does
not bind to the HhH motifs in the presence of equimolar
concentrations of Na+. These results suggest that in vivo,
where Mn2+ is present only in trace amounts, Mn2+ probably
does not have a large effect on DNA binding and may instead
manifest a mutagenic effect on pol beta primarily by
distorting nucleotide binding or by directly affecting the
catalytic step [Pelletier, H., Sawaya, M. R., Wolfle, W.,
Wilson, S. H., & Kraut, J. (1996b) Biochemistry 35,
12762-12777]. Crystal soaking experiments with 31-kDa
apoenzyme crystals show that, in the absence of DNA, the
HhH motif in the fingers subdomain binds metal ions with
either much lower occupancy or not at all, indicating that
metal ion binding is dependent on the presence of the DNA
substrate.