posted on 2017-07-19, 00:00authored byAmelia
H. Manlove, Paige L. McKibbin, Emily L. Doyle, Chandrima Majumdar, Michelle L. Hamm, Sheila S. David
Base excision repair
glycosylases locate and remove damaged bases
in DNA with remarkable specificity. The MutY glycosylases, unusual
for their excision of undamaged adenines mispaired to the oxidized
base 8-oxoguanine (OG), must recognize both bases of the mispair in
order to prevent promutagenic activity. Moreover, MutY must effectively
find OG:A mismatches within the context of highly abundant and structurally
similar T:A base pairs. Very little is known about the factors that
initiate MutY’s interaction with the substrate when it first
encounters an intrahelical OG:A mispair, or about the order of recognition
checkpoints. Here, we used structure–activity relationships
(SAR) to investigate the features that influence the in vitro measured parameters of mismatch affinity and adenine base excision
efficiency by E. coli MutY. We also evaluated the
impacts of the same substrate alterations on MutY-mediated repair
in a cellular context. Our results show that MutY relies strongly
on the presence of the OG base and recognizes multiple structural
features at different stages of recognition and catalysis to ensure
that only inappropriately mispaired adenines are excised. Notably,
some OG modifications resulted in more dramatic reductions in cellular
repair than in the in vitro kinetic parameters, indicating
their importance for initial recognition events needed to locate the
mismatch within DNA. Indeed, the initial encounter of MutY with its
target base pair may rely on specific interactions with the 2-amino
group of OG in the major groove, a feature that distinguishes OG:A
from T:A base pairs. These results furthermore suggest that inefficient
substrate location in human MutY homologue variants may prove predictive
for the early onset colorectal cancer phenotype known as MUTYH-Associated
Polyposis, or MAP.