Comparative
Studies on Bulky DNA Damage Binding by
Nucleotide Excision Repair Proteins Using Surface Plasmon Resonance,
Differential Scanning Fluorometry, and DNase I Footprinting
posted on 2024-12-27, 20:33authored byAng Cai, Katelyn L. LaVigne, Alicia M. Crisalli, Sarah Delaney, Jung-Hyun Min, Bongsup P. Cho
Nucleotide excision repair is a crucial cellular mechanism
that
ensures genomic stability, thereby preventing mutations that can lead
to cancer. The human XPC and its yeast ortholog Rad4 protein complexes
are central to this process and were the focus of the study. We used
surface plasmon resonance and differential scanning fluorimetry to
study the binding characteristics of XPC and Rad4 when bound to the
bulky cluster di-FAAF-containing 55-mer duplex DNA. Our findings revealed
that XPC binds 10 times more significant affinity to control and di-FAAF-modified
DNA than Rad4 with greater protein–DNA interactions. Differential
scanning fluorimetry indicates that Rad4 causes comparatively more
significant conformational changes upon complexation with the damaged
DNA. We conducted DNase I footprinting of the Rad4/DNA complex for
the first time by determining the regions protected from DNase I digestion.
The DNA at the lesion is entirely resistant to digestion by DNase
I in the absence of Rad4 several nucleotides to the 3′-side
of the first FAAF lesion. The lack of DNase I cleavage at the lesions
did not change upon adding Rad4. However, in the presence of Rad4,
a footprint is observed on the 7-nucleotide region (5′-TGGTGAT-3′)
of the complementary strand to the 3′ side of the lesion.