Abstract
Mitochondrial single-stranded DNA (ssDNA)-binding proteins (mtSSBs) are required for mitochondrial DNA replication and stability and are generally assumed to form homotetramers, and this species is proposed to be the one active for ssDNA binding. However, we recently reported that the mtSSB from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (ScRim1) forms homotetramers at high protein concentrations, whereas at low protein concentrations, it dissociates into dimers that bind ssDNA with high affinity. In this work, using a combination of analytical ultracentrifugation techniques and DNA binding experiments with fluorescently labeled DNA oligonucleotides, we tested whether the ability of ScRim1 to form dimers is unique among mtSSBs. Although human mtSSBs and those from Schizosaccharomyces pombe, Xenopus laevis, and Xenopus tropicalis formed stable homotetramers, the mtSSBs from Candida albicans and Candida parapsilosis formed stable homodimers. Moreover, the mtSSBs from Candida nivariensis and Candida castellii formed tetramers at high protein concentrations, whereas at low protein concentrations, they formed dimers, as did ScRim1. Mutational studies revealed that the ability to form either stable tetramers or dimers depended on a complex interplay of more than one amino acid at the dimer-dimer interface and the C-terminal unstructured tail. In conclusion, our findings indicate that mtSSBs can adopt different oligomeric states, ranging from stable tetramers to stable dimers, and suggest that a dimer of mtSSB may be a physiologically relevant species that binds to ssDNA in some yeast species.
Highlights
Mitochondrial single-stranded DNA– binding proteins are required for mitochondrial DNA replication and stability and are generally assumed to form homotetramers, and this species is proposed to be the one active for ssDNA binding
The best studied is HsmtSSB, which forms stable homotetramers in solution [1, 2], as do SpRim1 and XlmtSSB [14, 24]. Consistent with these observations, in this work, we showed that XlmtSSB, XtmtSSB, and SpRim1 form stable homotetramers at all protein concentrations tested and that this oligomeric species is the one responsible for high-affinity DNA binding
Our recent observation that ScRim1 does not form stable homotetramers in solution and binds to DNA as a dimer of dimers [10] raises the question of whether this behavior is exclusive to ScRim1 or a more general property shared among yeast mitochondrial SSBs
Summary
A stable tetramer is not the only oligomeric state that mitochondrial single-stranded DNA binding proteins can adopt. Vandna Kukshal, and Roberto Galletto From the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics, Washington University School of Medicine, Saint Louis, Missouri 63110
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