Abstract

Type IB DNA topoisomerases are found in all eukarya, two families of eukaryotic viruses (poxviruses and mimivirus), and many genera of bacteria. They alter DNA topology by cleaving and resealing one strand of duplex DNA via a covalent DNA-(3-phosphotyrosyl)-enzyme intermediate. Bacterial type IB enzymes were discovered recently and are described as poxvirus-like with respect to their small size, primary structures, and bipartite domain organization. Here we report the 1.75-A crystal structure of Deinococcus radiodurans topoisomerase IB (DraTopIB), a prototype of the bacterial clade. DraTopIB consists of an amino-terminal (N) beta-sheet domain (amino acids 1-90) and a predominantly alpha-helical carboxyl-terminal (C) domain (amino acids 91-346) that closely resemble the corresponding domains of vaccinia virus topoisomerase IB. The five amino acids of DraTopIB that comprise the catalytic pentad (Arg-137, Lys-174, Arg-239, Asn-280, and Tyr-289) are preassembled into the active site in the absence of DNA in a manner nearly identical to the pentad configuration in human topoisomerase I bound to DNA. This contrasts with the apoenzyme of vaccinia topoisomerase, in which three of the active site constituents are either displaced or disordered. The N and C domains of DraTopIB are splayed apart in an "open" conformation, in which the surface of the catalytic domain containing the active site is exposed for DNA binding. A comparison with the human topoisomerase I-DNA cocrystal structure suggests how viral and bacterial topoisomerase IB enzymes might bind DNA circumferentially via movement of the N domain into the major groove and clamping of a disordered loop of the C domain around the helix.

Highlights

  • Type I topoisomerases are subclassified as type IA or type IB enzymes, depending on whether they form a 5Ј- or 3Ј-phosphotyrosyl adduct, respectively

  • Type IB enzymes are found in eukarya, eukaryotic viruses, and many genera of bacteria [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • Eukaryotic nuclear type IB enzymes are large monomeric polypeptides, typically Ͼ90 kDa, whereas the viral and bacterial type IB polypeptides are much smaller, typically ϳ33–36 kDa. Despite their differences in size, the poxvirus and nuclear type IB enzymes have a common core tertiary structure and catalytic mechanism [7, 8], which is shared with the tyrosine recombinase family (9 –12), thereby suggesting a common ancestry for type IB topoisomerases and tyrosine recombinases [7, 8]

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Summary

Structure of Bacterial DNA Topoisomerase IB

A fuller understanding of target site recognition by type IB enzymes and the conformational changes that accompany DNA binding will depend on capturing the structures of a single enzyme in free and DNAbound states or on structural comparisons of enzymes with different site specificity in the same functional states along the reaction pathway. How viral and bacterial TopIB enzymes might bind circumferentially to DNA

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
Side chain
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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