Abstract

Flap endonucleases catalyze cleavage of single-stranded DNA flaps formed during replication, repair, and recombination and are therefore essential for genome processing and stability. Recent crystal structures of DNA-bound human flap endonuclease (hFEN1) offer new insights into how conformational changes in the DNA and hFEN1 may facilitate the reaction mechanism. For example, previous biochemical studies of DNA conformation performed under non-catalytic conditions with Ca2+ have suggested that base unpairing at the 5'-flap:template junction is an important step in the reaction, but the new structural data suggest otherwise. To clarify the role of DNA changes in the kinetic mechanism, we measured a series of transient steps, from substrate binding to product release, during the hFEN1-catalyzed reaction in the presence of Mg2+ We found that whereas hFEN1 binds and bends DNA at a fast, diffusion-limited rate, much slower Mg2+-dependent conformational changes in DNA around the active site are subsequently necessary and rate-limiting for 5'-flap cleavage. These changes are reported overall by fluorescence of 2-aminopurine at the 5'-flap:template junction, indicating that local DNA distortion (e.g. disruption of base stacking observed in structures), associated with positioning the 5'-flap scissile phosphodiester bond in the hFEN1 active site, controls catalysis. hFEN1 residues with distinct roles in the catalytic mechanism, including those binding metal ions (Asp-34 and Asp-181), steering the 5'-flap through the active site and binding the scissile phosphate (Lys-93 and Arg-100), and stacking against the base 5' to the scissile phosphate (Tyr-40), all contribute to these rate-limiting conformational changes, ensuring efficient and specific cleavage of 5'-flaps.

Highlights

  • Flap endonucleases catalyze cleavage of single-stranded DNA flaps formed during replication, repair, and recombination and are essential for genome processing and stability

  • These changes are reported overall by fluorescence of 2-aminopurine at the 5؅-flap:template junction, indicating that local DNA distortion, associated with positioning the 5؅-flap scissile phosphodiester bond in the human FEN1 (hFEN1) active site, controls catalysis. hFEN1 residues with distinct roles in the catalytic mechanism, including those binding metal ions (Asp-34 and Asp-181), steering the 5؅-flap through the active site and binding the scissile phosphate (Lys-93 and Arg-100), and stacking against the base 5؅ to the scissile phosphate (Tyr-40), all contribute to these rate-limiting conformational changes, ensuring efficient and specific cleavage of 5؅-flaps

  • A more recent structure of hFEN1R100A-DNA substrate complex has the 5Ј-flap strand ϩ1 and Ϫ1 bases unpaired from the template as it threads through the cap-helical gateway; the scissile phosphate remains ϳ4 –5 Å away from the metal ions in the active site, suggesting that this conformation is not catalytically competent (12)

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Summary

Edited by Patrick Sung

Flap endonucleases catalyze cleavage of single-stranded DNA flaps formed during replication, repair, and recombination and are essential for genome processing and stability. A more recent structure of hFEN1R100A-DNA substrate complex has the 5Ј-flap strand ϩ1 and Ϫ1 bases unpaired from the template as it threads through the cap-helical gateway; the scissile phosphate remains ϳ4 –5 Å away from the metal ions in the active site, suggesting that this conformation is not catalytically competent (12). In the hFEN1D86N-DNA substrate structure and that of an hFEN1D233N-DNA product complex (Fig. 1C; PDB code 5K97), basic residues lining the cap-helical gateway, including Lys-93 and Arg-100, appear necessary to electrostatically steer the phosphodiester backbone into a catalytically competent conformation, with the scissile phosphate coordinated by the metal ions and a nucleophilic water within striking distance in the active site. Active-site residues known for distinct roles in the catalytic mechanism all contribute to this rate-limiting stage of the 5Ј-flap cleavage mechanism

Results
Discussion
Stepwise release may influence further processing of the nicked product
DNA and protein
Full Text
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