Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the molecular action of lithocholic acid (LCA), known as a selective inhibitor of DNA polymerase beta (pol beta). The 39-kDa pol beta was separated proteolytically into two fragments of the template-primer binding domain (8 kDa) and the catalytic domain (31 kDa). LCA bound tightly to the 8-kDa fragment but not to the 31-kDa fragment. We examined the structural interaction with the 8-kDa domain using LCA. On (1)H-(15)N HMQC NMR analysis of pol beta with LCA, the 8-kDa domain bound to LCA as a 1:1 complex with a dissociation constant (K(D)) of 1.56 mM. The chemical shifts were observed only in residues mainly in helix-3, helix-4, and the 79-87 turn of the same face. No significant shifts were observed for helix-1, helix-2, and other loops of the 8-kDa domain. This region was composed mainly of three amino acid residues (Lys60, Leu77, and Thr79) of pol beta on the LCA interaction interface. The inhibition mechanism and the structure-function relationship between pol beta and LCA is discussed.

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