RecA-DNA complexes: What we can learn about structure and dynamics from disordered filaments using computed image analysis

Author(s):  
E.H. Egelman

The recA protein (38,000MW) of E. coli forms helical polymers which are able, in an ATP-dependent reaction, to mediate the entire genetic recombination process, including the search for homology, homologous pairing, and strand transfer. We have been using computed image analysis of electron micrographs of different recA complexes in an effort to understand the function of this protein in recombination. These filaments typically show poor helical order. We have studied the systematic deviations from helical order (the disorder) present in static images of recA complexes as a means of understanding the dynamics of recA filaments in solution.

Author(s):  
E. H. Egelman ◽  
X. Yu

The RecA protein of E. coli has been shown to mediate genetic recombination, regulate its own synthesis, control the expression of other genes, act as a specific protease, form a helical polymer and have an ATPase activity, among other observed properties. The unusual filament formed by the RecA protein on DNA has not previously been shown to exist outside of bacteria. Within this filament, the 36 Å pitch of B-form DNA is extended to about 95 Å, the pitch of the RecA helix. We have now establishedthat similar nucleo-protein complexes are formed by bacteriophage and yeast proteins, and availableevidence suggests that this structure is universal across all of biology, including humans. Thus, understanding the function of the RecA protein will reveal basic mechanisms, in existence inall organisms, that are at the foundation of general genetic recombination and repair.Recombination at this moment is assuming an importance far greater than just pure biology. The association between chromosomal rearrangements and neoplasms has become stronger and stronger, and these rearrangements are most likely products of the recombinatory apparatus of the normal cell. Further, damage to DNA appears to be a major cause of cancer.


Author(s):  
Edward H. Egelman

Advances in computer graphics and numerical processing, in video technology, and in image acquisition have enabled us to extend the power of the electron microscope in the analysis of macromolecular structures, particularly helical protein polymers. Three applications of this technology will be described:1) There are frequently times where the static images acquired from fixed, stained or frozen specimens leads to a loss of information about the dynamical properties of the molecules or structures being studied. We have been using computed image analysis, graphics and animation to recover the dynamical information that can be obtained from electron microscopic images.Using the RecA protein of E. coli , we have been able to capture different biochemical states as a function of time through the use of a slowly hydrolyzable ATP analog, ATP-γ-S. Threedimensional reconstruction of these helical structures, combined with computer-generated animation between different structures, have enabled us to directly visualize the motions within the protein polymer associated with the hydrolysis of the nucleotide analog. Modifications of the RecA protein, achieved through either proteolysis or mutation, have allowed us to use the same techniques to visualize domain-domain movements within the RecA filament which occur over a range of 5-10Å. The methods of analysis, graphics and animation which have been used will be discussed. The general applicability of these procedures to other systems will also be addressed.


Cell ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 223-235 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard P. Cunningham ◽  
Chanchal DasGupta ◽  
Takehiko Shibata ◽  
Charles M. Radding

1980 ◽  
Vol 77 (7) ◽  
pp. 3962-3966 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Cassuto ◽  
S. C. West ◽  
J. Mursalim ◽  
S. Conlon ◽  
P. Howard-Flanders

Author(s):  
X. Yu ◽  
K. Benson ◽  
A. Stasiak ◽  
I. Tsaneva ◽  
S. West ◽  
...  

We have been interested in the structure and function of proteins involved in genetic recombinaton. The ruv locus on the E. coli chromosome contains three genes (ruvA, ruvB and ruvC) that are important for genetic recombination and DNA repair. The ruvA and ruvB genes form part of the SOS response to DNA damage and encode the RuvA and RuvB proteins. Together, RuvA and RuvB promote the branch migration of Holliday junctions in a reaction that requires ATP hydrolysis. Each protein plays a defined role, with RuvA responsible for DNA binding (and, in particular, junction recognition), whereas the RuvB ATPase provides the motor for branch migration. Sequence analysis has identified RuvB as a member of a superfamily of helicases, and experimentally it has been shown that RuvB, in the presence of RuvA, acts as an ATP-dependent helicase.When purified RuvB protein was incubated (in the presence of the ATP analog, ATP-γ-S) with covalently closed, relaxed dsDNA, double-ringed structures were observed on the DNA in the electron microscope (Fig. 1). The DNA must be passing through the center of these rings, since the rings are always aligned along a common axis.


1994 ◽  
Vol 14 (9) ◽  
pp. 6097-6106
Author(s):  
H Kotani ◽  
E B Kmiec

The relationship between RNA synthesis and homologous pairing in vitro, catalyzed by RecA protein, was examined by using an established strand transfer assay system. When a short DNA duplex is mixed with single-stranded circles, RecA protein promotes the transfer of the minus strand of the duplex onto the complementary region of the plus-strand circle, with the displacement of the plus strand of the duplex. However, if minus-strand RNA is synthesized from the duplex pairing partner, joint molecules containing the RNA transcript, the plus strand of the DNA duplex, and the plus-strand circle are also observed to form. This reaction, which is dependent on RNA polymerase, sequence homology, and RecA protein, produces a joint molecule that can be dissolved by treatment with RNase H but not RNase A. Under these reaction conditions, product molecules form even when the length of shared homology between duplex and circle is reduced to 15 bp.


mSphere ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeong Yoon Lee ◽  
Ji Sun Lee ◽  
Emma C. Materne ◽  
Rahul Rajala ◽  
Ashrafali M. Ismail ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTAdenovirus infections in humans are common and sometimes lethal. Adenovirus-derived vectors are also commonly chosen for gene therapy in human clinical trials. We have shown in previous work that homologous recombination between adenoviral genomes of human adenovirus species D (HAdV-D), the largest and fastest growing HAdV species, is responsible for the rapid evolution of this species. Because adenovirus infection initiates in mucosal epithelia, particularly at the gastrointestinal, respiratory, genitourinary, and ocular surfaces, we sought to determine a possible role for mucosal microbiota in adenovirus genome diversity. By analysis of known recombination hot spots across 38 human adenovirus genomes in species D (HAdV-D), we identified nucleotide sequence motifs similar to bacterial Chi sequences, which facilitate homologous recombination in the presence of bacterial Rec enzymes. These motifs, referred to here as ChiAD, were identified immediately 5′ to the sequence encoding penton base hypervariable loop 2, which expresses the arginine-glycine-aspartate moiety critical to adenoviral cellular entry. Coinfection with two HAdV-Ds in the presence of anEscherichia colilysate increased recombination; this was blocked in a RecA mutant strain,E. coliDH5α, or upon RecA depletion. Recombination increased in the presence ofE. colilysate despite a general reduction in viral replication. RecA colocalized with viral DNA in HAdV-D-infected cell nuclei and was shown to bind specifically to ChiADsequences. These results indicate that adenoviruses may repurpose bacterial recombination machinery, a sharing of evolutionary mechanisms across a diverse microbiota, and unique example of viral commensalism.IMPORTANCEAdenoviruses are common human mucosal pathogens of the gastrointestinal, respiratory, and genitourinary tracts and ocular surface. Here, we report finding Chi-like sequences in adenovirus recombination hot spots. Adenovirus coinfection in the presence of bacterial RecA protein facilitated homologous recombination between viruses. Genetic recombination led to evolution of an important external feature on the adenoviral capsid, namely, the penton base protein hypervariable loop 2, which contains the arginine-glycine-aspartic acid motif critical to viral internalization. We speculate that free Rec proteins present in gastrointestinal secretions upon bacterial cell death facilitate the evolution of human adenoviruses through homologous recombination, an example of viral commensalism and the complexity of virus-host interactions, including regional microbiota.


1994 ◽  
Vol 14 (9) ◽  
pp. 6097-6106 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Kotani ◽  
E B Kmiec

The relationship between RNA synthesis and homologous pairing in vitro, catalyzed by RecA protein, was examined by using an established strand transfer assay system. When a short DNA duplex is mixed with single-stranded circles, RecA protein promotes the transfer of the minus strand of the duplex onto the complementary region of the plus-strand circle, with the displacement of the plus strand of the duplex. However, if minus-strand RNA is synthesized from the duplex pairing partner, joint molecules containing the RNA transcript, the plus strand of the DNA duplex, and the plus-strand circle are also observed to form. This reaction, which is dependent on RNA polymerase, sequence homology, and RecA protein, produces a joint molecule that can be dissolved by treatment with RNase H but not RNase A. Under these reaction conditions, product molecules form even when the length of shared homology between duplex and circle is reduced to 15 bp.


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