RecO protein initiates DNA recombination and strand annealing through two alternative DNA binding mechanisms. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Recombination mediator proteins (RMPs) are important for genome stability in all organisms. Several RMPs support two alternative reactions: initiation of homologous recombination and DNA annealing. We examined mechanisms of RMPs in both reactions with Mycobacterium smegmatis RecO (MsRecO) and demonstrated that MsRecO interacts with ssDNA by two distinct mechanisms. Zinc stimulates MsRecO binding to ssDNA during annealing, whereas the recombination function is zinc-independent and is regulated by interaction with MsRecR. Thus, different structural motifs or conformations of MsRecO are responsible for interaction with ssDNA during annealing and recombination. Neither annealing nor recombinase loading depends on MsRecO interaction with the conserved C-terminal tail of single-stranded (ss) DNA-binding protein (SSB), which is known to bind Escherichia coli RecO. However, similarly to E. coli proteins, MsRecO and MsRecOR do not dismiss SSB from ssDNA, suggesting that RMPs form a complex with SSB-ssDNA even in the absence of binding to the major protein interaction motif. We propose that alternative conformations of such complexes define the mechanism by which RMPs initiate the repair of stalled replication and support two different functions during recombinational repair of DNA breaks.

publication date

  • August 28, 2014

Research

keywords

  • DNA
  • Escherichia coli Proteins
  • Recombination, Genetic

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC4200245

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84908030723

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1074/jbc.M114.585117

PubMed ID

  • 25170075

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 289

issue

  • 42