The nuclear DNA deaminase AID functions distributively whereas cytoplasmic APOBEC3G has a processive mode of action.

DNA Repair (Amst)

DNA Editing Lab, Clare Hall Laboratories, Cancer Research UK, South Mimms EN6 3LD, UK.

Published: February 2007

AID deaminates cytosine in the context of single stranded DNA to generate uracil, essential for effective class-switch recombination, somatic hypermutation and gene conversion at the B cell immunoglobulin locus. As a nuclear DNA mutator, AID activity must be tightly controlled and regulated, but the genetic analysis of AID and other DNA deaminases has left unstudied a number of important biochemical details. We have asked fundamental questions regarding AID's substrate recognition and processing, i.e. whether AID acts distributively or processively. We demonstrate that in vitro, human AID exhibits turnover, a prerequisite for our analysis, and show that it exhibits a distributive mode of action. Using a variety of different assays, we established that human AID is alone unable to act processively on any of a number of DNA substrates, i.e. one AID molecule is unable to carry out multiple, sequential deamination events on the same substrate. This is in contrast to the cytoplasmically expressed anti-viral DNA deaminase APOBEC3G, which acts in a processive manner, possibly suggesting that evolutionary pressure has altered the ability of DNA deaminases to act in a processive or distributive manner, depending on the physiological need.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dnarep.2006.10.001DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

nuclear dna
8
dna deaminase
8
aid
8
mode action
8
dna deaminases
8
human aid
8
dna
6
deaminase aid
4
aid functions
4
functions distributively
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!