AI Article Synopsis

  • HpMutS2 is a non-specific nuclease that plays a crucial role in inhibiting recombination during transformation through its two essential catalytic sites.
  • Mutations in the protein's ATP-binding (HpMutS2-G338R) and hydrolysis (HpMutS2-E413A) sites reveal decreased affinity for ATP and reduced hydrolysis, impacting its overall conformation and DNA binding abilities.
  • The findings indicate that ATP binding and hydrolysis are vital for the anti-recombinase function of HpMutS2, showcasing a strong link between its ATPase function, DNA interaction, and nuclease activities.

Article Abstract

Background: Helicobacter pylori MutS2 (HpMutS2), an inhibitor of recombination during transformation is a non-specific nuclease with two catalytic sites, both of which are essential for its anti-recombinase activity. Although HpMutS2 belongs to a highly conserved family of ABC transporter ATPases, the role of its ATP binding and hydrolysis activities remains elusive.

Results: To explore the putative role of ATP binding and hydrolysis activities of HpMutS2 we specifically generated point mutations in the nucleotide-binding Walker-A (HpMutS2-G338R) and hydrolysis Walker-B (HpMutS2-E413A) domains of the protein. Compared to wild-type protein, HpMutS2-G338R exhibited ~2.5-fold lower affinity for both ATP and ADP while ATP hydrolysis was reduced by ~3-fold. Nucleotide binding efficiencies of HpMutS2-E413A were not significantly altered; however the ATP hydrolysis was reduced by ~10-fold. Although mutations in the Walker-A and Walker-B motifs of HpMutS2 only partially reduced its ability to bind and hydrolyze ATP, we demonstrate that these mutants not only exhibited alterations in the conformation, DNA binding and nuclease activities of the protein but failed to complement the hyper-recombinant phenotype displayed by mutS2-disrupted strain of H. pylori. In addition, we show that the nucleotide cofactor modulates the conformation, DNA binding and nuclease activities of HpMutS2.

Conclusions: These data describe a strong crosstalk between the ATPase, DNA binding, and nuclease activities of HpMutS2. Furthermore these data show that both, ATP binding and hydrolysis activities of HpMutS2 are essential for the in vivo anti-recombinase function of the protein.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4739419PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12866-016-0629-3DOI Listing

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