AI Article Synopsis

  • Type IIA topoisomerases (Top2s) work by introducing a temporary double-strand break in DNA, allowing another DNA segment to pass through and change its structure.
  • The study presents the first crystal structure of an open DNA-gate in human Top2, revealing important details about how DNA moves through it and showing unexpected changes that occur during gate-opening.
  • The findings suggest that Top2 prefers a particular DNA configuration and that it may facilitate DNA passage using a rocking motion similar to a switch.

Article Abstract

Type IIA topoisomerases (Top2s) manipulate the handedness of DNA crossovers by introducing a transient and protein-linked double-strand break in one DNA duplex, termed the DNA-gate, whose opening allows another DNA segment to be transported through to change the DNA topology. Despite the central importance of this gate-opening event to Top2 function, the DNA-gate in all reported structures of Top2-DNA complexes is in the closed state. Here we present the crystal structure of a human Top2 DNA-gate in an open conformation, which not only reveals structural characteristics of its DNA-conducting path, but also uncovers unexpected yet functionally significant conformational changes associated with gate-opening. This structure further implicates Top2's preference for a left-handed DNA braid and allows the construction of a model representing the initial entry of another DNA duplex into the DNA-gate. Steered molecular dynamics calculations suggests the Top2-catalyzed DNA passage may be achieved by a rocker-switch-type movement of the DNA-gate.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6078968PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05406-yDOI Listing

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