AI Article Synopsis

  • Deoxynucleotide triphosphohydrolases (dNTPases) like dGTPase are essential for maintaining dNTP pools, influencing cellular survival and DNA replication, with dGTPase being unique in specifically hydrolyzing dGTP.
  • The researchers used advanced techniques to reveal the free and bound structures of dGTPase, demonstrating how the enzyme's active site is dynamic and undergoes conformational changes when dGTP binds, while an inhibitor (GTP) keeps it in an inactive state.
  • Despite similarities between dGTPase and other enzymes like SAMHD1, dGTPase has unique features that confer guanine base specificity and the ability to enhance

Article Abstract

Deoxynucleotide triphosphohydrolases (dNTPases) play a critical role in cellular survival and DNA replication through the proper maintenance of cellular dNTP pools. While the vast majority of these enzymes display broad activity toward canonical dNTPs, such as the dNTPase SAMHD1 that blocks reverse transcription of retroviruses in macrophages by maintaining dNTP pools at low levels, ()dGTPase is the only known enzyme that specifically hydrolyzes dGTP. However, the mechanism behind dGTP selectivity is unclear. Here we present the free-, ligand (dGTP)- and inhibitor (GTP)-bound structures of hexameric dGTPase, including an X-ray free-electron laser structure of the free -dGTPase enzyme to 3.2 Å. To obtain this structure, we developed a method that applied UV-fluorescence microscopy, video analysis, and highly automated goniometer-based instrumentation to map and rapidly position individual crystals randomly located on fixed target holders, resulting in the highest indexing rates observed for a serial femtosecond crystallography experiment. Our structures show a highly dynamic active site where conformational changes are coupled to substrate (dGTP), but not inhibitor binding, since GTP locks dGTPase in its apo- form. Moreover, despite no sequence homology, -dGTPase and SAMHD1 share similar active-site and HD motif architectures; however, -dGTPase residues at the end of the substrate-binding pocket mimic Watson-Crick interactions providing guanine base specificity, while a 7-Å cleft separates SAMHD1 residues from dNTP bases, abolishing nucleotide-type discrimination. Furthermore, the structures shed light on the mechanism by which long distance binding (25 Å) of single-stranded DNA in an allosteric site primes the active site by conformationally "opening" a tyrosine gate allowing enhanced substrate binding.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6511015PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1814999116DOI Listing

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