The protein encoded by the vaccinia virus gene has base excision repair uracil-DNA -glycosylase (vvUNG) activity and also acts as a processivity factor in the viral replication complex. The use of a protein unlike PolN/PCNA sliding clamps is a unique feature of orthopoxviral replication, providing an attractive target for drug design. However, the intrinsic processivity of vvUNG has never been estimated, leaving open the question whether it is sufficient to impart processivity to the viral polymerase. Here, we use the correlated cleavage assay to characterize the translocation of vvUNG along DNA between two uracil residues. The salt dependence of the correlated cleavage, together with the similar affinity of vvUNG for damaged and undamaged DNA, support the one-dimensional diffusion mechanism of lesion search. Unlike short gaps, covalent adducts partly block vvUNG translocation. Kinetic experiments show that once a lesion is found it is excised with a probability ~0.76. Varying the distance between two uracils, we use a random walk model to estimate the mean number of steps per association with DNA at ~4200, which is consistent with vvUNG playing a role as a processivity factor. Finally, we show that inhibitors carrying a tetrahydro-2,4,6-trioxopyrimidinylidene moiety can suppress the processivity of vvUNG.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms24119113 | DOI Listing |
Nat Struct Mol Biol
January 2025
Centre for Mechanochemical Cell Biology and Warwick Biomedical Sciences, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
Cellular cargos move bidirectionally on microtubules by recruiting opposite polarity motors dynein and kinesin. These motors show codependence, where one requires the activity of the other, although the mechanism is unknown. Here we show that kinesin-3 KIF1C acts as both an activator and a processivity factor for dynein, using in vitro reconstitutions of human proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Glycosci (1999)
November 2024
1 Department of Biomaterial Sciences, Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo.
Enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulosic biomass is a complex process involving many factors, including multiple enzymes, heterogeneous substrates, and multi-step enzyme reactions. Cellulase researchers have conventionally used a double-exponential equation to fit the experimental time course of product formation, but no theoretical basis for this has been established. Here we present a mechanism-based equation that fits well the progress curves of cellulase reaction, incorporating the concepts of non-productive and productive binding on the cellulose surface and processivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring cell division, NuMA orchestrates the focusing of microtubule minus-ends in spindle poles and cortical force generation on astral microtubules by interacting with dynein motors, microtubules, and other cellular factors. Here we used in vitro reconstitution, cryo-electron microscopy, and live cell imaging to understand the mechanism and regulation of NuMA. We determined the structure of the processive dynein/dynactin/NuMA complex (DDN) and showed that the NuMA N-terminus drives dynein motility in vitro and facilitates dynein-mediated transport in live cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiotechnol Biofuels Bioprod
December 2024
Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, 37235, USA.
Background: Cellulose, an abundant biopolymer, has great potential to be utilized as a renewable fuel feedstock through its enzymatic degradation into soluble sugars followed by sugar fermentation into liquid biofuels. However, crystalline cellulose is highly resistant to hydrolysis, thus industrial-scale production of cellulosic biofuels has been cost-prohibitive to date. Mechanistic studies of enzymes that break down cellulose, called cellulases, are necessary to improve and adapt such biocatalysts for implementation in biofuel production processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Cell Biol
January 2025
The Wistar Institute, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Lineage-specific transcription factors operate as master orchestrators of developmental processes by activating select cis-regulatory enhancers and proximal promoters. Direct DNA binding of transcription factors ultimately drives context-specific recruitment of the basal transcriptional machinery that comprises RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) and a host of polymerase-associated multiprotein complexes, including the metazoan-specific Integrator complex. Integrator is primarily known to modulate RNAPII processivity and to surveil RNA integrity across coding genes.
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