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Eukaryotic Cell, December 2004, p. 1567-1573, Vol. 3, No. 6
1535-9778/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/EC.3.6.1567-1573.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
and
Vladislav A. Lanzov*
Division of Molecular and Radiation Biophysics, Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Gatchina/St. Petersburg, Russia
Received 16 June 2004/ Accepted 9 September 2004
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X174 ssDNA > poly(dA) > double-stranded M13 DNA]. An inefficient ATPase and very low cooperativity for ATP interaction position Rad51Pa closer to Rad51 than to RecA. Judging by thermoinactivation, Rad51Pa alone was 20-fold more thermostable at 37°C than its S. cerevisiae homolog (Rad51Sc). Moreover, it maintained ssDNA-dependent ATPase and DNA transferase activities up to 52 to 54°C, whereas Rad51Sc was completely inactive at 47°C. A quick nucleation and an efficient final-product formation in the strand exchange reaction promoted by Rad51Pa occurred only at temperatures above 42°C. These reaction characteristics suggest that Rad51Pa is dependent on high temperatures for activity. |
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Among 2,500 P. angusta novel protein-encoding genes now identified, 6% have no homologs in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (3). Little is known about the recombination or DNA repair proteins in P. angusta, such as the homologous DNA transferase Rad51 and its paralogs. This recombinase is a RecA-RadA-like protein, found in all three domains of life (4), which forms filaments on single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) in the presence of ATP (and thus possesses ATPase activity) and promotes homologous pairing and strand exchange, which are the two main steps in the initiation of homologous recombination and recombination repair, as well (6, 16, 27). All members of the RecA-RadA-Rad51 recombinase superfamily form nucleoprotein filaments of similar structures and stoichiometries, and they display similar preferences in DNA substrates for DNA-dependent ATP hydrolysis (26, 30, 32). Although similar in ATP-dependent recombination functions, these members are divided into two subfamilies: RecA-like and RadA-Rad51-like proteins. The latter group displays weak ATP hydrolysis activity and lacks the magnitude of the ATP-induced cooperativity displayed by RecA (8, 19, 35).
Here, we characterize the basic recombination activities of Rad51Pa, a new member of the Rad51 family from P. angusta. Some properties were compared with those of Rad51 from S. cerevisiae (Rad51Sc), mainly in the context of protein thermostability. In two principle recombination activities analyzed here, a quick nucleation and an efficient final-product (FP) formation in a
X174 DNA strand exchange reaction, Rad51Pa demonstrated thermodependence rather than thermotolerance.
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S. cerevisiae diploid strain D4004 (MATa/MAT
ade2
-248/ade2
-248 leu2-3,112/leu2-3,112 ura3-160,288/ura3-160,288 trp1/trp1 RAD51/RAD51) and its rad51-1 derivate D3164 (MATa/MAT
ade2
-248/ade2
-248 leu2-3,112/leu2-3,112 ura3-160,288/ura3-160,288 trp1/trp1 rad51-1/rad51-1) were used to study complementation of the ionizing radiation (IR) sensitivity of the S. cerevisiae rad51-1 diploid mutant with the cloned RAD51Pa gene.
cDNA library construction and RAD51Pa cloning procedure. The P. angusta cDNA library was constructed in a Uni-ZAP XR vector (Stratagene) with poly(A) RNA purified from BKM Y1397 cells. A fragment of the RAD51Pa gene was amplified by PCR using degenerate primers designed from conserved regions of the Rad51 protein family. The resulting PCR product was used as a probe for subsequent library screening. A positive clone containing RAD51Pa cDNA was selected and sequenced. For protein expression, the RAD51Pa gene was recloned into a pET21b vector (Novagen). The pYES2::RAD51Pa plasmid was constructed by recloning the RAD51Pa gene into the EcoRI-XhoI sites of the pYES2 plasmid under a GAL1 promoter. Both pYES2 and pYES2::RAD51Pa were used in comparative analysis of IR sensitivity.
DNA manipulation.
Standard procedures described previously (29) were used for DNA manipulation. Linear
X174 double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) was prepared from its circular form by cleavage with the PstI endonuclease, followed by extraction with phenol-chloroform, precipitation with ethanol, and resuspension in Tris-EDTA (pH 8.0) buffer. The concentrations of DNA substrates are expressed as nucleotide equivalents. The concentrations of poly(dT), poly(dC), poly(dA), ssDNA, and dsDNA were determined using the following extinction coefficients:
264, 8,520 M1 cm1;
268, 7,400 M1 cm1;
257, 8,600 M1 cm1;
260, 8,780 M1 cm1; and
260, 6,500 M1 cm1, respectively.
Protein purifications.
The Rad51Pa protein was produced in Escherichia coli strain BL21(DE3) (F ompT hsdSB [rB mB] dcm gal
recA306) carrying the pET21b::RAD51Pa plasmid.
and
were coexpressed to facilitate the translation of the RAD51Pa minor codons (1). The primary procedures of Rad51Pa protein purification, including the selective extraction with polymin P followed by phosphocellulose chromatography, were similar to those described earlier (7). The protein fraction containing Rad51Pa was further purified by separation on Bio-Gel hydroxyapatite, Cybacron Blue (Hi-Trap Blue), and MonoQ (Hi-Trap Q) columns. Finally, Rad51Pa eluted from the MonoQ column at 400 mM KCl was stored at 70°C at a concentration of 1.2 mg/ml. Purity of the protein was more than 95%, as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis followed by Coomassie blue staining. The final Rad51Pa protein fraction contained no detectable exonuclease or endonuclease activities.
S. cerevisiae Rad51 protein (Rad51Sc) was purified from insect cells as described previously (21). Yeast replication protein A (RPA) was expressed in E. coli by use of plasmid pJM126 (provided by S. Brill and B. Stillman) and was purified as described previously (5).
The concentrations of proteins were determined using the following extinction coefficients at 280 nm: 1.565 · 104 M1cm1 for Rad51Pa, 1.26 · 104 M1cm1 for Rad51Sc, and 8.8 · 104 M1cm1 for RPA.
DNA-dependent ATP hydrolysis. ATP hydrolysis was measured as described previously (17). Oxidation of NADH was measured as the decrease in absorbance at 340 nm by using an extinction coefficient of 6.22 mM1 cm1. Unless otherwise noted, the TMD reaction buffer used in all experiments contained 25 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 10 mM MgCl2, and 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT), and the incubation temperature was 37°C. Rad51Pa and a DNA cofactor [poly(dT), poly(dA), poly(dC), or dsDNA] were added to a reaction mixture containing 1 mM ATP, 3 mM phosphoenolpyruvate, 30 U of pyruvate kinase ml1, 0.26 mM NADH, and 30 U of lactate dehydrogenase ml1 in TMD buffer.
The hydrolysis of ATP by the Rad51Pa protein was analyzed by using the Hill equation (9) that expresses the rate constant per monomeric Rad51Pa protein according to the formula log[v/(Vmax v)] = nH log[ATP] nH logKm, where [ATP] is the substrate concentration, v is the velocity of the ATPase reaction at [ATP], Vmax is its maximal velocity at the infinite ATP concentration, and nH is the Hill coefficient. All kinetic parameters were determined by fitting data to this equation at various concentrations of ATP. Microsoft Excel was used in the calculation of the parameters.
The thermodynamic parameters for the rate-determining step, changes in enthalpy (
H), entropy (
S), and activation-free energy (
G), were obtained from the Arrhenius plot for Rad51Pa ATPase activity with the formula ln(kcat) = ln A Eact /RT and from respective kinetic parameter equations, namely,
H = Eact RT,
S = R ln(Ah/ekBT), and
G =
H T
S, where Eact is the activation energy, A is the intercept of the Arrhenius equation, R is the gas constant, T is the absolute temperature, kB is the Boltzman constant, kcat is the turnover number, and h is the Planck constant (18).
DNA strand exchange.
DNA strand exchange was performed using the agarose gel assay described previously (22). In the reaction, a 60 µM concentration of circular
X174 ssDNA was preincubated with 20 µM Rad51Pa in the presence of TMD buffer and 2.0 mM ATP with its regenerating system for 5 min at 37°C. Then, E. coli ssDNA-binding protein and yeast RPA were added to RPA concentrations of 6 and 3 µM, respectively. After 7 min, the reaction was started by the addition of linear
X174 dsDNA to achieve a concentration of 60 µM. The reaction was terminated after 120 min by the addition of EDTA, sodium dodecyl sulfate, and proteinase K to final concentrations of 5 mM, 0.5%, and 0.1 mg/ml, respectively, and then deproteinized by incubation at 37°C for 30 min. The products of the reaction were analyzed by gel electrophoresis on 1% agarose gel in Tris-acetate-EDTA buffer and visualized by staining with ethidium bromide.
The same reaction conditions were used for DNA strand exchange promoted by Rad51Sc except that TMD buffer was replaced with MMD buffer (40 mM K-MES [K-morpholineethanesulfonic acid] [pH 6.5], 2.5 mM MgCl2, 1 mM DTT) and 5 mM spermidine was added to the reaction mixture as described previously (34). After visualization, the products of DNA strand exchange were quantified, and the amounts of FPs and joint molecules (JM) were expressed as percentages of the original amounts of dsDNA converted into these products.
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The sequence data have been submitted to the DDBJ, EMBL, and GenBank databases under accession number AAP74362.
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FIG. 1. Sequence alignments of three yeast Rad51 proteins (from P. angusta, S. cerevisiae, and S. pombe, designated PaRad51, ScRad51, and SpRhp51, respectively) and an H. sapiens Rad51 protein (HsRad51). A dash indicates a gap introduced into the sequences to optimize the alignment. A period represents a residue identical to that from Rad51Pa. Bold letters show similarity between amino acid residues in given positions of the alignment. Asterisks indicate boundaries of the alignment chosen for quantitative comparison of sequences (residues 24 to 317).
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FIG. 2. Compensation of the Rad51Sc protein deficiency with Rad51Pa as measured by the resistance to -irradiation of strain D3164/pYES2::RAD51Pa, in which the expression of the Rad51Pa protein was induced by galactose (0.2%). Controls were D4004 (Rad51Sc+ phenotype) (filled diamonds), D3164/pYES2 without galactose in the growth medium after irradiation (Rad51Sc phenotype) (filled triangles), D3164/pYES2 with galactose after irradiation (Rad51Sc phenotype) (open triangles), and D3164/pYES2::RAD51Pa without galactose after irradiation (Rad51Pa phenotype) (filled squares). The experiment parameter was D3164/pYES2::RAD51Pa with galactose after irradiation (Rad51Pa+ phenotype) (open squares).
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FIG. 3. Rad51Pa-poly(dT)-binding isotherm monitored by ATP hydrolysis. Each point on the curves represents a result with an individual sample. The spectrophotometric assay was performed at 37°C in TMD buffer containing 4 µM Rad51Pa, 1 mM ATP with its regenerating system, the NADH-lactate dehydrogenase system, and poly(dT) at the concentration indicated. Each point in the curve (solid line) was averaged from the results of two or three repeat experiments. Broken line, extrapolation of the linear portions of the Rad51Pa-ssDNA-binding isotherm.
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X174 ssDNA, poly(dA), and M13 dsDNA (the least efficient). Similar orders for different DNAs were shown previously for other RecA-like proteins (32, 36). Additionally, ssDNA-dependent ATP hydrolysis catalyzed by Rad51Pa is 25-fold less efficient than that catalyzed by E. coli RecA under similar conditions (for RecA from E. coli, kcat/ssDNA was 28 min1). These results suggest that Rad51Pa belongs to the RadA-Rad51 subfamily of inefficient ATPases. |
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TABLE 1. Comparison of the abilities of different DNA cofactors to stimulate ATP hydrolysis catalyzed by Rad51Pa as assessed by the steady-state kinetic parameter kcat
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FIG. 4. Hill plot of Rad51Pa-mediated ATP hydrolysis as a function of ATP. The inset represents the original kinetic data. The spectrophotometric ATPase assays were performed by incubating 1.0 µM Rad51Pa and 20 µM poly(dT) with the indicated amount of ATP (with its regenerating system) in TMD buffer (pH 7.5) at the indicated temperatures for 20 min. Lg, log.
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TABLE 2. Kinetic parameters of poly(dT)-dependent ATP hydrolysis catalyzed by Rad51Paa
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FIG. 5. Comparative thermoinactivation of the Rad51Pa (PaRad51) and Rad51Sc (ScRad51) proteins. (A) Each protein alone was incubated in KMD buffer (20 mM potassium phosphate [pH 7.5], 4 mM MgCl2, and 1 mM DTT) with 5% glycerol for 10 min at the temperatures indicated. The residual poly(dT)-dependent ATPase activity was measured by spectrophotometric assay in the reaction mixture containing an 8 µM concentration of either Rad51Pa or Rad51Sc, 80 to 160 µM poly(dT), and 1 mM ATP with its regenerating system. Each point of the curves was averaged from the results of three separate experiments performed with different excesses of poly(dT) in order to determine a residual Vmax at the given temperature under conditions at which DNA binding sites of the protein are saturatedwith poly(dT). One hundred percent signifies the Vmax for the protein without a preliminary temperature treatment. (B and C) Time courses of the thermoinactivation of the Rad51Pa and Rad51Sc proteins. The residual poly(dT)-dependent ATPase was measured as described above. (D) Arrhenius plot. A reconstruction of the data from panels B and C is shown. T, temperature. Ki, inactivation coefficient.
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H], entropy of inactivation [
S], and inactivation-free energy [
G]), we conclude that the higher thermostability of Rad51Pa than that of Rad51Sc is attributed to the better structural stability of the Rad51Pa protein in the ATPase active site. |
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TABLE 3. Thermodynamic parameters of poly(dT)-dependent thermoinactivation of ATP hydrolysis: comparison of Rad51Pa and Rad51Sc proteinsa
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FIG. 6. Lag period of Rad51Pa polymerization on X174 ssDNA depends on temperature conditions. The lag was measured as a short period of time before a constant rate of ATP hydrolysis was established at a given temperature. The reaction was performed in TMD buffer (pH 7.5) containing 4 µM Rad51Pa, 1 mM ATP with its regenerating system, 30 µM X174 ssDNA, and all necessary additions for the ATPase spectrophotometric assay.
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FIG. 7. Strand exchange reactions promoted by the Rad51Pa (PaRad51) or Rad51Sc (ScRad51) proteins depend on temperature conditions, although in different ways. (A) Scheme of the strand exchange reaction between X174 ssDNA (plus strand) and the replicative-form linear dsDNA of the same phage. (B) Agarose gel assay of strand exchange reactions (for details, see Materials and Methods). JM, joint molecules; FP, final products. (C) Relative amounts of JM and FP were quantified from the gels presented in panel B, as described in Materials and Methods. Open triangles, JM; filled triangles, FP. Left, Rad51Pa; right, Rad51Sc.
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-irradiated rad51-1 cells (Fig. 2). The Rad51Pa protein was overproduced in E. coli and purified to homogeneity. Judging by ssDNA-dependent ATP hydrolysis and strand exchange reactions, the Rad51Pa protein, in vitro, maintained its activities at temperatures up to 54°C (Fig. 4 and 7 and Table 2). This thermostability may be partially explained by the stabilization of Rad51 proteins in the structure of the presynaptic ternary complex with ATP and ssDNA (24, 37). However, Rad51Pa alone treated at different temperatures exhibited significantly better thermostability than the Rad51Pa protein. Rad51Pa was about 20-fold more thermostable at 37°C than its S. cerevisiae homolog Rad51Sc. Moreover, Rad51Sc was inactivated more than 100-fold by incubation at 37°C for 5 min, but incubation of Rad51Pa at 49°C for 30 min decreased its activity only 10-fold (Fig. 5B). The impressive qualitative difference in the thermoinactivations of these two proteins (Fig. 5A) is also supported by quantitative thermodynamic data (Fig. 5C; Table 3). Because P. angusta strain BKM Y1397 survived and could even grow slightly at 49°C, it seems reasonable to conclude that the thermoresistant potential of Rad51Pa is more than enough to support the growth of its host at 42°C. Two additional conclusions can be derived from our results. First, Rad51Pa is a typical representative of the Rad51 subfamily. Indeed, according to such general characteristics as the stoichiometry (Fig. 2) and DNA specificity (Table 1) of Rad51Pa-ssDNA interactions, the protein is referred to as a member of the RecA-RadA-Rad51 superfamily. However, two particular properties, the inefficient ATPase (Table 2) and very low cooperativity (Fig. 4) in Rad51Pa-ATP interactions, are typical only for RadA-Rad51 proteins (32, 35).
Second, Rad51Pa is a thermodependent protein rather than a thermoresistant protein. Indeed, the temperature of 42°C is critical for at least two protein characteristics which are thought to be important for recombination. These characteristics are a sharp enhancement of nucleation in presynaptic filament formation (Fig. 6) and the ability to form extended JM and thus
X174 FPs in the strand exchange reaction (Fig. 7). Interestingly, this critical temperature was very close to the optimal growth temperature interval (37 to 42°C) found for P. angusta strain BKM Y1397.
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plasmid, Andrei Alexseev (PNPI) and Seiki Kuramitsu (Osaka University, Osaka, Japan) for help in the construction of the P. angusta cDNA library used in the work, Elena Sukhanova (PNPI) for assistance in some genetic experiments, and Vladimir Korolev (PNPI) and Leonid Firsov (PNPI) for fruitful discussions of some experimental results. This research was supported by the RAS Presidium Program "Gene Pool Dynamics of Plants, Animals and Human Beings."
Present address: Stanford Genome Technology Center, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA 94304. ![]()
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