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Biophysical Characterization of Human XRCC1 and Its Binding to Damaged and Undamaged DNA
66
Citations
13
References
2004
Year
The human DNA repair protein, hXRCC1, which is required for DNA single-strand break repair and genetic stability was produced as a histidine-tagged polypeptide in Escherichia coli, purified by affinity chromatography, and subjected to sedimentation and spectroscopic analyses. This study represents the first biophysical examination of full-length XRCC1. Sedimentation equilibrium measurements indicated that hXRCC1 exists as a monomer at lower protein concentrations but forms a dimer at higher protein concentrations with a K(d) of 5.7 x 10(-)(7) M. The size and shape of hXRCC1 in solution were determined by analytical ultracentrifugation studies. The protein exhibited an intrinsic sedimentation coefficient, s(0)(20,w), of 3.56 S and a Stokes radius, R(s), of 44.5 A, which together with the M(r) of 68000 suggested that hXRCC1 is a moderately asymmetric protein with an axial ratio of 7.2. Binding of model ligands, representing single-strand breaks with either a nick or a single nucleotide gap, quenched protein fluorescence, and binding affinities and stoichiometries were determined by carrying out fluorescence titrations as a function of ligand concentration. XRCC1 bound both nicked and 1 nucleotide-gapped DNA substrates tightly in a stoichiometric manner (1:1) with K(d) values of 65 and 34 nM, respectively. However, hXRCC1 exhibited lower affinities for a duplex with a 5 nucleotide gap, the intact duplex with no break, and a single-stranded oligonucleotide with K(d) values of 215, 230, and 260 nM, respectively. Our results suggest that hXRCC1 exhibits preferential binding to DNA with single-strand breaks with a gap size of <5 nucleotides.
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