Publication | Open Access
Flap Endonuclease 1 Mechanism Analysis Indicates Flap Base Binding Prior to Threading
45
Citations
30
References
2010
Year
Flap Endonuclease 1Long FlapFlap BaseProtein FunctionProtein AssemblyProtein FoldingNatural SciencesMolecular BiologyBiochemical InteractionCytoskeletonProtein EngineeringBiomolecular InteractionMedicineCell BiologyStructural BiologyBiomolecular EngineeringFen1 Bound
FEN1 cleaves 5' flaps at their base to create a nicked product for ligation. FEN1 has been reported to enter the flap from the 5'-end and track to the base. Current binding analyses support a very different mechanism of interaction with the flap substrate. Measurements of FEN1 binding to a flap substrate show that the nuclease binds with similar high affinity to the base of a long flap even when the 5'-end is blocked with biotin/streptavidin. However, FEN1 bound to a blocked flap is more sensitive to sequestration by a competing substrate. These results are consistent with a substrate interaction mechanism in which FEN1 first binds the flap base and then threads the flap through an opening in the protein from the 5'-end to the base for cleavage. Significantly, when the unblocked flap length is reduced from five to two nucleotides, FEN1 can be sequestered from the substrate to a similar extent as a blocked, long flap substrate. Apparently, interactions related to threading occur only when the flap is greater than two to four nucleotides long, implying that short flaps are cleaved without a threading requirement.
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