Publication | Open Access
UV damage endonuclease employs a novel dual-dinucleotide flipping mechanism to recognize different DNA lesions
28
Citations
25
References
2012
Year
Dna DamageDnaGeneticsDna-repair EnzymeDna AnalysisMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsNucleic Acid ChemistryDifferent Dna LesionsGenome InstabilityUv Damage EndonucleaseBiochemistryOligonucleotideDna ReplicationStructural BiologyChromatinNatural SciencesPyrimidine BasesMedicine
Repairing damaged DNA is essential for an organism's survival. UV damage endonuclease (UVDE) is a DNA-repair enzyme that can recognize and incise different types of damaged DNA. We present the structure of Sulfolobus acidocaldarius UVDE on its own and in a pre-catalytic complex with UV-damaged DNA containing a 6-4 photoproduct showing a novel 'dual dinucleotide flip' mechanism for recognition of damaged dipyrimidines: the two purines opposite to the damaged pyrimidine bases are flipped into a dipurine-specific pocket, while the damaged bases are also flipped into another cleft.
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