Mechanism of DNA transesterification by vaccinia topoisomerase: catalytic contributions of essential residues Arg-130, Gly-132, Tyr-136 and Lys-167
Open Access
- 1 August 1997
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Nucleic Acids Research
- Vol. 25 (15) , 3001-3008
- https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/25.15.3001
Abstract
Vaccinia topoisomerase, a eukaryotic type IB enzyme, catalyzes relaxation of supercoiled DNA by cleaving and rejoining DNA strands through a DNA-(3′-phosphotyrosyl)-enzyme intermediate. We have performed a kinetic analysis of mutational effects at four essential amino acids: Arg-130, Gly-132, Tyr-136 and Lys-167. Arg-130, Gly-132 and Lys-167 are conserved in all members of the type IB topoisomerase family. Tyr-136 is conserved in all poxvirus topoisomerases. We show that Arg-130 and Lys-167 are required for transesterification chemistry. Arg-130 enhances the rates of both cleavage and religation by 105. Lys-167 enhances the cleavage and religation reactions by 103 and 104, respectively. An instructive distinction between these two essential residues is that Arg-130 cannot be replaced by lysine, whereas substituting Lys-167 by arginine resulted in partial restoration of function relative to the alanine mutant. We propose that both basic residues interact directly with the scissile phosphate at the topoisomerase active site. Mutations at positions Gly-132 and Tyr-136 reduced the rate of strand cleavage by more than two orders of magnitude, but elicited only mild effects on religation rate. Gly-132 and Tyr-136 are suggested to facilitate a pre-cleavage activation step. The results of comprehensive mutagenesis of the vaccinia topoisomerase illuminate mechanistic and structural similarities to site-specific recombinases.Keywords
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