TY - JOUR
T1 - Crystal structure of the C-terminal domain of human DNA primase large subunit Implications for the mechanism of the primase - Polymerase α switch
AU - Agarkar, Vinod B.
AU - Babayeva, Nigar D.
AU - Pavlov, Youri I.
AU - Tahirov, Tahir H.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank J. Lovelace and G.E. Borgstahl for the main- tenance and management of the Eppley Institute’s X-ray Crystallography facility. The primers were synthesized in the Eppley Institute’s Molecular Biology Core facil- ity. Both facilities are supported by the Cancer Center Support Grant P30CA036727. This work is supported by Eppley Institute’s Pilot Projects and in part by NIGMS grant R01GM082923 to T.H.T. and by NCI grant CA129925 to Y.I.P. This work is also based upon research conducted at the Northeastern Collaborative Access Team beamlines of the Advanced Photon Source, supported by award RR-15301 from the National Center Resolution (A) for Research Resources at the National Institutes of No. reflections Health. Use of the Advanced Photon Source is supported R /R by the US Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy No. atoms/B-factors (A2)workfree Sciences, under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357.
PY - 2011/3/15
Y1 - 2011/3/15
N2 - DNA polymerases cannot synthesize DNA without a primer, and DNA primase is the only specialized enzyme capable of de novo synthesis of short RNA primers. In eukaryotes, primase functions within a heterotetrameric complex in concert with a tightly bound DNA polymerase α (Pol α). In humans, the Pol α part is comprised of a catalytic subunit (p180) and an accessory subunit B (p70), and the primase part consists of a small catalytic subunit (p49) and a large essential subunit (p58). The latter subunit participates in primer synthesis, counts the number of nucleotides in a primer, assists the release of the primer-template from primase and transfers it to the Pol α active site. Recently reported crystal structures of the C-terminal domains of the yeast and human enzymes' large subunits provided critical information related to their structure, possible sites for binding of nucleotides and template DNA, as well as the overall organization of eukaryotic primases. However, the structures also revealed a difference in the folding of their proposed DNA-binding fragments, raising the possibility that yeast and human proteins are functionally different. Here we report new structure of the C-terminal domain of the human primase p58 subunit. This structure exhibits a fold similar to a fold reported for the yeast protein but different than a fold reported for the human protein. Based on a comparative analysis of all three C-terminal domain structures, we propose a mechanism of RNA primer length counting and dissociation of the primer-template from primase by a switch in conformation of the ssDNA-binding region of p58.
AB - DNA polymerases cannot synthesize DNA without a primer, and DNA primase is the only specialized enzyme capable of de novo synthesis of short RNA primers. In eukaryotes, primase functions within a heterotetrameric complex in concert with a tightly bound DNA polymerase α (Pol α). In humans, the Pol α part is comprised of a catalytic subunit (p180) and an accessory subunit B (p70), and the primase part consists of a small catalytic subunit (p49) and a large essential subunit (p58). The latter subunit participates in primer synthesis, counts the number of nucleotides in a primer, assists the release of the primer-template from primase and transfers it to the Pol α active site. Recently reported crystal structures of the C-terminal domains of the yeast and human enzymes' large subunits provided critical information related to their structure, possible sites for binding of nucleotides and template DNA, as well as the overall organization of eukaryotic primases. However, the structures also revealed a difference in the folding of their proposed DNA-binding fragments, raising the possibility that yeast and human proteins are functionally different. Here we report new structure of the C-terminal domain of the human primase p58 subunit. This structure exhibits a fold similar to a fold reported for the yeast protein but different than a fold reported for the human protein. Based on a comparative analysis of all three C-terminal domain structures, we propose a mechanism of RNA primer length counting and dissociation of the primer-template from primase by a switch in conformation of the ssDNA-binding region of p58.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79952674723&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=79952674723&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4161/cc.10.6.15010
DO - 10.4161/cc.10.6.15010
M3 - Article
C2 - 21346410
AN - SCOPUS:79952674723
SN - 1538-4101
VL - 10
SP - 926
EP - 931
JO - Cell Cycle
JF - Cell Cycle
IS - 6
ER -