Basis for the discrimination of supercoil handedness during DNA cleavage by human and bacterial type II topoisomerases

Author:

Jian Jeffrey Y1,McCarty Kevin D1ORCID,Byl Jo Ann W1,Guengerich F Peter1,Neuman Keir C2,Osheroff Neil134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine , Nashville , TN 37232, USA

2. Laboratory of Single Molecule Biophysics, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health , Bethesda , MD 20982, USA

3. Department of Medicine (Hematology/Oncology), Vanderbilt University School of Medicine , Nashville , TN 37232, USA

4. VA Tennessee Valley Healthcare System , Nashville , TN 37212, USA

Abstract

AbstractTo perform double-stranded DNA passage, type II topoisomerases generate a covalent enzyme-cleaved DNA complex (i.e. cleavage complex). Although this complex is a requisite enzyme intermediate, it is also intrinsically dangerous to genomic stability. Consequently, cleavage complexes are the targets for several clinically relevant anticancer and antibacterial drugs. Human topoisomerase IIα and IIβ and bacterial gyrase maintain higher levels of cleavage complexes with negatively supercoiled over positively supercoiled DNA substrates. Conversely, bacterial topoisomerase IV is less able to distinguish DNA supercoil handedness. Despite the importance of supercoil geometry to the activities of type II topoisomerases, the basis for supercoil handedness recognition during DNA cleavage has not been characterized. Based on the results of benchtop and rapid-quench flow kinetics experiments, the forward rate of cleavage is the determining factor of how topoisomerase IIα/IIβ, gyrase and topoisomerase IV distinguish supercoil handedness in the absence or presence of anticancer/antibacterial drugs. In the presence of drugs, this ability can be enhanced by the formation of more stable cleavage complexes with negatively supercoiled DNA. Finally, rates of enzyme-mediated DNA ligation do not contribute to the recognition of DNA supercoil geometry during cleavage. Our results provide greater insight into how type II topoisomerases recognize their DNA substrates.

Funder

US Veterans Administration Merit Review Award

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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