Abstract
AbstractRing-shaped hexameric helicases are nucleotide hydrolases that unwind double-stranded DNA into single strands, a necessary step in DNA replication. Two main questions are critical to understanding their function: the location of DNA strand separation within the helicase, and the precise dynamic linkage between nucleotide hydrolysis and DNA translocation. We explore these questions by employing cryo-EM to visualize the translocation mechanics of a AAA+ helicase, the SV40 Large Tumor Antigen (LTag), on forked DNA. We find the DNA fork nexus is positioned deep within the core helicase domain, with each DNA-binding loop from the six subunits securing the tracking strand by forming a paired staircase spiral that substitutes the passive strand. This structure forges an internal separation wedge, channeling the passive strand through a gap in the subunit C-tiers at the back of the helicase. Via cryo-EM continuous heterogeneity analysis we capture, and exhaustively model, a seamless spectrum of conformations of translocating LTag at high resolution. ATP hydrolysis at the tightest inter-subunit interface operates like an ‘entropy switch’, triggering coordinated rigid-body rotations of the subunit C-tiers and DNA-binding loops, resulting in directional escorting of the tracking strand through the central channel, concomitantly setting preparatory steps for cycle restart. Overall, we demonstrate a dynamic model for hydrolysis-coupled translocation and DNA unwinding by a model helicase active in replication, with implications for origin unwinding. High structural conservation of core helicase regions suggests this mechanism is applicable to hexameric helicases across domains.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory