Structural highlights
Function
A7RCB1_PBCVA
Evolutionary Conservation
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Publication Abstract from PubMed
Chlorella virus DNA ligase is the smallest eukaryotic ATP-dependent ligase known; it has an intrinsic nick-sensing function and suffices for yeast cell growth. Here, we report the 2.0 A crystal structure of the covalent ligase-AMP reaction intermediate. The conformation of the adenosine nucleoside and contacts between the enzyme and the ribose sugar have undergone a significant change compared to complexes of T7 ligase with ATP or mRNA capping enzyme with GTP. The conformational switch allows the 3' OH of AMP to coordinate directly the 5' PO(4) of the nick. The structure explains why nick sensing is restricted to adenylated ligase and why the 5' phosphate is required for DNA binding. We identify a metal binding site on ligase-adenylate and propose a mechanism of nick recognition and catalysis supported by mutational data.
Crystal structure of eukaryotic DNA ligase-adenylate illuminates the mechanism of nick sensing and strand joining.,Odell M, Sriskanda V, Shuman S, Nikolov DB Mol Cell. 2000 Nov;6(5):1183-93. PMID:11106756[1]
From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
See Also
References
- ↑ Odell M, Sriskanda V, Shuman S, Nikolov DB. Crystal structure of eukaryotic DNA ligase-adenylate illuminates the mechanism of nick sensing and strand joining. Mol Cell. 2000 Nov;6(5):1183-93. PMID:11106756