Role of ATP hydrolysis in the antirecombinase function of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Srs2 protein

Lumir Krejci, Margaret Macris, Ying Li, Stephen Van Komen, Jana Villemain, Thomas Ellenberger, Hannah Klein, Patrick Sung

Producción científica: Articlerevisión exhaustiva

62 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Mutants of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae SRS2 gene are hyperrecombinogenic and sensitive to genotoxic agents, and they exhibit a synthetic lethality with mutations that compromise DNA repair or other chromosomal processes. In addition, srs2 mutants fail to adapt or recover from DNA damage checkpoint-imposed G2/M arrest. These phenotypic consequences of ablating SRS2 function are effectively overcome by deleting genes of the RAD52 epistasis group that promote homologous recombination, implicating an untimely recombination as the underlying cause of the srs2 mutant phenotypes. The SRS2-encoded protein has a single-stranded (ss) DNA-dependent ATPase activity, a DNA helicase activity, and an ability to disassemble the Rad51-ssDNA nucleoprotein filament, which is the key catalytic intermediate in Rad51-mediated recombination reactions. To address the role of ATP hydrolysis in Srs2 protein function, we have constructed two mutant variants that are altered in the Walker type A sequence involved in the binding and hydrolysis of ATP. The srs2 K41A and srs2 K41R mutant proteins are both devoid of ATPase and helicase activities and the ability to displace Rad51 from ssDNA. Accordingly, yeast strains harboring these srs2 mutations are hyperrecombinogenic and sensitive to methyl-methane sulfonate, and they become inviable upon introducing either the sgs1Δ or rad54Δ mutation. These results highlight the importance of the ATP hydrolysis-fueled DNA motor activity in SRS2 functions.

Idioma originalEnglish (US)
Páginas (desde-hasta)23193-23199
Número de páginas7
PublicaciónJournal of Biological Chemistry
Volumen279
N.º22
DOI
EstadoPublished - may 28 2004
Publicado de forma externa

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Molecular Biology
  • Biochemistry
  • Cell Biology

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