posted on 2024-11-15, 00:51authored byHasan Yardimci, Xindan Wang, Anna B Loveland, Inger Tappin, David Z Rudner, Jerard Hurwitz, Antonius van OijenAntonius van Oijen, Johannes C Walter
Replicative DNA helicases generally unwind DNA as a single hexamer that encircles and translocates along one strand of the duplex while excluding the complementary strand (known as steric exclusion). By contrast, large T antigen, the replicative DNA helicase of the simian virus 40 (SV40), is reported to function as a pair of stacked hexamers that pumps double-stranded DNA through its central channel while laterally extruding single-stranded DNA. Here we use single-molecule and ensemble assays to show that large T antigen assembled on the SV40 origin unwinds DNA efficiently as a single hexamer that translocates on single-stranded DNA in the 3′-to-5′ direction. Unexpectedly, large T antigen unwinds DNA past a DNA-protein crosslink on the translocation strand, suggesting that the large T antigen ring can open to bypass bulky adducts. Together, our data underscore the profound conservation among replicative helicase mechanisms, and reveal a new level of plasticity in the interactions of replicative helicases with DNA damage.
History
Citation
Yardimci, H., Wang, X., Loveland, A. B., Tappin, I., Rudner, D. Z., Hurwitz, J., van Oijen, A. M. & Walter, J. C. (2012). Bypass of a protein barrier by a replicative DNA helicase. Nature, 492 (7428), 205-209.