| ATP-Mediated Conformational Changes in the RecA Filament Structure, Volume 11, Issue 2, 1 February 2003, Pages 187-196 Margaret S. VanLoock, Xiong Yu, Shixin Yang, Alex L. Lai, Claudia Low, Michael J. Campbell and Edward H. Egelman Summary The crystal structure of the RecA protein was solved more than 10 years ago, but it has provided limited insight into the mechanism of homologous genetic recombination. Using electron microscopy, we have reconstructed five different states of RecA-DNA filaments. The C-terminal lobe of the RecA protein is modulated by the state of the distantly bound nucleotide, and this allosteric coupling can explain how mutations and truncations of this C-terminal lobe enhance RecA's activity. A model generated from these reconstructions shows that the nucleotide binding core is substantially rotated from its position in the RecA crystal filament, resulting in ATP binding between subunits. This simple rotation can explain the large cooperativity in ATP hydrolysis observed for RecA-DNA filaments. Summary | Full Text | PDF (574 kb) |
| A ubiquitous structural core Trends in Biochemical Sciences, Volume 25, Issue 4, 1 April 2000, Pages 183-184 Edward Egelman Full Text | PDF (70 kb) |
| The search for DNA homology does not limit stable homologous pairing promoted by RecA protein Current Biology, Volume 5, Issue 10, 1 October 1995, Pages 1149-1158 Janet E. Yancey-Wrona and R.Daniel Camerini-Otero Summary We conclude that, during the formation of synaptic complexes by RecA, the search for homology is not rate-limiting, and that the iteration frequency of the search is around 10–10 s. This value agrees well with what has been calculated as the minimum number for such a frequency in genome-wide searches, and limits the possible structures involved in the search for homology to those involving very soft (low energy) interactions. Furthermore, from the order of the reaction at the DNA concentrations found in eukaryotic nuclei, and the rate constant of the overall reaction, we predict that the search for homology is also not the rate-limiting step in the genome-wide searches implicated in meiosis and in gene targeting. Summary | Full Text | PDF (1391 kb) |
Copyright © 1995 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 69, Issue 6, 2728-2738, 1 December 1995
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(95)80144-X
Research Article
X. Yu, E. Angov, R.D. Camerini-Otero and E.H. Egelman
The Escherichia coli RecA protein has served as a model for understanding protein-catalyzed homologous recombination, both in vitro and in vivo. Although RecA proteins have now been sequenced from over 60 different bacteria, almost all of our structural knowledge about RecA has come from studies of the E. coli protein. We have used electron microscopy and image analysis to examine three different structures formed by the RecA protein from the thermophilic bacterium Thermus aquaticus. This protein has previously been shown to catalyze an in vitro strand exchange reaction at an optimal temperature of about 60 degrees C. We show that the active filament formed by the T. aquaticus RecA on DNA in the presence of a nucleotide cofactor is extremely similar to the filament formed by the E. coli protein, including the extension of DNA to a 5.1-A rise per base pair within this filament. This parameter appears highly conserved through evolution, as it has been observed for the eukaryotic RecA analogs as well. We have also characterized bundles of filaments formed by the T. aquaticus RecA in the absence of both DNA and nucleotide cofactor, as well as hexameric rings of the protein formed under all conditions examined. The bundles display a very large plasticity of mass within the RecA filament, as well as showing a polymorphism in filament-filament contacts that may be important to understanding mutations that affect surface residues on the RecA filament.