Kinetic Analysis of the Effect of N -Terminal Acetylation on Thymine DNA Glycosylase.
Mary E TarantinoSarah DelaneyPublished in: Biochemistry (2022)
Thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG) is tasked with initiating DNA base excision repair by recognizing and removing T, U, the chemotherapeutic 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), and many other oxidized and halogenated pyrimidine bases. TDG contains a long, unstructured N -terminus that contains four known sites of acetylation: lysine (K) residues 59, 83, 84, and 87. Here, K to glutamine (Q) mutants are used as acetyl-lysine (AcK) analogues to probe the effect of N -terminal acetylation on the kinetics of TDG. We find that mimicking acetylation affects neither the maximal single-turnover rate k max nor the turnover rate k TO , indicating that the steps after initial binding, through chemistry and product release, are not affected. Under subsaturating conditions, however, acetylation changes the processing of U substrates. Subtle differences among AcK analogues are revealed with 5-FU in single-stranded DNA. We propose that the subtleties observed among the AcK analogues may be amplified on the genomic scale, leading to regulation of TDG activity. N -terminal acetylation, though, may also play a structural, rather than kinetic role in vivo.