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The Mycobacterium tuberculosis Ku C-terminus is a multi-purpose arm for binding DNA and LigD and stimulating ligation.

Dana J SowaMonica M WarnerAndriana TetenychLucas KoechlinPardis BalariJose Pablo Rascon PerezCody CabaSara N Andres
Published in: Nucleic acids research (2022)
Bacterial non-homologous end joining requires the ligase, LigD and Ku. Ku finds the break site, recruits LigD, and then assists LigD to seal the phosphodiester backbone. Bacterial Ku contains a core domain conserved with eukaryotes but has a unique C-terminus that can be divided into a minimal C-terminal region that is conserved and an extended C-terminal region that varies in sequence and length between species. Here, we examine the role of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Ku C-terminal variants, where we removed either the extended or entire C-terminus to investigate the effects on Ku-DNA binding, rates of Ku-stimulated ligation, and binding affinity of a direct Ku-LigD interaction. We find that the extended C-terminus limits DNA binding and identify key amino acids that contribute to this effect through alanine-scanning mutagenesis. The minimal C-terminus is sufficient to stimulate ligation of double-stranded DNA, but the Ku core domain also contributes to stimulating ligation. We further show that wildtype Ku and the Ku core domain alone directly bind both ligase and polymerase domains of LigD. Our results suggest that Ku-stimulated ligation involves direct interactions between the Ku core domain and the LigD ligase domain, in addition to the extended Ku C-terminus and the LigD polymerase domain.
Keyphrases
  • dna binding
  • mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • transcription factor
  • crispr cas
  • dna damage
  • oxidative stress
  • mass spectrometry
  • circulating tumor cells
  • nucleic acid