Chen, Luan2012-05-242012-05-242012-04-18https://hdl.handle.net/11299/123848Holliday junction (HJ) resolvases are structure-specific endonucleases that cleave four-way DNA junctions (Holliday junctions) generated during DNA recombination and repair. Bacterial RuvC, a prototype of HJ resolvase, functions as a homodimer and nicks DNA strands precisely across the junction point. To gain insights into the mechanisms underlying specific recognition of HJ DNA and symmetrical strand cleavages by RuvC, we performed crystallographic and biochemical analyses of RuvC from Thermus thermophilus (T.th. RuvC). The crystal structure of T.th. RuvC shows an overall protein fold similar to that of Escherichia coli RuvC, but T.th. RuvC has a more tightly associated dimer interface possibly reflecting its thermostability. The binding mode of a HJ-DNA substrate can be inferred from the shape/charge complementarity between the RuvC dimer and HJ-DNA, as well as positions of sulfate ions bound on the protein surface. Unexpectedly, the crystal structure of T.th. RuvC homodimer refined at 1.28Å resolution shows distinct asymmetry near the dimer interface, in the region harboring catalytically important aromatic residues. The observation suggests that the T.th. RuvC homodimer interconverts between two asymmetric conformations, with alternating subunits switched on for DNA strand cleavage. This model provides a structural basis for the “nick-counter-nick” mechanism in HJ resolution, a mode of HJ processing shared by prokaryotic and eukaryotic HJ resolvases.en-USCollege of Biological SciencesStructural asymmetry in the Thermus thermophilus RuvC dimer suggests a basis for sequential strand cleavages during Holliday junction resolutionPresentation