DNA Substrate Length and Surrounding Sequence Affect the Activation-induced Deaminase Activity at Cytidine

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Abstract

Activation-induced deaminase (AID) is required for both immunoglobulin class switch recombination and somatic hypermutation. AID is known to deaminate cytidines in single-stranded DNA, but the relationship of this step to the class switch or somatic hypermutation processes is not entirely clear. We have studied the activity of a recombinant form of the mouse AID protein that was purified from a baculovirus expression system. We find that the length of the single-stranded DNA target is critical to the action of AID at the Cs positioned anywhere along the length of the DNA. The DNA sequence surrounding a given C influences AID deamination efficiency. AID preferentially deaminates Cs in the WRC motif, and additionally has a small but consistent preference for purine at the position after the WRC, thereby favoring WRCr (the lowercase r corresponds to the smaller impact on activity).

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Yu, K., Huang, F. T., & Lieber, M. R. (2004). DNA Substrate Length and Surrounding Sequence Affect the Activation-induced Deaminase Activity at Cytidine. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(8), 6496–6500. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M311616200

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