A second hybrid-binding domain modulates the activity of Drosophila ribonuclease H1

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Abstract

In eukaryotes, ribonuclease H1 (RNase H1) is involved in the processing and removal of RNA/DNA hybrids in both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA. The enzyme comprises a C-terminal catalytic domain and an N-terminal hybrid-binding domain (HBD), separated by a linker of variable length, 115 amino acids in Drosophila melanogaster (Dm). Molecular modelling predicted this extended linker to fold into a structure similar to the conserved HBD. Based on a deletion series, both the catalytic domain and the conserved HBD were required for high-affinity binding to heteroduplex substrates, while loss of the novel HBD led to an ∼90% drop in Kcat with a decreased KM, and a large increase in the stability of the RNA/DNA hybrid-enzyme complex, supporting a bipartite-binding model in which the second HBD facilitates processivity. Shotgun proteomics following in vivo cross-linking identified single-stranded DNA-binding proteins from both nuclear and mitochondrial compartments, respectively RpA-70 and mtSSB, as prominent interaction partners of Dm RNase H1. However, we were not able to document direct and stable interactions with mtSSB when the proteins were co-overexpressed in S2 cells, and functional interactions between them in vitro were minor.

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Gonzalez De Cozar, J. M., Carretero-Junquera, M., Ciesielski, G. L., Miettinen, S. M., Varjosalo, M., Kaguni, L. S., … Jacobs, H. T. (2020). A second hybrid-binding domain modulates the activity of Drosophila ribonuclease H1. Journal of Biochemistry, 168(5), 515–533. https://doi.org/10.1093/jb/mvaa067

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