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Structure-activity relationship of the peptide binding-motif mediating the BRCA2:RAD51 protein-protein interaction

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


Change log

Authors

Scott, Duncan E 
Marsh, May 
Blundell, Tom L 
Hyvönen, Marko 

Abstract

RAD51 is a recombinase involved in the homologous recombination of double-strand breaks in DNA. RAD51 forms oligomers by binding to another molecule of RAD51 via an 'FxxA' motif, and the same recognition sequence is similarly utilised to bind BRCA2. We have tabulated the effects of mutation of this sequence, across a variety of experimental methods and from relevant mutations observed in the clinic. We use mutants of a tetrapeptide sequence to probe the binding interaction, using both isothermal titration calorimetry and X-ray crystallography. Where possible, comparison between our tetrapeptide mutational study and the previously reported mutations is made, discrepancies are discussed and the importance of secondary structure in interpreting alanine scanning and mutational data of this nature is considered.

Description

Keywords

RAD51, X-ray crystallography, alanine scanning, biophysics/ITC, peptides, protein-protein interaction, Amino Acid Motifs, Amino Acid Sequence, BRCA2 Protein, Conserved Sequence, Humans, Models, Molecular, Mutation, Peptides, Protein Binding, Protein Structure, Secondary, Rad51 Recombinase, Structure-Activity Relationship

Journal Title

FEBS Lett

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0014-5793
1873-3468

Volume Title

590

Publisher

Wiley
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (080083/Z/06/Z)
We would like to thank Protein and Nucleic Acid Service at the Department of Biochemistry for peptide synthesis and the X-ray crystallographic and Biophysics facilities for access and support. We thank Diamond Light Source (beamline I02, I03 and I04 proposal MX315), Swiss Light Source (beamline pxIII) and European Synchrotron Radiation Source (beamline ID14.4) for access to and support at beamlines that contributed to the results presented here. This work was funded by a Translational Award from the Wellcome Trust (080083/Z/06/Z).