Full paper / Memoire Characterization of the DNA repair spore photoproduct lyase enzyme from Clostridium acetobutylicum: A radical-SAM enzyme

2007 
Spore photoproduct lyase (SPL) is a ‘‘Radical-SAM’’ repair enzyme which catalyzes the cleavage of spore photoproduct (SP, 5thyminyl-5,6-dihydrothymine), a specific lesion found in bacterial spore DNA, to thymine monomers by a free-radical mechanism. The enzyme requires S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) and a [4Fee4S] cluster for activity. SPL from Bacillus subtilis has been difficult to isolate and characterize due to problems with the solubility and stability of the overexpressed protein in Escherichia coli and the lability of the [FeeS] cluster, even if the protein was purified under strictly anaerobic conditions. In order to overcome these problems we searched for another SPL enzyme and we found that the recombinant SPL enzyme from Clostridium acetobutylicum, isolated either aerobically or anaerobically from overexpressing E. coli, behaves more stably than the B. subtilis one. We report here a complete spectroscopic and biochemical characterization of this enzyme. In particular we show for the first time that, using HYSCORE spectroscopy, SAM binds to the cluster as observed in the case of other members of the ‘‘Radical-SAM’’ enzyme family such as the activases of pyruvate formate lyase and ribonucleotide reductase. To cite this article: A. Chandor et al., C. R. Chimie 10 (2007).
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