Pushing proteins off DNA - how do helicases unwind protein-coated DNA?

Lead Research Organisation: University of Glasgow
Department Name: School of Chemistry

Abstract

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Technical Summary

A central feature of nucleic acid metabolism is the unwinding and remodelling of DNA and RNA via the action of helicases. We know much about how these motor enzymes couple ATP hydrolysis to translocation along and disruption of base pairing between nucleic acid strands. However, recent work has highlighted the barriers to unwinding presented by the many different proteins unavoidably bound to DNA and RNA inside cells. Helicases must therefore disrupt the many noncovalent bonds between nucleic acids and bound proteins in addition to the unwinding of base pairs. A widely held assumption is that protein displacement is simply a consequence of helicase translocation along the nucleic acid. However, in spite of the importance of disrupting nucleoprotein complexes, we know little about how helicases catalyse displacement of proteins from nucleic acids.

The E. coli helicase Rep catalyses protein displacement ahead of the advancing DNA replication machinery. We have created versions of Rep that display (1) activated DNA unwinding but reduced protein displacement, (2) barely detectable DNA unwinding but robust protein displacement and (3) activation of both DNA unwinding and protein displacement. These data demonstrate that nucleoprotein complex disruption is not simply a consequence of helicase translocation along DNA but is an evolved function of these molecular motors. We will exploit these Rep mutants to determine the properties of Rep that are needed to displace proteins from DNA, test whether helicases can act as molecular springs to facilitate disruption of nucleoprotein complexes and analyse the links between helicase properties, protein displacement and force generation. These analyses will provide fundamental mechanistic insight into how molecular motors push proteins off DNA, a key function that sits at the heart of nucleic acid metabolism in all organisms.

Planned Impact

This proposal seeks to understand how a class of enzymes central to all aspects of nucleic acid metabolism, helicases, act on their true substrates. All nucleic acids in cells are coated with a vast array of different proteins and so helicases must disrupt protein-nucleic acid interactions in order to unwind the nucleic acid. This ability to disrupt nucleoprotein complexes is therefore critical for the survival of all cells and for the ability to generate faithful copies of their genetic material to pass on to the next generation.

Understanding the mechanistic features of helicases that are critical in disruption of nucleoprotein complexes will further our understanding of potential defects in nucleic acid metabolism and how these might relate to disease. Defects in DNA replication, transcription, translation and recombination are associated with a range of human and animal genetic diseases. Clinicians and scientists with interests in nucleic acid metabolism and links with disease will therefore benefit from the fundamental studies proposed here on how nucleic acids are unwound and remodelled within the complex environment of cells.

A second set of beneficiaries will be scientists and clinicians who wish to develop antiviral, antibacterial and anticancer agents. Helicases have been the targets of many screens for novel inhibitors, in part because this class of enzymes play central roles in maintaining viability. Our proposed work will build on our preliminary data indicating that helicases have evolved specific mechanistic features that aid protein displacement. This proposal will therefore link helicase structure with novel mechanistic features, fundamental information that will be of long-term benefit to pharmaceutical companies aiming to develop new therapies to prevent growth of viruses, bacteria and cancer cells.

Understanding how helicases function will also benefit the biotechnology sector. Development of synthetic organisms requires robust nucleic acid metabolic systems. Central to such systems are helicases and our preliminary work shown in this proposal demonstrates that a core evolved function of helicases is to disrupt nucleoprotein complexes effectively. Our proposed studies will therefore inform the design of nucleic acid metabolic networks needed for synthetic organisms. Helicases are also under development as molecular motors for new very high throughput DNA and RNA sequencing methods using nanopores. Our proposed work will potentially benefit optimisation of these motors for use in sequencing and other related technologies.

This proposal will develop novel applications for cutting-edge biophotonics instrumentation using bespoke equipment that is not available commercially. Direct visualisation of events as they happen at the single molecule level has transformed our understanding of biological systems and consequently there is a growing interest in these advanced imaging techniques. Our proposed experiments will highlight novel applications of these technologies and may aid the development and marketing of commercial biophotonics instrumentation.

This proposed project is highly interdisciplinary. The staff on this project will receive excellent cross-disciplinary training that will add considerably to the scientific skills base within the UK. The UK economy will benefit from this training by enhanced competitiveness in technology-driven industries. Understanding how key enzymes of nucleic acid metabolism function, and what can go wrong with these enzymes, will also have longer term benefits to the health and well-being of the UK population.

Publications

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Description The project started as a collaboration between two investigators (Dr. Steven Magennis in Glasgow and Prof. Peter McGlynn at the University of York). The project had been active for around half the duration when the postdoctoral researcher on the project left (August 2018). At that time, good progress had been made on understanding the mechanism of Rep helicase unwinding of DNA. A no-cost extension was granted and a new PDRA started on 1st April 2019 for the remainder of the project. The role of PI in York was then taken over by Prof. Mark Leake following the departure of Prof. McGlynn. We had hoped to submit a joint publication that focused on probing multiple conformational states of Rep using a range of single-molecule and advanced ensemble biophysics approaches. Unfortunately, the delays due to COVID, technical difficulties and another change of PDRA in Glasgow, meant that this project ended without a joint publication. All of the data from Glasgow was shared with the team in York, and this might lead to a future publication or inform future research. The team in Glasgow did publish a related paper on a novel fluorescence enhancement method, which we named stacking-induced fluorescence increase (published in Nucleic Acids Research). This has potential applications as a probe of DNA structure and dynamics.
Exploitation Route The work in Nucleic Acids Research has already been well cited and led to another paper.
Sectors Healthcare,Pharmaceuticals and Medical Biotechnology

 
Description The work published in Nucleic Acids. Res. 2018, 46, 11618-11626 resulted in a lot of interest from other academics who were coincidentally working in related areas at the same time. A discussion, which was initiated on Twitter (see link below), led to an international collaboration between around 10 research groups to write a review article, showing how our work overlapped and looking towards future developments. I was the joint corresponding author. This has been submitted on arxiv (https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2302.12455) and to Methods and Applications in Fluorescence. https://twitter.com/eitan_lerner/status/1630100698623889411?s=20 This work would not have been done if the BBSRC award had not been made.
First Year Of Impact 2017
Sector Healthcare,Pharmaceuticals and Medical Biotechnology
Impact Types Economic

 
Title Stacking-induced fluorescence increase reveals allosteric interactions through DNA 
Description Time-resolved fluorescence (TCSPC) data and time traces from single-molecule movies 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2018 
Provided To Others? Yes