Conway AB, et al. (2004) Crystal structure of a Rad51 filament. Nat Struct Mol Biol 11(8):791-6
Abstract: Rad51, the major eukaryotic homologous recombinase, is important for the repair of DNA damage and the maintenance of genomic diversity and stability. The active form of this DNA-dependent ATPase is a helical filament within which the search for homology and strand exchange occurs. Here we present the crystal structure of a Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rad51 filament formed by a gain-of-function mutant. This filament has a longer pitch than that seen in crystals of Rad51's prokaryotic homolog RecA, and places the ATPase site directly at a new interface between protomers. Although the filament exhibits approximate six-fold symmetry, alternate protein-protein interfaces are slightly different, implying that the functional unit of Rad51 within the filament may be a dimer. Additionally, we show that mutation of His352, which lies at this new interface, markedly disrupts DNA binding.
| Status: Published | Type: Journal Article | PubMed ID: 15235592 |
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| Topics | Genes linked to topics |
|---|---|
| RAD51 | |
| Mutants/Phenotypes | |
| Primary Literature | |
| Protein-Nucleic Acid Interactions | |
| Protein-protein Interactions | |
| Protein/Nucleic Acid Structure | |
| Substrates/Ligands/Cofactors | |




