A. Saito et al., IDENTIFICATION OF 4 ACIDIC AMINO-ACIDS THAT CONSTITUTE THE CATALYTIC CENTER OF THE RUVC HOLLIDAY JUNCTION RESOLVASE, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United Statesof America, 92(16), 1995, pp. 7470-7474
Escherichia coli RuvC protein is a specific endonuclease that resolves
Holliday junctions during homologous recombination, Since the endonuc
leolytic activity of RuvC requires a divalent cation and since 3 or 4
acidic residues constitute the catalytic centers of several nucleases
that require a divalent cation for the catalytic activity, we examined
whether any of the acidic residues of RuvC were required for the nucl
eolytic activity, By site-directed mutagenesis, we constructed a serie
s of ruvC mutant genes with similar amino acid replacements in 1 of th
e 13 acidic residues, Among them, the mutant genes with an alteration
at Asp-7, Glu-66, Asp-138, or Asp-141 could not complement UV sensitiv
ity of a ruvC deletion strain, and the multicopy mutant genes showed a
dominant negative phenotype when introduced into a wildtype strain, T
he products of these mutant genes were purified and their biochemical
properties were studied, All of them retained the ability to form a di
mer and to bind specifically to a synthetic Holliday junction. However
, they showed no, or extremely reduced, endonuclease activity specific
for the junction, These 4 acidic residues, which are dispersed in the
primary sequence, are located in close proximity at the bottom of the
putative DNA binding cleft in the three-dimensional structure, From t
hese results, we propose that these 4 acidic residues constitute the c
atalytic center for the Holliday junction resolvase and that some of t
hem play a role in coordinating a divalent metal ion in the active cen
ter.