JOURNAL ARTICLE

Human Pif1 helicase is a G-quadruplex DNA-binding protein with G-quadruplex DNA-unwinding activity

Cyril M. Sanders

Year: 2010 Journal:   Biochemical Journal Vol: 430 (1)Pages: 119-128   Publisher: Portland Press

Abstract

Pif1 proteins are helicases that in yeast are implicated in the maintenance of genome stability. One activity of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Pif1 is to stabilize DNA sequences that could otherwise form deleterious G4 (G-quadruplex) structures by acting as a G4 resolvase. The present study shows that human Pif1 (hPif1, nuclear form) is a G4 DNA-binding and resolvase protein and that these activities are properties of the conserved helicase domain (amino acids 206–620 of 641, hPifHD). hPif1 preferentially bound synthetic G4 DNA relative to ssDNA (single-stranded DNA), dsDNA (double-stranded DNA) and a partially single-stranded duplex DNA helicase substrate. G4 DNA unwinding, but not binding, required an extended (>10 nucleotide) 5′ ssDNA tail, and in competition assays, G4 DNA was an ineffective suppressor of helicase activity compared with ssDNA. These results suggest a distinction between the determinants of G4 DNA binding and the ssDNA interactions required for helicase action and that hPif1 may act on G4 substrates by binding alone or as a resolvase. Human Pif1 could therefore have a role in processing G4 structures that arise in the single-stranded nucleic acid intermediates formed during DNA replication and gene expression.

Keywords:
Helicase DNA Biology Circular bacterial chromosome dnaB helicase HMG-box DNA clamp Replication protein A Molecular biology Protein–DNA interaction DNA replication Biochemistry DNA-binding protein Gene RNA Transcription factor

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150
Cited By
4.33
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
47
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0.94
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Citation History

Topics

DNA and Nucleic Acid Chemistry
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
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