26–30 Aug 2024
Europe/Berlin timezone

Time-Resolved Crystallography Captures Light-Driven DNA Repair

27 Aug 2024, 17:30
15m
Saal E

Saal E

Contributed talk 9. New trends in crystallography and structural biology Mikrosymposium 9/1: New Trends in Crystallography and Structural Biology

Speaker

Thomas Lane (FS-PS (Photon Science))

Description

Photolyase is an enzyme that uses light to catalyze DNA repair. To capture the reaction intermediates involved in the enzyme’s catalytic cycle, we conducted a time-resolved crystallography experiment. We found that photolyase traps the excited state of the active cofactor, flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), in a highly bent geometry. This excited state performs electron transfer to damaged DNA, inducing repair. We show that the repair reaction, which involves the lysis of two covalent bonds, occurs through a single-bond intermediate. The transformation of the substrate into product crowds the active site and disrupts hydrogen bonds with the enzyme, resulting in stepwise product release, with the 3′ thymine ejected first, followed by the 5′ base.

I plan to submit also conference proceedings No

Primary author

Thomas Lane (FS-PS (Photon Science))

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.