Shelley L. Lusetti
University of Wisconsin-Madison
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Featured researches published by Shelley L. Lusetti.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004
Julia C. Drees; Shelley L. Lusetti; Michael M. Cox
The RecX protein is a potent inhibitor of RecA activities. We identified several factors that affect RecX-RecA interaction. The interaction is enhanced by the RecA C terminus and by significant concentrations of free Mg2+ ion. The interaction is also enhanced by an N-terminal His6 tag on the RecX protein. We conclude that RecX protein interacts most effectively with a RecA functional state designated Ao and that the RecA C terminus has a role in modulating the interaction. We further identified a C-terminal point mutation in RecA protein (E343K) that significantly alters the interaction between RecA and RecX proteins.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004
Shelley L. Lusetti; Julia C. Drees; Elizabeth A. Stohl; H. Steven Seifert; Michael M. Cox
The DinI and RecX proteins of Escherichia coli both modulate the function of RecA protein, but have very different effects. DinI protein stabilizes RecA filaments, preventing disassembly but permitting assembly. RecX protein blocks RecA filament extension, which can lead to net filament disassembly. We demonstrate that both proteins can interact with the RecA filament, and propose that each can replace the other. The DinI/RecX displacement reactions are slow, requiring multiple minutes even when a large excess of the challenging protein is present. The effects of RecX protein on RecA filaments are manifest at lower modulator concentrations than the effects of DinI protein. Together, the DinI and RecX proteins constitute a new regulatory network. The two proteins compete directly as mainly positive (DinI) and negative (RecX) modulators of RecA function.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Emigdio Reyes; Praveen L. Patidar; Lee A. Uranga; Angelina S. Bortoletto; Shelley L. Lusetti
The bacterial RecN protein is involved in the recombinational repair of DNA double-stranded breaks, and recN mutants are sensitive to DNA-damaging agents. Little is known about the biochemical function of RecN. Protein sequence analysis suggests that RecN is related to the SMC (structural maintenance of chromosomes) family of proteins, predicting globular N- and C-terminal domains connected by an extensive coil-coiled domain. The N- and C-domains contain the nucleotide-binding sequences Walker A and Walker B, respectively. We have purified the RecN protein from Deinococcus radiodurans and characterized its DNA-dependent and DNA-independent ATPase activity. The RecN protein hydrolyzes ATP with a kcat of 24 min−1, and this rate is stimulated 4-fold by duplex DNA but not by single-stranded DNA. This DNA-dependent ATP turnover rate exhibits a dependence on the concentration of RecN protein, suggesting that RecN-RecN interactions are required for efficient ATP hydrolysis, and those interactions are stabilized only by duplex DNA. Finally, we show that RecN stimulates the intermolecular ligation of linear DNA molecules in the presence of DNA ligase. This DNA bridging activity is strikingly similar to that of the cohesin complex, an SMC family member, to which RecN is related.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Rachel L. Britt; Nami Haruta; Shelley L. Lusetti; Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu; Ross B. Inman; Michael M. Cox
Disassembly of RecA protein subunits from a RecA filament has long been known to occur during DNA strand exchange, although its importance to this process has been controversial. An Escherichia coli RecA E38K/ΔC17 double mutant protein displays a unique and pH-dependent mutational separation of DNA pairing and extended DNA strand exchange. Single strand DNA-dependent ATP hydrolysis is catalyzed by this mutant protein nearly normally from pH 6 to 8.5. It will also form filaments on DNA and promote DNA pairing. However, below pH 7.3, ATP hydrolysis is completely uncoupled from extended DNA strand exchange. The products of extended DNA strand exchange do not form. At the lower pH values, disassembly of RecA E38K/ΔC17 filaments is strongly suppressed, even when homologous DNAs are paired and available for extended DNA strand exchange. Disassembly of RecA E38K/ΔC17 filaments improves at pH 8.5, whereas complete DNA strand exchange is also restored. Under these sets of conditions, a tight correlation between filament disassembly and completion of DNA strand exchange is observed. This correlation provides evidence that RecA filament disassembly plays a major role in, and may be required for, DNA strand exchange. A requirement for RecA filament disassembly in DNA strand exchange has a variety of ramifications for the current models linking ATP hydrolysis to DNA strand exchange.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011
Lee A. Uranga; Victoria D. Balise; Candice V. Benally; Angelina Grey; Shelley L. Lusetti
Escherichia coli dinD is an SOS gene up-regulated in response to DNA damage. We find that the purified DinD protein is a novel inhibitor of RecA-mediated DNA strand exchange activities. Most modulators of RecA protein activity act by controlling the amount of RecA protein bound to single-stranded DNA by affecting either the loading of RecA protein onto DNA or the disassembly of RecA nucleoprotein filaments bound to single-stranded DNA. The DinD protein, however, acts postsynaptically to inhibit RecA during an on-going DNA strand exchange, likely through the disassembly of RecA filaments. DinD protein does not affect RecA single-stranded DNA filaments but efficiently disassembles RecA when bound to two or more DNA strands, effectively halting RecA-mediated branch migration. By utilizing a nonspecific duplex DNA-binding protein, YebG, we show that the DinD effect is not simply due to duplex DNA sequestration. We present a model suggesting that the negative effects of DinD protein are targeted to a specific conformational state of the RecA protein and discuss the potential role of DinD protein in the regulation of recombinational DNA repair.
Nature Communications | 2017
Lee A. Uranga; Emigdio Reyes; Praveen L. Patidar; Lindsay N. Redman; Shelley L. Lusetti
RecN is a cohesin-like protein involved in DNA double-strand break repair in bacteria. The RecA recombinase functions to mediate repair via homologous DNA strand invasion to form D-loops. Here we provide evidence that the RecN protein stimulates the DNA strand invasion step of RecA-mediated recombinational DNA repair. The intermolecular DNA tethering activity of RecN protein described previously cannot fully explain this novel activity since stimulation of RecA function is species-specific and requires RecN ATP hydrolysis. Further, DNA-bound RecA protein increases the rate of ATP hydrolysis catalysed by RecN during the DNA pairing reaction. DNA-dependent RecN ATPase kinetics are affected by RecA protein in a manner suggesting a specific order of protein–DNA assembly, with RecN acting after RecA binds DNA. We present a model for RecN function that includes presynaptic stimulation of the bacterial repair pathway perhaps by contributing to the RecA homology search before ternary complex formation.
Annual Review of Biochemistry | 2002
Shelley L. Lusetti; Michael M. Cox
Molecular Cell | 2004
Julia C. Drees; Shelley L. Lusetti; Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu; Ross B. Inman; Michael M. Cox
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003
Aimee L. Eggler; Shelley L. Lusetti; Michael M. Cox
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003
Shelley L. Lusetti; Elizabeth A. Wood; Christopher D. Fleming; Michael J. Modica; Joshua Korth; Lily Abbott; David W. Dwyer; Alberto I. Roca; Ross B. Inman; Michael M. Cox