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Dive into the research topics where Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu is active.

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Featured researches published by Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

DdrB Protein, an Alternative Deinococcus radiodurans SSB Induced by Ionizing Radiation

Cédric Norais; Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu; Elizabeth A. Wood; Ross B. Inman; Michael M. Cox

Abstract Deinococcus radiodurans exhibits an extraordinary resistance to the effects of exposure to ionizing radiation (IR). DdrB is one of five proteins induced to high levels in Deinococcus following extreme IR exposure, and which play a demonstrable role in genome reconstitution. Although homology is limited, DdrB is a bacterial single-stranded DNA binding protein. DdrB features a stable core with a putative OB fold, and a C-terminal segment with properties consistent with other bacterial SSBs. In solution, the protein functions as a pentamer. The protein binds single-stranded DNA but not duplex DNA. Electron microscopy and assays with two RecA proteins provide further structural and functional identification with bacterial SSB. Overall, the results establish DdrB as the prototype of a new bacterial SSB family. Given the role of SSB as a mobilization scaffold for many processes in DNA metabolism, the induction of an alternative and quite novel SSB following irradiation has potentially broad significance for the organization of genome reconstitution functions.Deinococcus radiodurans exhibits an extraordinary resistance to the effects of exposure to ionizing radiation (IR). DdrB is one of five proteins induced to high levels in Deinococcus following extreme IR exposure and that play a demonstrable role in genome reconstitution. Although homology is limited, DdrB is a bacterial single-stranded DNA-binding protein. DdrB features a stable core with a putative OB-fold, and a C-terminal segment with properties consistent with other bacterial SSBs. In solution, the protein functions as a pentamer. The protein binds single-stranded DNA but not duplex DNA. Electron microscopy and assays with two RecA proteins provide further structural and functional identification with bacterial SSB. Overall, the results establish DdrB as the prototype of a new bacterial SSB family. Given the role of SSB as a mobilization scaffold for many processes in DNA metabolism, the induction of an alternative and quite novel SSB following irradiation has potentially broad significance for the organization of genome reconstitution functions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

An alternative Deinococcus radiodurans SSB induced by ionizing radiation: The DdrB protein

Cédric Norais; Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu; Elizabeth A. Wood; Ross B. Inman; Michael M. Cox

Abstract Deinococcus radiodurans exhibits an extraordinary resistance to the effects of exposure to ionizing radiation (IR). DdrB is one of five proteins induced to high levels in Deinococcus following extreme IR exposure, and which play a demonstrable role in genome reconstitution. Although homology is limited, DdrB is a bacterial single-stranded DNA binding protein. DdrB features a stable core with a putative OB fold, and a C-terminal segment with properties consistent with other bacterial SSBs. In solution, the protein functions as a pentamer. The protein binds single-stranded DNA but not duplex DNA. Electron microscopy and assays with two RecA proteins provide further structural and functional identification with bacterial SSB. Overall, the results establish DdrB as the prototype of a new bacterial SSB family. Given the role of SSB as a mobilization scaffold for many processes in DNA metabolism, the induction of an alternative and quite novel SSB following irradiation has potentially broad significance for the organization of genome reconstitution functions.Deinococcus radiodurans exhibits an extraordinary resistance to the effects of exposure to ionizing radiation (IR). DdrB is one of five proteins induced to high levels in Deinococcus following extreme IR exposure and that play a demonstrable role in genome reconstitution. Although homology is limited, DdrB is a bacterial single-stranded DNA-binding protein. DdrB features a stable core with a putative OB-fold, and a C-terminal segment with properties consistent with other bacterial SSBs. In solution, the protein functions as a pentamer. The protein binds single-stranded DNA but not duplex DNA. Electron microscopy and assays with two RecA proteins provide further structural and functional identification with bacterial SSB. Overall, the results establish DdrB as the prototype of a new bacterial SSB family. Given the role of SSB as a mobilization scaffold for many processes in DNA metabolism, the induction of an alternative and quite novel SSB following irradiation has potentially broad significance for the organization of genome reconstitution functions.


Molecular Microbiology | 2008

RecA‐mediated SOS induction requires an extended filament conformation but no ATP hydrolysis

Marielle C. Gruenig; Nicholas Renzette; Edward Long; Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu; Ross B. Inman; Michael M. Cox; Steven J. Sandler

The Escherichia coli SOS response to DNA damage is modulated by the RecA protein, a recombinase that forms an extended filament on single‐stranded DNA and hydrolyzes ATP. The RecA K72R (recA2201) mutation eliminates the ATPase activity of RecA protein. The mutation also limits the capacity of RecA to form long filaments in the presence of ATP. Strains with this mutation do not undergo SOS induction in vivo. We have combined the K72R variant of RecA with another mutation, RecA E38K (recA730). In vitro, the double mutant RecA E38K/K72R (recA730,2201) mimics the K72R mutant protein in that it has no ATPase activity. The double mutant protein will form long extended filaments on ssDNA and facilitate LexA cleavage almost as well as wild‐type, and do so in the presence of ATP. Unlike recA K72R, the recA E38K/K72R double mutant promotes SOS induction in vivo after UV treatment. Thus, SOS induction does not require ATP hydrolysis by the RecA protein, but does require formation of extended RecA filaments. The RecA E38K/K72R protein represents an improved reagent for studies of the function of ATP hydrolysis by RecA in vivo and in vitro.


Molecular Cell | 2009

An SOS Inhibitor that Binds to Free RecA Protein: The PsiB Protein

Vessela Petrova; Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu; Julia C. Drees; Ross B. Inman; Michael M. Cox

The process of bacterial conjugation involves the transfer of a conjugative plasmid as a single strand. The potentially deleterious SOS response, which is normally triggered by the appearance of single-stranded DNA, is suppressed in the recipient cell by a conjugative plasmid system centered on the product of the psiB gene. The F plasmid PsiB protein inhibits all activities of the RecA protein, including DNA binding, DNA strand exchange, and LexA protein cleavage. The proteins known to negatively regulate recombinases, such as RecA or Rad51, generally work at the level of dismantling the nucleoprotein filament. However, PsiB binds to RecA protein that is free in solution. The RecA-PsiB complex impedes formation of RecA nucleoprotein filaments on DNA.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Structure and Cellular Dynamics of Deinococcus radiodurans Single-stranded DNA (ssDNA)-binding Protein (SSB)-DNA Complexes

Nicholas P. George; Khanh V. Ngo; Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu; Cédric Norais; John R. Battista; Michael M. Cox; James L. Keck

Background: The dimeric D. radiodurans single-stranded DNA-binding protein (DrSSB) has poorly defined DNA-binding and cellular mechanisms. Results: DrSSB binds ssDNA analogously to tetrameric bacterial SSBs and is regulated in response to ionizing radiation. Conclusion: The DrSSB ssDNA mechanism is conserved with other SSBs, and the protein is dynamically localized during DNA repair. Significance: The findings suggest a central role for DrSSB in DNA repair. The single-stranded DNA (ssDNA)-binding protein from the radiation-resistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans (DrSSB) functions as a homodimer in which each monomer contains two oligonucleotide-binding (OB) domains. This arrangement is exceedingly rare among bacterial SSBs, which typically form homotetramers of single-OB domain subunits. To better understand how this unusual structure influences the DNA binding and biological functions of DrSSB in D. radiodurans radiation resistance, we have examined the structure of DrSSB in complex with ssDNA and the DNA damage-dependent cellular dynamics of DrSSB. The x-ray crystal structure of the DrSSB-ssDNA complex shows that ssDNA binds to surfaces of DrSSB that are analogous to those mapped in homotetrameric SSBs, although there are distinct contacts in DrSSB that mediate species-specific ssDNA binding. Observations by electron microscopy reveal two salt-dependent ssDNA-binding modes for DrSSB that strongly resemble those of the homotetrameric Escherichia coli SSB, further supporting a shared overall DNA binding mechanism between the two classes of bacterial SSBs. In vivo, DrSSB levels are heavily induced following exposure to ionizing radiation. This accumulation is accompanied by dramatic time-dependent DrSSB cellular dynamics in which a single nucleoid-centric focus of DrSSB is observed within 1 h of irradiation but is dispersed by 3 h after irradiation. These kinetics parallel those of D. radiodurans postirradiation genome reconstitution, suggesting that DrSSB dynamics could play important organizational roles in DNA repair.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Inhibition of RecA Protein Function by the RdgC Protein from Escherichia coli

Julia C. Drees; Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu; Darrell R. McCaslin; Ross B. Inman; Michael M. Cox

The Escherichia coli RdgC protein is a potential negative regulator of RecA function. RdgC inhibits RecA protein-promoted DNA strand exchange, ATPase activity, and RecA-dependent LexA cleavage. The primary mechanism of RdgC inhibition appears to involve a simple competition for DNA binding sites, especially on duplex DNA. The capacity of RecA to compete with RdgC is improved by the DinI protein. RdgC protein can inhibit DNA strand exchange catalyzed by RecA nucleoprotein filaments formed on single-stranded DNA by binding to the homologous duplex DNA and thereby blocking access to that DNA by the RecA nucleoprotein filaments. RdgC protein binds to single-stranded and double-stranded DNA, and the protein can be visualized on DNA using electron microscopy. RdgC protein exists in solution as a mixture of oligomeric states in equilibrium, most likely as monomers, dimers, and tetramers. This concentration-dependent change of state appears to affect its mode of binding to DNA and its capacity to inhibit RecA. The various species differ in their capacity to inhibit RecA function.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Less Is More: Neisseria gonorrhoeae RecX Protein Stimulates Recombination by Inhibiting RecA

Marielle C. Gruenig; Elizabeth A. Stohl; Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu; H. Steven Seifert; Michael M. Cox

Escherichia coli RecX (RecXEc) is a negative regulator of RecA activities both in the bacterial cell and in vitro. In contrast, the Neisseria gonorrhoeae RecX protein (RecXNg) enhances all RecA-related processes in N. gonorrhoeae. Surprisingly, the RecXNg protein is not a RecA protein activator in vitro. Instead, RecXNg is a much more potent inhibitor of all RecANg and RecAEc activities than is the E. coli RecX ortholog. A series of RecXNg mutant proteins representing a gradient of functional deficiencies provide a direct correlation between RecANg inhibition in vitro and the enhancement of RecANg function in N. gonorrhoeae. Unlike RecXEc, RecXNg does not simply cap the growing ends of RecA filaments, but it directly facilitates a more rapid RecA filament disassembly. Thus, in N. gonorrhoeae, recombinational processes are facilitated by RecXNg protein-mediated limitations on RecANg filament presence and/or length to achieve maximal function.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Complementation of One RecA Protein Point Mutation by Another EVIDENCE FOR TRANS CATALYSIS OF ATP HYDROLYSIS

Julia M. Cox; Stephen N. Abbott; Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu; Ross B. Inman; Michael M. Cox

The RecA residues Lys248 and Glu96 are closely opposed across the RecA subunit-subunit interface in some recent models of the RecA nucleoprotein filament. The K248R and E96D single mutant proteins of the Escherichia coli RecA protein each bind to DNA and form nucleoprotein filaments but do not hydrolyze ATP or dATP. A mixture of K248R and E96D single mutant proteins restores dATP hydrolysis to 25% of the wild type rate, with maximum restoration seen when the proteins are present in a 1:1 ratio. The K248R/E96D double mutant RecA protein also hydrolyzes ATP and dATP at rates up to 10-fold higher than either single mutant, although at a reduced rate compared with the wild type protein. Thus, the K248R mutation partially complements the inactive E96D mutation and vice versa. The complementation is not sufficient to allow DNA strand exchange. The K248R and E96D mutations originate from opposite sides of the subunit-subunit interface. The functional complementation suggests that Lys248 plays a significant role in ATP hydrolysis in trans across the subunit-subunit interface in the RecA nucleoprotein filament. This could be part of a mechanism for the long range coordination of hydrolytic cycles between subunits within the RecA filament.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

Active displacement of RecA filaments by UvrD translocase activity

Vessela Petrova; Stefanie H. Chen; Eileen T. Molzberger; Eric J. Tomko; Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu; Haifeng Jia; Yerdos Ordabayev; Timothy M. Lohman; Michael M. Cox

The UvrD helicase has been implicated in the disassembly of RecA nucleoprotein filaments in vivo and in vitro. We demonstrate that UvrD utilizes an active mechanism to remove RecA from the DNA. Efficient RecA removal depends on the availability of DNA binding sites for UvrD and/or the accessibility of the RecA filament ends. The removal of RecA from DNA also requires ATP hydrolysis by the UvrD helicase but not by RecA protein. The RecA-removal activity of UvrD is slowed by RecA variants with enhanced DNA-binding properties. The ATPase rate of UvrD during RecA removal is much slower than the ATPase activity of UvrD when it is functioning either as a translocase or a helicase on DNA in the absence of RecA. Thus, in this context UvrD may operate in a specialized disassembly mode.


Biochemistry | 2011

Investigating Deinococcus radiodurans RecA protein filament formation on double-stranded DNA by a real-time single-molecule approach.

Hsin-Fang Hsu; Khanh V. Ngo; Sindhu Chitteni-Pattu; Michael M. Cox; Hung-Wen Li

With the aid of an efficient, precise, and almost error-free DNA repair system, Deinococcus radiodurans can survive hundreds of double-strand breaks inflicted by high doses of irradiation or desiccation. RecA of D. radiodurans (DrRecA) plays a central role both in the early phase of repair by an extended synthesis-dependent strand annealing process and in the later more general homologous recombination phase. Both roles likely require DrRecA filament formation on duplex DNA. We have developed single-molecule tethered particle motion experiments to study the assembly dynamics of RecA proteins on individual duplex DNA molecules by observing changes in DNA tether length resulting from RecA binding. We demonstrate that DrRecA nucleation on double-stranded DNA is much faster than that of Escherichia coli RecA protein (EcRecA), but the extension is slower. This combination of attributes would tend to increase the number and decrease the length of DrRecA filaments relative to those of EcRecA, a feature that may reflect the requirement to repair hundreds of genomic double-strand breaks concurrently in irradiated Deinococcus cells.

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Michael M. Cox

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Ross B. Inman

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Elizabeth A. Wood

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Julia C. Drees

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Khanh V. Ngo

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Shelley L. Lusetti

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Eileen T. Molzberger

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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