Single-Molecule FRET Unveils Induced-Fit Mechanism for Substrate Selectivity if Flap Endonuclease 1

by Fahad Rashid, Paul D. Harris, Manal S. Zaher, Mohamed A. Sobhy, Luay I. Joudeh, Chunli Yan, Hubert Piwoński, Susan E. Tsutakawa, Ivaylo Ivanov, John A. Tainer, Satoshi Habuchi, Samir M. Hamdan
eLife Year: 2017 ISSN: DOI: 10.7554/eLife.21884

Bibliography

Single-Molecule FRET Unveils Induced-Fit Mechanism for Substrate Selectivity in Flap Endonuclease 1

Fahad Rashid, Paul D. Harris, Manal S. Zaher, Mohamed A. Sobhy, Luay I. Joudeh, Chunli Yan, Hubert Piwonski, Susan E. Tsutakawa, Ivaylo Ivanov, John A. Tainer, Satoshi Habuchi, Samir M. Hamdan

eLife 2017, 6, e21884.

Abstract

Human flap endonuclease 1 (FEN1) and related structure-specific 5’nucleases precisely identify and incise aberrant DNA structures during replication, repair and recombination to avoid genomic instability. Yet, it is unclear how the 5’nuclease mechanisms of DNA distortion and protein ordering robustly mediate efficient and accurate substrate recognition and catalytic selectivity. Here, single-molecule sub-millisecond and millisecond analyses of FEN1 reveal a protein-DNA induced-fit mechanism that efficiently verifies substrate and suppresses off-target cleavage. FEN1 sculpts DNA with diffusion-limited kinetics to test DNA substrate. This DNA distortion mutually ‘locks’ protein and DNA conformation and enables substrate verification with extreme precision. Strikingly, FEN1 never misses cleavage of its cognate substrate while blocking probable formation of catalytically competent interactions with noncognate substrates and fostering their pre-incision dissociation. These findings establish FEN1 has practically perfect precision and that separate control of induced-fit substrate recognition sets up the catalytic selectivity of the nuclease active site for genome stability.