EMD-11791
MutS in Scanning state
EMD-11791
Single-particle4.4 Å

Map released: 31/03/2021
Last modified: 01/05/2024
Sample Organism:
synthetic construct,
Escherichia coli
Sample: MutS loaded on matched DNA in the presence of ATP
Fitted models: 7ai5 (Avg. Q-score: 0.239)
Deposition Authors: Fernandez-Leiro R
,
Bhairosing-Kok D
Sample: MutS loaded on matched DNA in the presence of ATP
Fitted models: 7ai5 (Avg. Q-score: 0.239)
Deposition Authors: Fernandez-Leiro R

The selection process of licensing a DNA mismatch for repair.
Fernandez-Leiro R
,
Bhairosing-Kok D,
Kunetsky V
,
Laffeber C,
Winterwerp HH,
Groothuizen F,
Fish A,
Lebbink JHG,
Friedhoff P
,
Sixma TK
,
Lamers MH
(2021) Nat Struct Mol Biol , 28 , 373 - 381





(2021) Nat Struct Mol Biol , 28 , 373 - 381
Abstract:
DNA mismatch repair detects and removes mismatches from DNA by a conserved mechanism, reducing the error rate of DNA replication by 100- to 1,000-fold. In this process, MutS homologs scan DNA, recognize mismatches and initiate repair. How the MutS homologs selectively license repair of a mismatch among millions of matched base pairs is not understood. Here we present four cryo-EM structures of Escherichia coli MutS that provide snapshots, from scanning homoduplex DNA to mismatch binding and MutL activation via an intermediate state. During scanning, the homoduplex DNA forms a steric block that prevents MutS from transitioning into the MutL-bound clamp state, which can only be overcome through kinking of the DNA at a mismatch. Structural asymmetry in all four structures indicates a division of labor between the two MutS monomers. Together, these structures reveal how a small conformational change from the homoduplex- to heteroduplex-bound MutS acts as a licensing step that triggers a dramatic conformational change that enables MutL binding and initiation of the repair cascade.
DNA mismatch repair detects and removes mismatches from DNA by a conserved mechanism, reducing the error rate of DNA replication by 100- to 1,000-fold. In this process, MutS homologs scan DNA, recognize mismatches and initiate repair. How the MutS homologs selectively license repair of a mismatch among millions of matched base pairs is not understood. Here we present four cryo-EM structures of Escherichia coli MutS that provide snapshots, from scanning homoduplex DNA to mismatch binding and MutL activation via an intermediate state. During scanning, the homoduplex DNA forms a steric block that prevents MutS from transitioning into the MutL-bound clamp state, which can only be overcome through kinking of the DNA at a mismatch. Structural asymmetry in all four structures indicates a division of labor between the two MutS monomers. Together, these structures reveal how a small conformational change from the homoduplex- to heteroduplex-bound MutS acts as a licensing step that triggers a dramatic conformational change that enables MutL binding and initiation of the repair cascade.