Understanding the structure and role of DNA-PK in NHEJ: How X-ray diffraction and cryo-EM contribute in complementary ways

Q Wu, S Liang, T Ochi, DY Chirgadze… - Progress in Biophysics …, 2019 - Elsevier
Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology, 2019Elsevier
DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), generated by ionizing radiation, reactive oxygen species
and DNA replication across nicks, are the most severe DNA damage in eukaryotic cells. Non-
Homologous End Joining repairs DNA double-strand breaks directly without a template and
so can take place at any point in the cell cycle. Ku70/80 heterodimers rapidly assemble
around broken DNA ends, allowing DNA-PKcs, the catalytic subunit of DNA-dependent
protein kinase, to be recruited and facilitating synapsis of broken DNA ends. This then …
Abstract
DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), generated by ionizing radiation, reactive oxygen species and DNA replication across nicks, are the most severe DNA damage in eukaryotic cells. Non-Homologous End Joining repairs DNA double-strand breaks directly without a template and so can take place at any point in the cell cycle. Ku70/80 heterodimers rapidly assemble around broken DNA ends, allowing DNA-PKcs, the catalytic subunit of DNA-dependent protein kinase, to be recruited and facilitating synapsis of broken DNA ends. This then provides a stage for end-processing and ligation. Here we review progress leading in 2017 to the medium resolution X-ray structure of DNA-PKcs, a single polypeptide chain of 4128 amino acids. This was followed quickly by chain tracing of cryo-EM structures of DNA-PKcs in complex with Ku and DNA. We discuss how combination of structural information from X-ray and cryo-EM studies can produce a working model for complex multicomponent molecular assemblies such as those found in DNA-double-strand-break repair.
Elsevier