Structural Plasticity Of Substrate Selection By Activation-Induced Cytidine Deaminase As A Regulator Of Its Genome-Wide Mutagenic Activity

FEBS LETTERS(2021)

Cited 7|Views21
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Abstract
Activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) mediates somatic hypermutation and class-switch recombination of antibodies. Computational-biochemical and crystallography analyses of AID have identified three surface grooves for binding single-stranded DNA (ssDNA). Functional studies have also found evidence for RNA-binding motifs on AID. Although AID and the related apolipoprotein B mRNA-editing enzyme catalytic polypeptide-like (APOBEC) enzymes share a conserved core, AID uniquely features multiple substrate-binding motifs on its surface. Here we suggest that combinatorial deployment of AID's multiple ssDNA- or RNA-binding motifs yields many substrate-binding modes that can accommodate ssDNA, RNA, or DNA/RNA substrates of diverse structures. We also suggest that AID oligomerization generates yet additional novel substrate-binding modes. We propose that this plasticity in substrate choice is an evolved aspect of AID's structure that contributes to the regulation of its differential mutagenic activity at various loci.
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Key words
activation&#8208, induced cytidine deaminase, APOBEC, deaminases, DNA, RNA editing, enzyme structure, enzyme, substrate binding, genome mutations
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