4.8 Article

Human topoisomerase IIα uses a two-metal-ion mechanism for DNA cleavage

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 36, Issue 15, Pages 4883-4893

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkn466

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM33944, T32 CA09592]

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The DNA cleavage reaction of human topoisomerase II is critical to all of the physiological and pharmacological functions of the protein. While it has long been known that the type II enzyme requires a divalent metal ion in order to cleave DNA, the role of the cation in this process is not known. To resolve this fundamental issue, the present study utilized a series of divalent metal ions with varying thiophilicities in conjunction with DNA cleavage substrates that replaced the 3-bridging oxygen of the scissile bond with a sulfur atom (i.e. 3-bridging phosphorothiolates). Rates and levels of DNA scission were greatly enhanced when thiophilic metal ions were included in reactions that utilized sulfur-containing substrates. Based on these results and those of reactions that employed divalent cation mixtures, we propose that topoisomerase II mediates DNA cleavage via a two-metal-ion mechanism. In this model, one of the metal ions makes a critical interaction with the 3-bridging atom of the scissile phosphate. This interaction greatly accelerates rates of enzyme-mediated DNA cleavage, and most likely is needed to stabilize the leaving 3-oxygen.

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