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Mutationalanalysisofthepreferentialbindingof human
topoisomerase Itosupercoiled DNA
Zheng Yang, James F. Carey and James J. Champoux
Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
Introduction
Type IDNA topoisomerases relax supercoils by intro-
ducing a transient single-strand break in the DNA.
These enzymes are classified into type IA and type IB
subfamilies based on the polarity of attachment to the
cleaved DNA [1–3]. The members ofthe two subfami-
lies share no sequence homology and are further dis-
tinguished by their substrate requirements and
mechanisms of relaxation. Type IA subfamily members
require a single-stranded region to bind DNA, become
attached tothe 5¢ end upon cleavage, and only relax
negatively supercoiledDNA in the presence of divalent
cations such as Mg
2+
. Escherichia coli DNA topo-
isomerase I is the prototype ofthe type IA subfamily.
Type IB subfamily members bind double-stranded
DNA, become attached tothe 3¢ end ofthe cleaved
strand, and relax both positive and negative supercoils.
ATP or divalent cations are not required for the
type IB enzymes, although Mg
2+
and Ca
2+
enhance
the rate of relaxation [4].
The cleavage–religation reaction catalyzed by human
DNA topoisomerase I, the prototypical type IB
enzyme, is essential for many biological processes,
Keywords
competition binding assay; DNA topology;
node binding; supercoiled DNA;
topoisomerase I
Correspondence
J. J. Champoux, Department of
Microbiology, University of Washington, Box
357242, Seattle, WA 98195-7242, USA
Fax: +1 206 543 8297
Tel: +1 206 543 8574
E-mail: champoux@u.washington.edu
(Received 7 July 2009, revised 9 August
2009, accepted 11 August 2009)
doi:10.1111/j.1742-4658.2009.07270.x
Human topoisomeraseI binds DNA in a topology-dependent fashion with
a strong preference for supercoiled DNAs of either sign over relaxed circu-
lar DNA. One hypothesis to account for this preference is that a second
DNA-binding site exists on the enzyme that mediates an association with
the nodes present in supercoiled DNA. The failure ofthe enzyme to dimer-
ize, even in the presence of DNA, appears to rule out the hypothesis that
two binding sites are generated by dimerization ofthe protein. A series of
mutant protein constructs was generated to test the hypotheses that the
homeodomain-like core subdomain II (residues 233–319) provides a second
DNA-binding site, or that the linker or basic residues in core subdo-
main III are involved in thepreferentialbindingtosupercoiled DNAs.
When putative DNA contact points within core subdomain II were altered
or the domain was removed altogether, there was no effect on the ability
of the enzyme to recognize supercoiled DNA, as measured by both a gel
shift assay and a competition binding assay. However, the preference for
supercoils was noticeably reduced for a form ofthe enzyme lacking the
coiled-coil linker region or when pairs of lysines were changed to glutamic
acids in core subdomain III. The results obtained implicate the linker and
solvent-exposed basic residues in core subdomain III in the preferential
binding ofhumantopoisomeraseItosupercoiled DNA.
Abbreviations
Dcap, NH
2
-terminal truncation ofhumantopoisomerase beginning at residue 433; GST, glutathione S-transferase; topo31, a fragment of
human topoisomeraseI extending from residues 175–433; topo56, COOH-terminal truncation of topo70 missing the last 126 amino acids;
topo58, COOH-terminal truncation of topo70 missing the last 106 amino acids; topo70, NH
2
-terminal truncation ofhumantopoisomerase I
missing the first 174 amino acids; topo70DL, a form of topo70 missing linker residues 660–688.
5906 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 5906–5919 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS
including DNA replication, transcription and recombi-
nation [2,3]. Strand cleavage is initiated by nucleophilic
attack ofthe O4 atom ofthe active site tyrosine on the
scissile phosphate in the DNA, resulting in the cova-
lent attachment ofthe enzyme tothe 3¢ end of the
broken strand [2]. Rotation ofthe duplex region
downstream ofthe break site relieves any supercoiling
strain in theDNA prior to religation and release of
the topoisomerase [5,6].
Human DNAtopoisomeraseI is composed of 765
amino acids and has a molecular mass of 91 kDa. On
the basis of sequence comparisons, limited proteolysis
studies and the crystal structure ofthe enzyme [7,8],
four domains have been identified in the protein: an
NH
2
-terminal domain (Met1-Gly214), a core domain
(Ile215-Ala635), a linker domain (Pro636-Lys712) and
a COOH-terminal domain (Gln713-Phe765) (Fig. 1).
The NH
2
-terminal domain is unstructured, poorly con-
served, highly charged and dispensable for the DNA
relaxation activity in vitro . It contains nuclear localiza-
tion signals and was shown to interact with nucleolin,
the SV40 large T antigen, p53, and possibly certain
transcription factors [9–13]. Topo70 is a truncated
form ofhumantopoisomeraseI that lacks residues
1–174 ofthe NH
2
-terminal domain, yet retains full
enzymatic activity [7] and a preference for binding su-
percoiled DNA. The core domain is highly conserved
and more protease-resistant than the other domains.
The poorly-conserved linker domain is highly charged
and forms an anti-parallel coiled-coil structure that
connects the core domain tothe COOH-terminal
domain. The linker protrudes from the body of the
protein and, instead of tracking with the axis of a
bound DNA helix, angles away from DNA. The
COOH-terminal domain is highly conserved and con-
tains the active site tyrosine, Tyr723. When separately
expressed, the COOH-terminal and core domains can
associate in vitro to reconstitute wild-type levels of
enzymatic activity, demonstrating that the linker
domain is not required for activity [4,7,14].
The co-crystal structure ofhumantopoisomerase I
with bound DNA indicates that the core domain can
be further divided into three subdomains [8] (Fig. 1).
Core subdomain I (residues 215–232, 320–433) and
core subdomain II (residues 233–319) form the Cap
structure ofthe enzyme and cover one side of the
DNA. Core subdomain III (residues 434–635) contains
all the residues implicated in catalysis except Tyr723
and cradles theDNA on the side opposite ofthe Cap
[5,8]. Although there is little sequence similarity, the
fold ofthe subdomain II is very similar to that of a
homeodomain found in a family of DNA-binding
proteins. For example, residues 244–314 ofthe core
subdomain II superimpose on the POU homeodomain
of the Oct-1 transcription factor with an rmsd of only
3.0 A
˚
[8,15]. This observation suggests that core sub-
domain II, which forms part ofthe exposed Cap,
could represent a second DNA-binding site distinct
from the substrate binding channel observed in the
co-crystal structure. However, the conserved residues
that are involved in base-specific contacts in the POU
homeodomain are absent in core subdomain II of
human topoisomerase I, suggesting that, if sub-
domain II interacts with DNA, it does so with low
affinity and likely without sequence specificity [15,16].
It has been proposed that topoisomerases relax the
negative and positive supercoils generated by the trans-
location of an RNA polymerase along the DNA
during transcription [17]. In support of this model,
eukaryotic type IB topoisomerases have been found to
associate with transcriptionally active genes and have
been reported to interact directly with the transcription
machinery [18–26]. Eukaryotic type IB topoisomerases
have also been shown to provide the swivels for the
Fig. 1. Crystal structure ofhumantopoisomerase I. Core subdo-
mains I, II and III are colored yellow, blue and red, respectively,
with the linker and C-terminal domains colored orange and green,
respectively. The Cap and Linkers regions are labeled along with
the amino acid residues that were changed in the present study.
Amino acids in core subdomain II (His266, Lys299 and Ser306) that
were changed to glutamic acid in the combinations indicated in the
text are shown in ball and stick and colored magenta. The three
amino acids in the linker (Lys650 ⁄ Lys654 ⁄ Gln657) that were
simultaneously changed to alanine are similarly depicted and
colored brown. The four amino acids in the linker (Lys679 ⁄
Lys682 ⁄ Lys687 ⁄ Lys689) that were simultaneously changed to
serine are colored gray. Surface-exposed lysine residues in core
subdomain III (Lys466 ⁄ Lys468 and Lys545 ⁄ Lys549) that were
pairwise mutated to glutamic acid are colored black.
Z. Yang et al. Supercoil binding by topoisomerase I
FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 5906–5919 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 5907
relaxation of positive supercoils during DNA replica-
tion [20,27–31]. The mechanism for recruiting DNA
topoisomerase Ito transcriptionally active and repli-
cating DNA remains unclear, although several studies
have shown that the enzyme prefers to bind super-
coiled over relaxed DNA [32–37]. Because the enzyme
binds supercoiledDNA irrespective ofthe sign of the
supercoils, Zechiedrich and Osheroff [36] hypothesized
that topoisomeraseI specifically binds at a node where
two duplex regions ofthesupercoiledDNA cross and
also provided electron microscopic evidence in support
of this hypothesis [36].
The structural basis for thepreferentialbinding of
human topoisomeraseItosupercoiledDNA is
unknown but, if node recognition is important, then it
is likely that thebinding involves an interaction with
two regions ofDNA at the point of crossing. One
hypothesis to explain how the enzyme provides two
DNA-binding sites to stabilize an interaction with a
DNA node is to assume that it binds as a dimer
(Fig. 2A). An alternative hypothesis is that, in addition
to the substrate binding channel identified in the crys-
tal structure ofthe protein (Fig. 1) [8], there is a
second DNA-binding site present on the protein that
stabilizes an interaction at a DNA node (Fig. 2B). In
the present study, we performed experiments designed
to distinguish between these possible explanations for
the preference oftopoisomeraseI for supercoils.
Results
Human topoisomeraseI does not dimerize in the
absence or presence of DNA
We previously used a gel filtration assay to demon-
strate that, although topo70DL, a mutant form of
topo70 missing a portion ofthe linker (i.e. linker
residues 660–688), formed dimers through a domain
swapping mechanism, no dimerization of WT topo70
was detectable under the same conditions [4,38].
Because these earlier experiments were carried out in
the absence of DNA, we wanted to test whether
dimers could form in the presence of DNA. In the
present study, we used a glutathione S-transferase
(GST) pull-down assay to determine whether topo70
that was already covalently bound to a DNA oligonu-
cleotide could dimerize. GST-topo70 was incubated
with free topo70 in the absence or presence of an oli-
gonucleotide suicide substrate, and any protein bound
to GST-topo70 was collected by adsorption to gluta-
thione S-Sepharose beads and analyzed by SDS–
PAGE. Control experiments showed that free topo70
did not bind to either GST alone or tothe beads
(Fig. 3, lanes 6 and 7). Under the same conditions, no
topo70 was found associated with the bead-bound
GST-topo70 either in the absence or presence of DNA
(Fig. 3, lanes 2 and 3, respectively). The slower migrat-
ing species ofthe doublet observed in lane 3 in Fig. 3
is the result of suicide cleavage and shows that approx-
imately half ofthe GST-topo70 contained covalently
bound oligonucleotide DNA. Thus, these results con-
firm our earlier finding that topo70 does not dimerize
when free in solution and also extend the results to
show that, even when bound toDNA after suicide
cleavage, dimerization does not occur.
Fig. 2. Alternative modes for topoisomeraseIbindingto a DNA
node. (A) Node binding occurs through dimerization of topoisomer-
ase I. (B) Node binding is mediated by two DNA-binding sites on a
single molecule oftopoisomerase I.
Fig. 3. GST pull-down experiment to test for dimerization. The indi-
cated combinations of GST-topo70, topo70 and GST were incu-
bated with and without a suicide DNA oligonucleotide and mixed
with glutathione Sepharose 4B beads (GSH beads). The beads
were collected by centrifugation, washed and the samples were
analyzed by SDS-PAGE. Lane 1, protein markers with sizes (kDa)
indicated along the left side ofthe gel. Lanes 4 and 5 contain GST-
topo70 and topo70 size markers, respectively. The GST protein in
lane 6 was run off the gel in this analysis. Although all of the
samples were analyzed on the same gel, lanes with unrelated data
were removed digitally at the places indicated by the thin vertical
lines.
Supercoil binding by topoisomeraseI Z. Yang et al.
5908 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 5906–5919 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS
DNA-binding properties of mutant proteins as
measured by a gel shift assay
A structural alignment of core subdomain II of human
topoisomerase I with the POU homeodomain of Oct-1
indicated that the residues making base specific
contacts with theDNA in the homeodomain are not
conserved in the core subdomain II. However, basic
residues K25, R46 and R53 ofthe POU homeodomain
that make hydrogen bonds with phosphates in the
bound DNA correspond to residues His266, Lys299
and Ser306 in core subdomain II ofhuman topo-
isomerase I (Fig. 1). All three of these residues are
conserved among known eukaryotic topoisomerase I
sequences. To test whether these amino acids mediate
an interaction with DNA that accounts for node bind-
ing by the enzyme, site-directed mutagenesis was used
to replace these residues with glutamic acid in topo70.
These changes would be predicted to disrupt an inter-
action with theDNA phosphate backbone, but have a
minimal effect on the overall enzyme structure because
all three are in a solvent-exposed region. Because the
assays to detect thepreferentialbindingto supercoiled
DNA require a catalytically inactive form ofthe pro-
tein [37], a mutation in the active site tyrosine (Y723F)
was also introduced into the proteins. Topo70 capKS-
E ⁄ Y723F and topo70 capHKS-E ⁄ Y723F were
expressed and purified from recombinant baculovirus-
infected insect SF-9 cells. The following proteins were
similarly purified for use in these assays: a reconsti-
tuted form ofthe protein lacking the linker, compris-
ing a COOH-terminal truncation of topo70 missing
the last 126 amino acids (topo56) plus the Y723F
mutant form ofthe COOH-terminal domain (topo6.3),
the catalytically inactive NH
2
-terminal truncation of
human topoisomerase beginning at residue 433 (Dcap)
[39] and a fragment ofhumantopoisomeraseI extend-
ing from residues 175–433 (topo31) (Fig. 4).
The various forms ofthetopoisomerase protein
described above were mixed with an equimolar mixture
of supercoiled, nicked circular and linear pBluescript
KSII(+) DNAs, and a gel shift assay [40–44] was
used to analyze the preference ofthe proteins for the
different topological forms of DNA. For the positive
Fig. 4. HumantopoisomeraseI fragments
used in the DNA-binding studies. (A) The
four domains of full-length human topoisom-
erase I (topo I) are shown above the various
constructs used in thebinding studies:
topo70, a 70 kDa NH
2
-terminally truncated
protein that starts with an engineered Met
upstream of Lys175; topo58, a COOH-termi-
nal deletion of topo70, ending at Ala659;
topo31, a COOH-terminal deletion of topo70
ending at Ser433; Dcap, an NH
2
-terminal
truncation starting at Ser433; topo56 ⁄ 6.3, a
reconstituted protein comprising the core
domain from Lys175 to Thr639 and the
COOH-terminal domain from Lys713 to the
COOH terminus (Phe765). (B) SDS-PAGE
analysis of 2 lg ofthe indicated purified pro-
teins. Lane 1, protein markers with sizes
(kDa) indicated along left side ofthe panel;
lane 2, topo70 Y723F; lane 3, topo70 capKS-
E ⁄ Y723F; lane 4, topo70 capHKS-E ⁄ Y723F;
lane 5, topo56 ⁄ 6.3 Y723F (6.3 kDa fragment
of topo6.3 Y723F was run off the bottom of
the gel); lane 6, Dcap; lane 7, topo31; lane
8, protein markers; lane 9, topo70 K466-
468E ⁄ Y723F; lane 10, topo70 K545-
549E ⁄ Y723F.
Z. Yang et al. Supercoil binding by topoisomerase I
FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 5906–5919 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 5909
control protein, topo70 Y723F, the mobility of the
supercoiled DNA was reduced, with essentially no effect
on the mobility of either the nicked or linear DNAs at
the two lowest protein concentrations (Fig. 5A, com-
pare lanes 2 and 3 with lane 1). As the amount of topo70
Y723F protein was increased, thesupercoiledDNA was
shifted further and, to a lesser extent, both the linear
and nicked DNA bands became shifted as well (Fig. 5A,
lanes 4 and 5). These results confirmed the earlier find-
ing that topo70 Y723F has a preference for supercoiled
over linear and nicked DNA [37]. Topo31, which corre-
sponds tothe Cap region ofhumantopoisomerase I,
provides a convenient nonspecific negative control for
this analysis. As shown in Fig. 5A, lanes 22–26, all three
forms ofthe plasmid DNA responded equally to
increasing concentrations ofthe topo31 fragment, con-
sistent with a lack of preference for one form over
another. A higher concentration of topo31 was required
to effect a gel shift, reflecting the lower affinity of the
protein for DNA compared to topo70.
Both topo70 capKS-E ⁄ Y723F and topo70 capHKS-
E ⁄ Y723F retained the preference for binding super-
coiled DNA (Fig. 5A, lanes 7–10 and 12–15), ruling
out Cap residues His266, Lys299 and Ser306 as con-
tributors tothepreferentialbindingto supercoils. To
further test the possible involvement ofthe core subdo-
main II in thepreferentialbindingto supercoiled
DNA, the Dcap mutant lacking core subdomains I and
II was also tested in the gel shift analysis (Fig. 5A,
lanes 17–20). Dcap contains core subdomain III, the
linker domain, and the COOH-terminal domain (resi-
dues 433–765) (Fig. 4A), and is catalytically inactive,
despite containing all ofthe residues known to be
directly involved in catalysis [39]. At the lower concen-
trations ofthe Dcap protein, thesupercoiledDNA was
selectively shifted upon binding, although the magni-
tude ofthe shift was less compared to that observed
with the topo70 protein (Fig. 5A, compare lanes 17–20
with lanes 1–5). This reduction in the shift most likely
resulted from the two-fold lower affinity ofthe Dcap
for DNA [39] and the lower molecular weight of Dcap
(41 kDa) compared to topo70 (71 kDa). Thus, deletion
of the Cap region that includes subdomain II did not
eliminate the preference for supercoiled DNA, indicat-
ing that core subdomain II is dispensable for the
preferential bindingoftopoisomeraseIto supercoils.
Although the band corresponding tothe supercoiled
DNA was selectively shifted in the presence of topo70
Y723F and all ofthe mutant proteins except topo31,
we wanted to formally rule out the possibility that the
Fig. 5. DNA-binding measured by an agarose gel shift assay. (A) Two-fold serial dilutions ofthe indicated proteins were incubated with equal
amounts of supercoiled, linear and nicked pBluescript KSII(+) plasmid DNA and analyzed by electrophoresis in an agarose gel as described in
the Experimental procedures. The mobilities of unshifted supercoiled, linear and nicked DNAs are indicated along the right side. Lanes 1, 6,
11, 16, 21 and 27 contain DNA alone; lanes 2–5 contain 0.88, 1.75, 3.5 and 7 pmol of topo70 Y723F, respectively; lanes 7–10 contain 0.88,
1.75, 3.5 and 7 pmol of topo70 capKS-E ⁄ Y723F, respectively; lanes 12–15 contain 0.88, 1.75, 3.5 and 7 pmol of topo70 capHKS-E ⁄ Y723F,
respectively; lanes 17–20 contain 0.88, 1.75, 3.5 and 7 pmol of Dcap, respectively; and lanes 22-26 contain 0.88, 1.75, 3.5, 7 and 14 pmol of
topo31, respectively. The white spaces demarcate separate gel analyses. (B) Same experimental design as in (A) for the indicated proteins.
Lanes 1, 6 and 11 are DNA alone; lanes 2–5 contain 0.88, 1.75, 3.5 and 7 pmol of topo70 Y723F, respectively; and lanes 7–10 contain 0.88,
1.75, 3.5 and 7 pmol of topo56 ⁄ 6.3 Y723F, respectively.
Supercoil binding by topoisomeraseI Z. Yang et al.
5910 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 5906–5919 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS
proteins bound tothe supercoiled, linear and nicked
DNAs equally well, but only thesupercoiled DNA
shift was detected visually because of its greater initial
mobility. Therefore, the gel shift assay was repeated
using topo70 Y723F or topo70 capHKS-E ⁄ Y723F that
had been previously labeled with
32
P using protein
kinase C. The autoradiograph ofthe agarose gel
showed that the majority ofthe labeled proteins were
associated with the shifted supercoiledDNA and that
the amount of bound label correlated with the extent
of the shift (Fig. 6, lanes 2, 3, 5 and 6). Furthermore,
label was only associated with the nicked and linear
DNAs at the protein concentration where a mobility
shift of these species was also detected (Fig. 6, lanes 3
and 6). These results validated the gel shift assay and
confirmed that the selective shift ofthe supercoiled
DNA band results from preferential binding.
To further define the region that is involved in the
preferential bindingtosupercoiled DNA, we repeated
the assays using a form ofhumantopoisomerase I
reconstituted from a mixture of topo56 and topo6.3
Y723F (Fig. 4A). This reconstituted protein contains
only the core and COOH-terminal domains and com-
pletely lacks the linker region (Fig. 1). When tested in
the gel shift assay, topo56 ⁄ 6.3 Y723F retained a pref-
erence for supercoiled DNA, although the preference
was reduced compared to that ofthe topo70 Y723F
(Fig. 5B). For example, although only the supercoiled
DNA was shifted by both topo70 Y723F and
topo56 ⁄ 6.3 Y723F at the lowest protein concentration
tested (Fig. 5B, lanes 2 and 7), at the higher protein
concentrations where mainly thesupercoiledDNA was
shifted by topo70 Y723F, the reconstituted enzyme
shifted the linear and nicked DNAs as well (Fig. 5B,
in particular, compare lane 4 with lane 9). These
results suggest that an intact linker region is necessary
for the full manifestation ofthe preference for super-
coiled DNA but, in its absence, the enzyme can still
distinguish to a limited extent a supercoiled from a
nonsupercoiled DNA.
Competition binding assays
To verify these results by an independent method and
to provide a more quantitative measure for the binding
of the various proteins tosupercoiled DNA, we
employed a filter binding assay similar tothe one we
used previously [37]. Unlabeled nicked and supercoiled
SV40 DNAs were used separately as competitors for
the binding of
3
H-labeled nicked SV40 DNAto cata-
lytically inactive (Y723F) mutant forms of topo70. The
competition assays were carried out for topo70 cap-
HKS-E ⁄ Y723F and 4cap and the results were com-
pared with those obtained for topo70 ⁄ Y723F. For all
three proteins, the competition profile for the like com-
petitor (nicked DNA) exhibited a half-maximum at the
expected 1 : 1 ratio of competitor to labeled DNA
(Fig. 7A, closed symbols), whereas only approximately
one-tenth as much supercoiled competitor was required
to reduce thebindingofthe labeled nicked DNA to
the 50% level (Fig. 7A, open symbols). The competi-
tion profile of topo56 ⁄ 6.3 Y723F for the supercoiled
DNA showed that the amount ofsupercoiled DNA
needed to compete tothe 50% level was approximately
one-third as much as for the nicked DNA (Fig. 7B).
These results are consistent with the gel shift assays
and confirm that topo70 Y723F, topo70 capHKS-
E ⁄ Y723F and Dcap have a strong preference for
supercoiled DNA over nicked DNA, whereas the
reconstituted topo56 ⁄ 6.3 Y723F lacking the linker has
a reduced ability to discriminate supercoiled from
nicked DNA.
Because the above results implicate the linker in the
preference for bindingsupercoiled DNA, we wanted to
investigate whether the clusters of positively-charged
amino acids in the linker region are required for this
effect. To test this possibility, we generated two
mutant forms of topo70 Y723F, each of which elimi-
nates the positive charges associated with clusters of
basic amino acids within one ofthe a-helices ofthe lin-
ker region (a18). The changes in one ofthe mutant
proteins were K650A ⁄ K654A ⁄ Q657A and in the
Fig. 6. Gel shift assay with
32
P labeled proteins. (A) Agarose gel
shift assay as described for Fig. 5 using
32
P labeled topo70 Y723F
and topo70 capHKS-E ⁄ Y723F. Lanes 1 and 4, DNA alone; lanes 2
and 3 contain 1.75 and 3.5 pmol of topo70 Y723F, respectively;
lanes 5 and 6 contain 1.75 and 3.5 pmol of topo70 capHKS-
E ⁄ Y723F, respectively. (B) Autoradiogram ofthe gel shown in (A).
The mobilities of unshifted supercoiled, linear and nicked DNAs are
indicated along the right side.
Z. Yang et al. Supercoil binding by topoisomerase I
FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 5906–5919 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 5911
second were K679S ⁄ K682S ⁄ K687S ⁄ K689S (Fig. 1).
These proteins are referred to as topo70 linkerKKQ-
A ⁄ Y723F and topo70 linker4K-S ⁄ Y723F, respectively.
When these proteins were used in the competition
binding assay, the ratio of unlabeled supercoiled com-
petitor to labeled nicked DNA that was required for
half-maximal binding was offset from the ratio for the
nicked or like competitor by the same amount for the
mutants as for the topo70 Y723F protein (Fig. 8A).
The magnitude of this offset was slightly less for the
competition profiles in Fig. 8A compared to that
observed in Fig. 7A because the preparation of unla-
beled supercoiled competitor used in this experiment
contained a slightly higher percentage of nicked mole-
cules ( 20% compared with the previous 5%, data
not shown). On the basis of these results, we conclude
that the absence of either of these two clusters of basic
amino acid within the linker does not affect the ability
of the protein to preferentially bind supercoiled DNA.
The solvent-exposed region ofthe core subdo-
main III distal from the Cap represents yet another
Fig. 8. (A) Filter binding assays comparing unlabeled supercoiled
and nicked SV40 DNAs as competitors for
3
H-labeled nicked SV40
DNA-binding totopoisomerase variants containing multiple amino
acid changes in the linker domain: topo70 Y723F (nicked competi-
tor, solid squares; supercoiled competitor, open squares); topo70
linker4K-S ⁄ Y723F (nicked competitor, solid triangles; supercoiled
competitor, open triangles); and topo70 linkerKKQ-A ⁄ Y723F (nicked
competitor, solid diamonds; supercoiled competitor, open diamonds,
dashed line). (B) Filter binding assays for topoisomerase variants
containing mutations at exposed lysine residues in the core domain
of the enzyme: topo70 Y723F (nicked competitor, solid diamonds,
supercoiled competitor, open diamonds); topo70 K466-468E Y723F
(nicked competitor, solid squares, supercoiled competitor, open
squares); and topo70 K545-549E Y723F (nicked competitor, solid tri-
angles, supercoiled competitor, open triangles). For topo70 Y723F,
the values plotted are the mean of seven independent determina-
tions and, for the two mutant proteins, the values are the mean of six
independent determinations.
Fig. 7. Filter binding assays comparing unlabeled supercoiled and
nicked SV40 DNAs as competitors for
3
H-labeled nicked SV40
DNA-binding totopoisomeraseI constructs. (A) The results of the
competition assay for topo70 Y723F (nicked competitor, solid
squares; supercoiled competitor, open squares), topo70 capHKS-
E ⁄ Y723F (nicked competitor, solid triangles; supercoiled competi-
tor, open triangles) and Dcap (nicked competitor, solid diamonds;
supercoiled competitor, open diamonds). (B) Results for the compe-
tition assay for topo56 ⁄ 6.3 Y723F (nicked competitor, solid circles;
supercoiled competitor, open circles).
Supercoil binding by topoisomeraseI Z. Yang et al.
5912 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 5906–5919 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS
region ofthe protein that might provide a binding
interface for a second DNA-binding site. To examine
this possibility, we generated mutant proteins in which
pairs of positively-charged lysine residues within core
subdomain III were changed to glutamates (Fig. 1)
and tested these proteins in the competition binding
assay. As shown in Fig. 8B, the competition profiles of
the nicked competitor DNA for the topo70 K466-
468E ⁄ Y723F and topo70 K545-549E ⁄ Y723F proteins
are identical tothe profile for the control topo70
Y723F protein (Fig. 8B, closed symbols) but, impor-
tantly, thesupercoiledDNA did not compete as well
for thebindingtothe two mutant proteins as it did
for thebindingtothe control topo70 Y723F protein
(Fig. 8B, compare the open squares and triangles with
the open diamonds). To be certain that these differ-
ences were significant, multiple experiments were per-
formed to determine the mean value for the ratio of
unlabeled nicked tosupercoiled competitor required to
reduce bindingtothe 50% level. For the positive con-
trol topo70 Y723F, this ratio (±SD) was found to be
8.6 ± 3.9 (seven repeats), which is consistent with the
earlier determinations, whereas the corresponding
ratios for topo70 K466-468E ⁄ Y723F and topo70
K545-549E ⁄ Y723F were 4.1 ± 1.1 and 4.6 ± 1.7,
respectively (six repeats). Using the t-test, these differ-
ences ofthe ratios for the two mutant proteins from
the control are significant at P < 0.05, and thus the
mutant proteins have a reduced ability to discriminate
supercoiled from nonsupercoiled DNA.
Discussion
Although protein–protein interactions have been impli-
cated in targeting topoisomeraseItosupercoiled sub-
strates in vivo [21,24–26], when given a choice of
supercoiled and relaxed substrates in the absence of
other proteins in vitro, the enzyme exhibits a prefer-
ence for bindingtothesupercoiledDNA [32–37].
Because this intrinsic preference for supercoils is inde-
pendent ofthe sign ofthe supercoiling [37,45], it is
likely theDNA feature being recognized by the
enzyme is a DNA node [36], a structural element that
is shared by DNAs with positive and negative super-
coils. In the absence of DNA, thetopoisomerase I
protein is a bi-lobed structure that exists in an open
clamp conformation [5]. Upon binding DNA, the
clamp closes around the duplex to form a clearly-
defined channel that interacts with theDNA backbone
over a length of approximately 6 bp (Fig. 1) [8]. The
simplest model to explain node recognition by the
enzyme assumes that, in addition to this well-charac-
terized DNA-binding channel, the protein has a second
DNA-binding region that stabilizes the interaction
with a DNA crossing. Here, we consider four struc-
ture-related hypotheses that could explain node bind-
ing. First, the bent structure of a supercoiled duplex
could be a feature that is recognized by a single topo-
isomerase I protein without the need for a second
DNA-binding site. Second, a topoisomeraseI homodi-
mer could provide two DNA-binding sites on the same
protein molecule (Fig. 2A). Third, core subdomain II,
which structurally resembles a homeodomain and is an
exposed feature ofthe Cap (Fig. 1), could constitute
a second DNA-binding site on the protein. Fourth,
clusters of basic residues in core subdomain III, and
the linker on the side ofthe protein distal from the
Cap, could mediate DNA-binding at a node.
For some proteins, the preference for binding to
supercoiled DNA is related tothe tendency of the
proteins to cause DNA bending. For example, high-
mobility group proteins [44,46–50] and the p53 protein
[40–43,51] preferentially bind supercoiledDNA and, in
both cases, it was shown that the proteins bend DNA.
Moreover, in the case ofthe high-mobility group pro-
teins, theDNA bending capacity correlates with the
supercoiled DNA-binding [50]. In the crystal structure
of thehumantopoisomerase I-DNA complex, the
22 bp DNA substrate does not show any bending
deformation and is an almost perfect B-shaped helix
[8]. This observation suggests that the preference of
human topoisomeraseI for supercoiledDNA is not
the result of an attraction ofthe enzyme for bent
DNA.
In a previous study [38], we showed that the
topo70DL form ofhumantopoisomeraseI missing
part ofthe coiled-coil linker domain could form dimers
through a domain swapping mechanism involving the
core and COOH-terminal domains ofthe two subunits.
We hypothesized that the shortened linker in the
mutant enzyme destabilized the interaction between
the COOH-terminal and core domains, enabling the
COOH-terminal domain of one protein to occupy its
binding site in the core domain ofthe other protein
and vice versa. Consistent with this suggestion, we
were unable to detect dimerization of free wild-type
enzyme containing the normal length linker [4,38].
However, these results did not rule out the possibility
that dimerization ofthe enzyme only occurs after the
first molecule of enzyme is already bound to DNA. In
this regard, it was shown that a molecule of topoisom-
erase I that is covalently trapped on DNA after suicide
cleavage recruits another molecule of enzyme to cleave
approximately 13 bp upstream ofthe trapped enzyme
[52]. Although the basis for dimerization in this case
is unknown, this interaction between two enzyme
Z. Yang et al. Supercoil binding by topoisomerase I
FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 5906–5919 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 5913
molecules is unlikely to mediate node binding because
the second molecule of enzyme is bound tothe DNA
immediately adjacent tothe one already trapped on
the DNA. For our GST pull-down assay, we deliber-
ately chose an oligonucleotide that was too short to
permit this type of side-by-side contact (total duplex
length 14 bp) to assay for DNA-mediated dimeriza-
tion. Importantly, under these conditions, we show
that a topoisomeraseI molecule covalently bound to
DNA after suicide cleavage does not bind another
molecule ofthe enzyme. These results rule against the
hypothesis that dimerization oftopoisomerase I
accounts for the preference ofthe enzyme for super-
coiled DNA.
In previous studies [36,37] demonstrating a prefer-
ence oftopoisomeraseI for supercoils, the full length
enzyme was used. In the present study, we demonstrate
that topo70, a form ofthe enzyme missing residues
1–174 that constitute most ofthe N-terminal domain,
also preferentially binds supercoiled over relaxed
DNA. This observation rules out this portion of the
N-terminus as a region ofthe enzyme that provides a
second DNA-binding site involved in node recogni-
tion.
In the present study, we tested whether the homeo-
domain-like region within the Cap ofthe enzyme (core
subdomain II) constitutes a second DNA-binding site
on the enzyme that mediates the preference for super-
coils (Fig. 2B). Alignment ofthe sequences of human
topoisomerase I and the Oct-1 homeodomain revealed
three amino acids within core subdomain II ofthe Cap
that might be expected to interact with the negatively-
charged DNA backbone and form the basis for a sec-
ond DNA-binding site on the enzyme (His266, Lys299
and Ser306) (Fig. 1). Replacing all three of these resi-
dues with a glutamic acid residue or complete deletion
of the Cap region (Dcap) had no effect on the ability
of the resulting proteins to preferentially bind super-
coiled DNA when assayed by either a gel shift assay
or a competition binding assay. These results rule out
the hypothesis that an interaction with a node is medi-
ated by a second DNA-binding site localized to core
subdomain II ofthe enzyme.
The results obtained in the present study with
respect to topo56 ⁄ 6.3 Y723F, a reconstituted enzyme
completely missing the linker region, reveal that this
form ofthe enzyme has a reduced preference for
supercoiled DNA compared tothe wild-type enzyme.
In a study carried out prior tothe availability of the
co-crystal structure oftopoisomeraseI [8], we exam-
ined the substrate binding preference of topo58, a form
of the protein now known to contain the core domain
and one third ofthe linker region (residues 175–659)
(Fig. 4). At the time, we concluded that the binding
properties of a COOH-terminal truncation of topo70
missing the last 106 amino acids (topo58) was similar
to those of topo70 Y723F, but a re-examination of
these older data [37] reveals that, similar tothe recon-
stituted topo56 ⁄ 6.3 Y723F investigated in the present
study, topo58 alone exhibits a reduced preference for
supercoiled DNA. Taken together, these observations
suggest that an intact linker region ofthe enzyme is
necessary for the full manifestation ofthe preference
for supercoils. It is noteworthy that the elimination of
either ofthe clusters of basic amino acids within the
linker region (Fig. 1) does not affect the preference of
the enzyme for supercoiled DNA. Our interpretation
of this finding is that the contribution ofthe linker to
node binding relates to how the linker influences local
protein structure rather than via the formation of a
second DNA-binding site that makes direct amino acid
side chain contacts with theDNA backbone. In this
regard, it is noteworthy that the linker region is not
only remarkably flexible [53], but also mutations that
affect its flexibility can influence the structure of the
protein at distant sites [54].
Unlike the linker where the evidence rules out a
direct interaction between basic amino acids and the
DNA in node binding, mutational studies within core
subdomain III indicate that reversing the charge on
pairs of basic, surface-exposed amino acids (K466 ⁄
K468 and K545 ⁄ K549) (Fig. 1) has a significant
impact on thepreferentialbindingofthe topoisomer-
ase tosupercoiled DNA. Notably, these lysine residues
are conserved in thetopoisomeraseI protein in most
higher eukaryotes. (Fig. 9). These results suggest that
basic amino acids within core subdomain III contrib-
ute to node binding through direct contacts with the
DNA. The observation that the pairwise mutation of
these lysines to glutamic acid only partially eliminates
the preference for supercoiledDNA suggests that other
residues within this domain also contribute tothe for-
mation of a second DNA-binding region in the pro-
tein. Taken together, the results obtained in the
present study strongly support the node binding
hypothesis to explain the preference ofhuman topo-
isomerase I for supercoiledDNA [36].
The related type IB topoisomerase from vaccinia
virus also preferentially binds to node structures in
duplex DNA [36,55]. In a recent study, it was found
that the vaccinia topoisomerase binds cooperatively to
DNA to form long filaments in a reaction that is
nucleated by the formation of an intramolecular node
on DNA [56]. Although it is not known whether the
initial node binding event involves a monomer or
dimer ofthe enzyme, if a monomer is sufficient for
Supercoil binding by topoisomeraseI Z. Yang et al.
5914 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 5906–5919 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS
node binding, then a second DNA-binding region must
exist within the viral enzyme, as we have suggested
above for thehuman enzyme. If this were to be the
case, it is noteworthy that the structural similarity
between thehuman and vaccinia enzymes is confined
to the region referred to as subdomain III in the
human enzyme [57,58] and that two ofthe residues in
the human enzyme that we have implicated in node
binding (Lys466 and Lys549) are conserved in the viral
enzyme (Fig. 9). Thus, it is conceivable that the struc-
tural basis for node binding by the two enzymes is
similar.
Experimental procedures
Generation of baculovirus constructs expressing
mutant proteins
pFASTBAC1-topo70 K299E ⁄ S306E, pFASTBAC1-topo70
K299E ⁄ S306E ⁄ Y723F, pFASTBAC1-topo70 H266E ⁄
K299E ⁄ S306E and pFASTBAC1-topo70 H266E ⁄ K299E ⁄ -
S306E ⁄ Y723F were generated as follows. The plasmid
pGEX-topo70 [14] was the template for making site-directed
mutations using the QuickChangeÔ mutagenesis kit from
Stratagene (La Jolla, CA, USA). A pair of oligonucleotides
containing the nucleotide changes for replacing Lys299 and
Ser306 with glutamic acid was used to generate pGEX-topo70
K299E ⁄ S306E. The resulting plasmid and another set of
oligonucleotides that changed His266 to glutamic acid were
similarly used to generate pGEX-topo70 H266E ⁄ K299E ⁄
S306E. Both pGEX-topo70 K299E ⁄ S306E and pGEX-
topo70 H266E ⁄ K299E ⁄ S306E were digested with NdeI and
NheI and the fragments that contain the point mutations were
purified and used to replace the corresponding fragments in
NdeI and NheI digested pFASTBAC1-topo70 [59]. The result-
ing constructs, pFASTBAC1-topo70 K299E ⁄ S306E and
pFASTBAC1-topo70 H266E ⁄ K299E⁄ S306E, were used to
generate baculoviruses with the Bac-to-Bac system (Invitro-
gen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) in accordance with the manufac-
turer’s instructions. Recombinant baculovirus infection of Sf9
cells was used to produce proteins referred to as topo70 cap-
KS-E and topo70 capHKS-E, respectively. These same two
pFASTBAC1 constructs were also digested with NdeI and
PpuMI and the fragments containing the mutations were puri-
fied by gel electrophoresis. The isolated fragments were used
to replace the corresponding fragment of pFASTBAC1-
topo70 Y723F [59] that had been digested with the same two
restriction enzymes to generate pFASTBAC1-topo70 K299E ⁄
S306E ⁄ Y723F and pFASTBAC1-topo70 H266E ⁄ K299E ⁄
S306E ⁄ Y723F. The catalytically inactive proteins expressed
in baculoviruses from these two constructs are referred to as
topo70 capKS-E ⁄ Y723F and topo70 capHKS-E ⁄ Y723F,
respectively.
Starting from pFASTBAC1-topo70, two sets of oligonu-
cleotide pairs were used to introduce clustered mutations in
the linker-coding region to produce pFASTBAC1-topo70
K650A ⁄ K654A ⁄ Q657A and pFASTBAC1-topo70 K679S ⁄
K682S ⁄ K687S ⁄ K689S using the QuickChange method
Fig. 9. Sequence alignment within core subdomain III of representative eukaryotic members ofthe type IB subfamily of topoisomerases.
Human, Drosophila, Saccharomyces cerevisiae and vaccinia virus topoisomeraseI sequences were aligned using
CLUSTALW2 software avail-
able online from the European Bioinformatics Institute (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/Tools/clustalw2/). The homology ofthe bacterial type IB
enzymes to these eukaryotic members ofthe family was too weak for them to be included in the alignment. The key conserved active site
residues Arg488 and Lys532 (human numbering) are marked with closed circles. The open circles identify the residues in thehuman enzyme
(Lys466, Lys468, Lys545 and Lys549) that are implicated in thepreferentialbindingto supercoils.
Z. Yang et al. Supercoil binding by topoisomerase I
FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 5906–5919 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 5915
[...]... described previously for topo58 ⁄ 6.3 [14] The purification of top31 has been described previously [39] SDS-PAGE analysisofthe purified proteins is shown in Fig 4B TheDNA -binding assays were carried out with the various mutant proteins containing the Y723F inactivating mutation but, to ensure that the mutations did not affect the overall fold ofthe protein, the mutant proteins containing the active site... topoisomerase I: analysisofthebinding step and ofthe catalytic constants of topoisomerization as a function ofDNA topology Biochemistry 29, 8152–8157 36 Zechiedrich EL & Osheroff N (1990) Eukaryotic topoisomerases recognize nucleic acid topology by preferentially interacting with DNA crossovers EMBO J 9, 4555–4562 37 Madden KR, Stewart L & Champoux JJ (1995) PreferentialbindingofhumantopoisomeraseI to. .. Mol Biol 208, 257–267 31 Champoux JJ (1992) TopoisomeraseI is preferentially associated with normal SV40 replicative intermediates, but is associated with both replicating and nonreplicating SV40 DNAs which are deficient in histones Nucleic Acids Res 20, 3347–3352 32 Muller MT (1985) Quantitation of eukaryotic topoisomeraseI reactivity with DNAPreferential cleavage ofsupercoiledDNA Biochim Biophys... Roles ofDNA topoisomerases in simian virus 40 DNA replication in vitro Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 84, 950– 954 5918 29 Avemann K, Knippers R, Koller T & Sogo JM (1988) Camptothecin, a specific inhibitor of type IDNA topoisomerase, induces DNA breakage at replication forks Mol Cell Biol 8, 3026–3034 30 Kim RA & Wang JC (1989) Function ofDNA topoisomerases as replication swivels in Saccharomyces cerevisiae... 33 Camilloni G, Di Martino E, Caserta M & di Mauro E (1988) Eukaryotic DNAtopoisomeraseI reaction is topology dependent Nucleic Acids Res 16, 7071–7085 34 Caserta M, Amadei A, Di Mauro E & Camilloni G (1989) In vitro preferential topoisomerization of bent DNA Nucleic Acids Res 17, 8463–8474 35 Caserta M, Amadei A, Camilloni G & Di Mauro E (1990) Regulation ofthe function of eukaryotic DNA topoisomerase. .. J, Billova S, Subramaniam V & Jovin TM (2001) Bindingof p53 and its core domain tosupercoiledDNA Eur J Biochem 268, 573–581 Stros M (2001) Two mutations of basic residues within the N-terminus of HMG-1 B domain with different effects on DNA supercoiling and bindingto bent DNA Biochemistry 40, 4769–4779 Stewart L & Champoux JJ (2001) Assaying DNAtopoisomeraseI relaxation activity Methods Mol Biol... Association ofDNAtopoisomeraseI and RNA polymerase I: a possible role for topoisomeraseI in ribosomal gene transcription Chromosoma 96, 411–416 22 Zhang H, Wang JC & Liu LF (1988) Involvement ofDNAtopoisomeraseI in transcription ofhuman ribosomal RNA genes Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 85, 1060– 1064 23 Kroeger PE & Rowe TC (1989) Interaction oftopoisomerase 1 with the transcribed region ofthe Drosophila... superhelical DNA EMBO J 14, 5399–5409 38 Ireton GC, Stewart L, Parker LH & Champoux JJ (2000) Expression ofhumantopoisomeraseI with a partial deletion ofthe linker region yields monomeric and dimeric enzymes that respond differently to camptothecin J Biol Chem 275, 25820–25830 39 Yang Z & Champoux JJ (2002) Reconstitution of enzymatic activity by the association ofthe cap and catalytic domains of human. .. Acknowledgements This work was supported by Grants GM60330 and GM49156 from the National Institutes of Health We thank Matthew Redinbo and Wim Hol for their assistance with the structural comparison of core subdomain II ofhumantopoisomeraseI with homeodomains Supercoil binding by topoisomeraseI We gratefully acknowledge Sharon Schultz and Heidrun Interthal for critically reading the manuscript References... gene Nucleic Acids Res 17, 8495–8509 24 Stewart AF, Herrera RE & Nordheim A (1990) Rapid induction of c-fos transcription reveals quantitative linkage of RNA polymerase II and DNAtopoisomeraseI enzyme activities Cell 60, 141–149 25 Kretzschmar M, Meisterernst M & Roeder RG (1993) Identification ofhumanDNAtopoisomeraseI as a cofactor for activator-dependent transcription by RNA polymerase II Proc . preferential binding of human topoisomerase I to supercoiled DNA is unknown but, if node recognition is important, then it is likely that the binding involves an interaction with two regions of DNA. subdomain III. The results obtained implicate the linker and solvent-exposed basic residues in core subdomain III in the preferential binding of human topoisomerase I to supercoiled DNA. Abbreviations Dcap,. second DNA -binding site, or that the linker or basic residues in core subdo- main III are involved in the preferential binding to supercoiled DNAs. When putative DNA contact points within core subdomain II