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. 2005 Feb;13(2):287-96.
doi: 10.1016/j.str.2004.12.011.

Small-angle X-ray scattering reveals the solution structure of the full-length DNA gyrase a subunit

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Free article

Small-angle X-ray scattering reveals the solution structure of the full-length DNA gyrase a subunit

Lionel Costenaro et al. Structure. 2005 Feb.
Free article

Abstract

DNA gyrase is the topoisomerase uniquely able to actively introduce negative supercoils into DNA. Vital in all bacteria, but absent in humans, this enzyme is a successful target for antibacterial drugs. From biophysical experiments in solution, we report the low-resolution structure of the full-length A subunit (GyrA). Analytical ultracentrifugation shows that GyrA is dimeric, but nonglobular. Ab initio modeling from small-angle X-ray scattering allows us to retrieve the molecular envelope of GyrA and thereby the organization of its domains. The available crystallographic structure of the amino-terminal domain (GyrA59) forms a dimeric core, and two additional pear-shaped densities closely flank it in an unexpected position. Each accommodates very well a carboxyl-terminal domain (GyrA-CTD) built from a homologous crystallographic structure. The uniqueness of gyrase is due to the ability of the GyrA-CTDs to wrap DNA. Their position within the GyrA structure strongly suggests a large conformation change of the enzyme upon DNA binding.

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