posted on 2017-02-16, 00:00authored byLiliya Euro, Outi Haapanen, Tomasz Róg, Ilpo Vattulainen, Anu Suomalainen, Vivek Sharma
DNA
polymerase γ (Pol γ) is a key component of the
mitochondrial DNA replisome and an important cause of neurological
diseases. Despite the availability of its crystal structures, the
molecular mechanism of DNA replication, the switch between polymerase
and exonuclease activities, the site of replisomal interactions, and
functional effects of patient mutations that do not affect direct
catalysis have remained elusive. Here we report the first atomistic
classical molecular dynamics simulations of the human Pol γ
replicative complex. Our simulation data show that DNA binding triggers
remarkable changes in the enzyme structure, including (1) completion
of the DNA-binding channel via a dynamic subdomain, which in the apo
form blocks the catalytic site, (2) stabilization of the structure
through the distal accessory β-subunit, and (3) formation of
a putative transient replisome-binding platform in the “intrinsic
processivity” subdomain of the enzyme. Our data indicate that
noncatalytic mutations may disrupt replisomal interactions, thereby
causing Pol γ-associated neurodegenerative disorders.