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Published May 20, 2009 | public
Journal Article

Accelerated search kinetics mediated by redox reactions of DNA repair enzymes

Abstract

A charge transport (CT) mechanism has been proposed in several articles to explain the localization of base excision repair (BER) enzymes to lesions on DNA. The CT mechanism relies on redox reactions of iron-sulfur cofactors that modify the enzyme's binding affinity. These redox reactions are mediated by the DNA strand and involve the exchange of electrons between BER enzymes along DNA. We propose a mathematical model that incorporates enzyme binding/unbinding, electron transport, and enzyme diffusion along DNA. Analysis of our model within a range of parameter values suggests that the redox reactions can increase desorption of BER enzymes not already bound to lesions, allowing the enzymes to be recycled—thus accelerating the overall search process. This acceleration mechanism is most effective when enzyme copy numbers and enzyme diffusivity along the DNA are small. Under such conditions, we find that CT BER enzymes find their targets more quickly than simple passive enzymes that simply attach to the DNA without desorbing.

Additional Information

© 2009 Biophysical Society. Submitted December 15, 2008, and accepted for publication February 11, 2009. P.-W. Fok is grateful for helpful discussions with A. K. Boal and J. Geneveaux. The authors acknowledge support from the National Science Foundation (DMS-0349195) and the National Institutes of Health (K25AI058672).

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023