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The RNase H-like superfamily: new members, comparative structural analysis and evolutionary classification.

Majorek, Karolina A and Dunin-Horkawicz, Stanislaw and Steczkiewicz, Kamil and Muszewska, Anna and Nowotny, Marcin and Ginalski, Krzysztof and Bujnicki, Janusz M (2014) The RNase H-like superfamily: new members, comparative structural analysis and evolutionary classification. Nucleic acids research, 42 (7). pp. 4160-4179. ISSN 1362-4962

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Official URL: http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2014/0...

Abstract

Ribonuclease H-like (RNHL) superfamily, also called the retroviral integrase superfamily, groups together numerous enzymes involved in nucleic acid metabolism and implicated in many biological processes, including replication, homologous recombination, DNA repair, transposition and RNA interference. The RNHL superfamily proteins show extensive divergence of sequences and structures. We conducted database searches to identify members of the RNHL superfamily (including those previously unknown), yielding >60 000 unique domain sequences. Our analysis led to the identification of new RNHL superfamily members, such as RRXRR (PF14239), DUF460 (PF04312, COG2433), DUF3010 (PF11215), DUF429 (PF04250 and COG2410, COG4328, COG4923), DUF1092 (PF06485), COG5558, OrfB_IS605 (PF01385, COG0675) and Peptidase_A17 (PF05380). Based on the clustering analysis we grouped all identified RNHL domain sequences into 152 families. Phylogenetic studies revealed relationships between these families, and suggested a possible history of the evolution of RNHL fold and its active site. Our results revealed clear division of the RNHL superfamily into exonucleases and endonucleases. Structural analyses of features characteristic for particular groups revealed a correlation between the orientation of the C-terminal helix with the exonuclease/endonuclease function and the architecture of the active site. Our analysis provides a comprehensive picture of sequence-structure-function relationships in the RNHL superfamily that may guide functional studies of the previously uncharacterized protein families.

Item Type:Article
Subjects:Q Science > QH Natural history > QH301 Biology
Divisions:Department of Microbial Biochemistry
ID Code:656
Deposited By: dr Anna Muszewska
Deposited On:29 May 2014 09:41
Last Modified:24 Oct 2014 11:30

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