Journal of Virology, August 2001, p. 7206-7209, Vol. 75, No. 15
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.15.7206-7209.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
DNA and ATP Binding Activities of the
Baculovirus DNA Helicase P143
Vivien V.
McDougal1 and
Linda A.
Guarino1,2,*
Departments of Biochemistry and
Biophysics1 and
Entomology,2 Texas A&M University,
College Station, Texas 77843-2128
Received 26 February 2001/Accepted 2 May 2001
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ABSTRACT |
P143 is a DNA helicase that tightly binds both double-stranded and
single-stranded DNA. DNA-protein complexes rapidly dissociated in the
presence of ATP and Mg2+. This finding suggests that ATP
hydrolysis causes a conformational change in P143 which decreases
affinity for DNA. This supports the model of an inchworm mechanism of
DNA unwinding.
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TEXT |
The P143 protein of Autographa
californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus is an essential protein
that was predicted to be a DNA helicase based on the presence of an ATP
binding motif that is conserved among DNA helicases (3,
9). Subsequent site-directed mutagenesis studies on seven
putative helicase motifs revealed that mutations in motifs I, Ia, II,
and III blocked DNA replication, while mutations in the other motifs
had no effect (7). This result supports the classification
of P143 as a member of superfamily III, which is a relatively
uncharacterized group of enzymes that lack recognizable sequences
corresponding to motifs IV to VI (2).
P143 is required for transient replication of a plasmid containing a
baculovirus origin of DNA replication in addition to IE1, DNApol,
LEF-1, LEF-2, and LEF-3 (5, 10). P143 copurifies with LEF-3, the baculovirus single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) binding protein
(SSB) (1, 4). This interaction between P143 and LEF-3 is not surprising because many helicases specifically bind their cognate SSBs, and this interaction has been shown to
stimulate DNA unwinding (11). In the case of P143,
however, the LEF-3 interaction also has an unexpected function because
LEF-3 is required for nuclear localization of P143 (15).
Recently, we showed that P143 has both ATPase and DNA unwinding
activities (12). As expected for a helicase, P143 binds to
double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) and ssDNA in a sequence-nonspecific manner
(6, 12). In electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSAs),
ladders of shifted bands are observed in an enzyme-dependent manner,
suggesting that multiple monomers or oligomers bind to both probes in a
noncooperative manner.
ATP inhibits the DNA binding activity of P143.
Our aim in this
study was to further analyze the DNA binding activity of P143 in order
to gain insight into the mechanism of DNA binding and DNA unwinding
activities. As a first step, we compared the DNA binding activity of
P143 in a standard EMSA buffer and in a buffer optimized for ATPase
activity. We found that DNA binding was considerably lower in the
ATPase buffer (data not shown). Analysis of each of the different
components revealed that the formation of stable protein-DNA complexes
was decreased approximately fivefold by the addition of ATP and
MgCl2 (Fig. 1,
lanes 6, 7, 13, and 14). This experiment was performed with two
different concentrations of enzyme in order to cover a wider range of
activity. Furthermore, addition of ATP alone had an even more dramatic
effect on DNA binding (Fig. 1, lanes 4, 5, 11, and 12). This was true
for both dsDNA (Fig. 1, lanes 1 to 7) and ssDNA (Fig. 1, lanes 8 to
14).

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FIG. 1.
Effects of ATP and MgCl2 on the binding of
P143 to 252-bp hr5 ss- and dsDNA. The conditions for
purification of P143, radiolabeling of hr5 probe, and
EMSAs have been described previously (12). In this
experiment, the molar ratios of enzyme to probe were 10:1 and 50:1. The
presence or absence (+ or ) of 2 mM ATP and 6 mM MgCl2 is
indicated at the top. Lanes 1 to 7 contain dsDNA probe; lanes 8 to 14 contain ssDNA probe. ssDNA probe was generated from the double-stranded
probe by dilution in water followed by boiling and rapid cooling on
ice. Free and protein-bound DNAs were separated on a 3.5%
acrylamide-Tris-borate-EDTA gel, dried, and exposed to PhosphorImager
plates. ds, double-stranded; ss, single-stranded.
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Inhibition is specific for ATP.
A trivial explanation for the
inhibition of DNA binding is that ATP altered the pH or ionic strength
of the buffer, even though the nucleotide solution was neutralized to
pH 7.0 before use. We reasoned that if inhibition were due simply to
the presence of a negatively charged nucleotide that competed with DNA,
then other nucleoside triphosphates (NTPs) should have the same effect. To test this, we added eight different NTPs individually to identical reaction mixtures, each at the same concentration. For these
experiments, a shorter DNA probe, corresponding to an 88-bp fragment of
hr5, was used because it produced only one or two shifted
bands. This allowed for better quantitation than did the larger probe,
which produced multiple bands containing unknown amounts of protein in
each shifted band. The EMSA results showed that DNA binding was
inhibited only in the reactions containing ATP (Fig.
2). The other seven nucleotides did not
significantly alter the binding of P143 to DNA. Previously, we showed
that ATP was the only NTP that could support the DNA unwinding activity
of P143 (12). Therefore, this suggests that inhibition is
due to binding of the enzyme to ATP and not to nonspecific ionic
effects.

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FIG. 2.
Effect of NTPs on P143 DNA binding in the absence of
divalent cation. Lane 1 contains probe alone; lanes 2 to 10 contain
purified P143 in fivefold-molar excess of enzyme over an 88-nucleotide
radiolabeled DNA probe. Lanes 3 to 10 contain a 2 mM concentration of
the indicated NTP. Free and protein-bound DNAs were fractionated on a
5% acrylamide-Tris-borate-EDTA gel, dried, and exposed to a
PhosphorImager plate. An 88-nucleotide probe, also containing
hr5 sequences, was cut from the same plasmid, first with
EcoRI and then, after kinase labeling, with
MluI.
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These results suggest that P143 can bind ATP even in the absence of
added Mg2+. This was surprising because ATP
binding proteins are believed to interact with the metal-bound form of
ATP. We therefore conducted filter binding assays in the presence and
absence of MgCl2. We found that the enzyme bound
ATP in the presence and absence of added magnesium (data not shown);
however, we cannot rule out the possibility that the purified enzyme
and the ATP solution contained bound metal. The use of ATP analogs like
adenylyl-imidodiphosphate and adenosine 5'-0-(3-thiotriphosphate) also
gave inconclusive results in DNA binding assays. Subsequent analyses
suggested that P143 did not bind these analogs. We found that addition
of analogs did not compete with radiolabeled ATP in ATPase assays (data
not shown).
Only divalent cations that support ATP hydrolysis restore DNA
binding.
We then wanted to determine whether the ability of
MgCl2 to reverse the ATP inhibition of DNA
binding was related to the catalytic activity of the enzyme. If
MgCl2 were only acting as a counterion, then
other divalent cation salts should have the same effect. Alternatively,
if MgCl2 restored DNA binding because it
supported ATPase activity, then only cations that also function as
cofactors should relieve inhibition.
To test this, equal concentrations of four different divalent cation
salts were added to individual ATPase reactions (Fig. 3A). Reaction mixtures containing
MgCl2 hydrolyzed the most ATP, which was not surprising as
most ATPases function best in the presence of magnesium rather than
that of another divalent cation (12). The next best
divalent cofactor was manganese. Reaction mixtures containing calcium
and zinc produced negligible ATP hydrolysis, and there was no
hydrolysis in the absence of divalent cation.

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FIG. 3.
Effects of divalent cations. (A) ATPase. Each reaction
mixture contained a 6 mM concentration of the indicated divalent cation
salt. ATPase reaction mixtures contained 2 mM ATP, 0.1 µCi of
[ -32P]ATP, a 6 mM concentration of the indicated
divalent cation chloride salt, 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 0.1 mM EDTA, 15 mM NaCl, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 140 fmol of P143, and 0.25 µg of
activated calf thymus DNA in a final volume of 20 µl. Samples were
incubated at 30°C for 30 min and were then terminated by the addition
of 25 mM EDTA. Polyethyleneimine thin-layer plates were spotted with 1 µl of each reaction, and the hydrolyzed, radiolabeled phosphate was
separated from the input triphosphate by development in 1 M formic acid
and 0.5 M LiCl. Thin-layer chromatography plates were dried and exposed
to PhosphorImager screens. Results were quantitated using a Storm
PhosphorImager. Background levels of hydrolysis in the absence of
enzyme were subtracted. An assay was performed in triplicate, and
standard error is indicated. (B) DNA binding. Lane 1 contains probe
without enzyme. Lanes 2 to 7 contain P143 in a fivefold-molar excess
over the 88-nucleotide radiolabeled probe. Lanes 3 to 7 contain 2 mM
ATP (+), while lane 2 does not ( ). Lanes 4 to 7 contain a 6 mM
concentration of the indicated divalent cation salt. Reaction mixtures
were fractionated on a 5% acrylamide-Tris-borate-EDTA gel, dried, and
exposed to a PhosphorImager plate.
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We then added the same divalent cations used in the ATPase
assay to EMSA reaction mixtures containing ATP and P143 (Fig.
3B). ATP inhibited the DNA binding activity of P143, and the addition of MgCl2 restored 18% of normal binding, as
previously seen. MnCl2 restored binding to a
lesser extent, only 7% of the level obtained in the absence of ATP.
CaCl2 and ZnCl2 (Fig. 3B,
lanes 5 and 6) did not significantly relieve ATP inhibition. Therefore,
we concluded that only divalent cations that support ATPase activity
supported DNA binding in the presence of ATP, indicating that this
effect was related to the catalytic activity of the enzyme and not due to nonspecific buffer effects. Qualitatively similar results were obtained with the larger 252-bp probe and with a single-stranded 88-bp
probe (data not shown).
ATP and MgCl2 increase the rate of dissociation.
We hypothesized that the DNA binding affinity of P143 was higher in the
absence of its substrate and cofactor because it was not engaged in ATP
hydrolysis. We tested this idea by assembling two binding reactions,
one in the presence of ATP and MgCl2 and one in
the absence. The enzyme was incubated on ice for 20 min to allow
binding to the radiolabeled double-stranded 252-bp probe. Then, a
100-fold-molar excess of the same unlabeled DNA fragment was added
(aliquots were removed at the indicated times) and was loaded onto a
gel with the current running continuously. This allowed us to compare
the rate of dissociation of P143 from the DNA under both sets of
conditions (Fig. 4).

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FIG. 4.
The effect of ATP and MgCl2 on the
dissociation rate of P143 DNA binding. Lanes 2 to 21 contain a
fivefold-molar excess of P143 over a radiolabeled 252-bp dsDNA
probe in the absence or presence (+ or ) of 2 mM ATP and 6 mM
MgCl2 as indicated at the top. After 20 min of incubation,
a 100-fold molar excess of unlabeled probe was added to each reaction
mixture, and 20 µl was removed at the times indicated at the top of
the gel and was loaded on a 3.5% nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel with
the current running continuously (lanes 6 to 21). Lane 1 contains the
probe in the absence of enzyme; lanes 2 and 3 contain probe and
competitor added together; lanes 4 and 5 had no competitor added. Free
probe shifts up with time because these samples were loaded later and,
therefore, electrophoresed for a shorter period of time.
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Before the addition of competitor DNA, four shifted bands were clearly
visible in the absence of cofactors, while only two were detected in
the presence of cofactors, as previously shown. By 1 min after the
addition of competitor DNA, P143 had dissociated from the probe in the
reaction mixture containing ATP and MgCl2. In the
absence of cofactors, however, the rate of dissociation was much
slower, and at least two shifted bands were present throughout the
60-min time course. Because the stoichiometry of enzyme to DNA in each
band is unknown, we were unable to calculate an exact rate of
dissociation. But, from this experiment it seems that the rate is in
seconds in the presence of cofactors and in minutes in the absence of cofactors.
A model for DNA binding and ATPase activities of P143.
The DNA
binding data presented here suggests a model in which P143 undergoes
conformational changes upon binding and hydrolysis of ATP. These
conformational changes alter its affinity for DNA and presumably
involve translocation and/or DNA unwinding. This suggests that helicase
does not unwind DNA by the rolling mechanism because a fundamental
requirement of that model is that a subunit of the helicase is in
contact with the DNA at all times (13, 14). The inchworm
model (16) is more consistent with our findings because it
proposes that helicases undergo conformational changes that advance the
enzyme forward into the double-stranded region of DNA before ATP
hydrolysis. In order to slide forward on the DNA, the enzyme must
release the nucleotides in the DNA binding pocket. This is consistent
with the finding that P143 binds DNA more efficiently in the absence of
ATP and MgCl2; the enzyme is static in the
absence of cofactors and therefore binds DNA with high affinity. In the
presence of ATP and MgCl2, P143 goes through cycles of hydrolysis and translocation. EMSA captures only those molecules that are bound with high affinity, while those in the process
of translocation temporarily dissociate from DNA and so do not produce
shifted bands.
The observation that the DNA binding activity of a helicase is
inhibited by ATP and MgCl2 is unusual but has
also been reported for hepatitis C virus helicase NS3
(8). Those authors showed that 2 mM ATP inhibited DNA
binding of the wild-type helicase but not of a mutant unable to
hydrolyze ATP. They did not speculate on the possible causes of this
ATP-induced decrease in binding. The fact that it was not seen in an
ATPase-deficient enzyme suggests that it is not an artifact but a part
of the helicase mechanism. It seems likely that the binding of ATP
alters the conformation of the helicase, modifying the DNA binding affinity.
Further experiments are needed to corroborate the model of P143
helicase activity proposed here. One approach would be to mutagenize
the ATP binding domain of P143. Our model would be supported by the
finding that ATP no longer inhibited P143 DNA binding in the mutated
enzyme, confirming that ATP binding was the cause of the inhibition.
Unfortunately we have not been able to express P143 in any system other
than the baculovirus system, and since P143 is essential for viral
replication, we cannot express proteins with mutations that inhibit function.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Wen Dong for technical assistance.
This research was supported by grant MCB-9874532 from the National
Science Foundation.
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FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Biochemistry and Biophysics, Texas A&M University, MS2128, College
Station, TX 77843-2128. Phone: (409) 845-7556. Fax: (409) 845-9274. E-mail: lguarino{at}tamu.edu.
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Journal of Virology, August 2001, p. 7206-7209, Vol. 75, No. 15
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.15.7206-7209.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.