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The Drosophila orthologue of progeroid human WRN exonuclease, DmWRNexo, cleaves replication substrates but is inhibited by uracil or abasic sites : analysis of DmWRNexo activity in vitro.
[werner syndrome]
Werner
syndrome
(
WS
)
is
a
rare
late-onset
premature
ageing
disease
showing
many
of
the
phenotypes
associated
with
normal
ageing
,
and
provides
one
of
the
best
models
for
investigating
cellular
pathways
that
lead
to
normal
ageing
.
WS
is
caused
by
mutation
of
WRN
,
which
encodes
a
multifunctional
DNA
replication
and
repair
helicase
/
exonuclease
.
To
investigate
the
role
of
WRN
protein
's
unique
exonuclease
domain
,
we
have
recently
identified
DmWRNexo
,
the
fly
orthologue
of
the
exonuclease
domain
of
human
WRN
.
Here
,
we
fully
characterise
DmWRNexo
exonuclease
activity
in
vitro
,
confirming
3
'
-
5
'
polarity
,
demonstrating
a
requirement
for
Mg
(
2
+
)
,
inhibition
by
ATP
,
and
an
ability
to
degrade
both
single
-stranded
DNA
and
duplex
DNA
substrates
with
3
'
or
5
'
overhangs
,
or
bubble
structures
,
but
with
no
activity
on
blunt
ended
DNA
duplexes
.
We
report
a
novel
active
site
mutation
that
ablates
enzyme
activity
.
Lesional
substrates
containing
uracil
are
partially
cleaved
by
DmWRNexo
,
but
the
enzyme
pauses
on
such
substrates
and
is
inhibited
by
abasic
sites
.
These
strong
biochemical
similarities
to
human
WRN
suggest
that
Drosophila
can
provide
a
valuable
experimental
system
for
analysing
the
importance
of
WRN
exonuclease
in
cell
and
organismal
ageing
.
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werner syndrome
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