A selective protonation strategy is described that uses [3-2H] 13C alpha-ketoisovalerate to introduce (1H-delta methyl)-leucine and (1H-gamma methyl)-valine into 15N-, 13C-, 2H-labeled proteins. A minimum level of 90% incorporation of label into both leucine and valine methyl groups is obtained by inclusion of approximately 100 mg/L alpha-ketoisovalerate in the bacterial growth medium. Addition of [3,3-2H2] alpha-ketobutyrate to the expression media (D2O solvent) results in the production of proteins with (1H-delta1 methyl)-isoleucine (> 90% incorporation). 1H-13C HSQC correlation spectroscopy establishes that CH2D and CHD2 isotopomers are not produced with this method. This approach offers enhanced labeling of Leu methyl groups over previous methods that utilize Val as the labeling agent and is more cost effective.
Topoisomerase 2 (TOP2) DNA transactions are essential for life, and proceed via formation of the TOP2 cleavage complex (TOP2cc), a covalent enzyme-DNA reaction intermediate that is vulnerable to trapping by potent anticancer TOP2 drugs. How genotoxic TOP2 DNA-protein crosslinks are resolved is unclear. Here, we show that the SUMO ligase ZATT (ZNF451) is a multifunctional DNA repair factor that controls cellular responses to TOP2 damage. ZATT binding to TOP2cc facilitates a proteasome-independent Tyrosyl-DNA phosphodiesterase 2 (TDP2) hydrolase activity on stalled TOP2cc. The ZATT SUMO ligase activity further promotes TDP2 interactions with SUMOylated TOP2, regulating efficient TDP2 recruitment through a "split-SIM" SUMO2 engagement platform. These findings uncover a ZATT–TDP2 catalyzed and SUMO2-modulated pathway for direct resolution of TOP2cc.
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