Author
Listed:
- Jennifer N. Wells
(Imperial College London
MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS))
- Lucy V. Edwardes
(Imperial College London
MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS))
- Vera Leber
(Imperial College London
MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS))
- Shenaz Allyjaun
(Imperial College London
MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS))
- Matthew Peach
(Imperial College London
MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS))
- Joshua Tomkins
(Imperial College London
MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS))
- Antonia Kefala-Stavridi
(Imperial College London
MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS))
- Sarah V. Faull
(Imperial College London
MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS))
- Ricardo Aramayo
(Imperial College London
MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS))
- Carolina M. Pestana
(Imperial College London
MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS))
- Lepakshi Ranjha
(Imperial College London
MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS))
- Christian Speck
(Imperial College London
MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS))
Abstract
Human DNA licensing initiates replication fork assembly and DNA replication. This reaction promotes the loading of the hMCM2-7 complex on DNA, which represents the core of the replicative helicase that unwinds DNA during S-phase. Here, we report the reconstitution of human DNA licensing using purified proteins. We showed that the in vitro reaction is specific and results in the assembly of high-salt resistant hMCM2-7 double-hexamers. With ATPγS, an hORC1-5-hCDC6-hCDT1-hMCM2-7 (hOCCM) assembles independent of hORC6, but hORC6 enhances double-hexamer formation. We determined the hOCCM structure, which showed that hORC-hCDC6 recruits hMCM2-7 via five hMCM winged-helix domains. The structure highlights how hORC1 activates the hCDC6 ATPase and uncovered an unexpected role for hCDC6 ATPase in complex disassembly. We identified that hCDC6 binding to hORC1-5 stabilises hORC2-DNA interactions and supports hMCM3-dependent recruitment of hMCM2-7. Finally, the structure allowed us to locate cancer-associated mutations at the hCDC6-hMCM3 interface, which showed specific helicase loading defects.
Suggested Citation
Jennifer N. Wells & Lucy V. Edwardes & Vera Leber & Shenaz Allyjaun & Matthew Peach & Joshua Tomkins & Antonia Kefala-Stavridi & Sarah V. Faull & Ricardo Aramayo & Carolina M. Pestana & Lepakshi Ranjh, 2025.
"Reconstitution of human DNA licensing and the structural and functional analysis of key intermediates,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-21, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-024-55772-z
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-55772-z
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