Base excision of mismatched or damaged nucleotides catalyzed by glycosylase enzymes is the first step of the base excision repair system, a machinery preserving the integrity of DNA. Thymine DNA glycosylase recognizes and removes mismatched thymine by cleaving the C1′–N1 bond between the base and the sugar ring. Our quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical calculations of this reaction in human thymine DNA glycosylase reveal a requirement for a positive charge in the active site to facilitate C1′–N1 bond scission: protonation of His151 significantly lowers the free energy barrier for C1′–N1 bond dissociation compared to the situation with neutral His151. Shuttling a proton from His151 to the thymine base further reduces the activation free e...
The (6-4) photolyases are blue-light-activated enzymes that selectively bind to DNA and initiate spl...
Damage to the heterocyclic bases of DNA in the genome is mainly corrected by the base excision repai...
The repair of the multitude of single-base lesions formed daily in the cells of all living organisms...
Thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG) initiates the base excision repair mechanism for the deamination and o...
Deamination of 5-methylcytosine residues in DNA gives rise to the G/T mismatched base pair. In human...
DNA glycosylase, as one member of DNA repair machineries, plays an essential role in correcting mism...
Glycosylases specifically recognize and flip their target base out of the DNA helix into the enzyme’...
Although DNA damage can have a variety of deleterious effects on cells (e.g., senescence, death, and...
DNA repair enzymes induce base flipping in the process of damage recognition. Endonuclease V initiat...
Thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG) initiates base excision repair by cleaving the N-glycosidic bond betwe...
DNA glycosylases remove damaged or modified nucleobases by cleaving the N-glycosyl bond and the corr...
Lesion-specific DNA glycosylases play the key role in base excision DNA repair of finding the damage...
The ubiquitous occurrence of DNA damages renders its repair machinery a crucial requirement for the ...
The (6–4) photolyases are blue-light-activated enzymes that selectively bind to DNA and initiate spl...
Thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG) is a DNA repair enzyme that excises a variety of mismatched or damaged...
The (6-4) photolyases are blue-light-activated enzymes that selectively bind to DNA and initiate spl...
Damage to the heterocyclic bases of DNA in the genome is mainly corrected by the base excision repai...
The repair of the multitude of single-base lesions formed daily in the cells of all living organisms...
Thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG) initiates the base excision repair mechanism for the deamination and o...
Deamination of 5-methylcytosine residues in DNA gives rise to the G/T mismatched base pair. In human...
DNA glycosylase, as one member of DNA repair machineries, plays an essential role in correcting mism...
Glycosylases specifically recognize and flip their target base out of the DNA helix into the enzyme’...
Although DNA damage can have a variety of deleterious effects on cells (e.g., senescence, death, and...
DNA repair enzymes induce base flipping in the process of damage recognition. Endonuclease V initiat...
Thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG) initiates base excision repair by cleaving the N-glycosidic bond betwe...
DNA glycosylases remove damaged or modified nucleobases by cleaving the N-glycosyl bond and the corr...
Lesion-specific DNA glycosylases play the key role in base excision DNA repair of finding the damage...
The ubiquitous occurrence of DNA damages renders its repair machinery a crucial requirement for the ...
The (6–4) photolyases are blue-light-activated enzymes that selectively bind to DNA and initiate spl...
Thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG) is a DNA repair enzyme that excises a variety of mismatched or damaged...
The (6-4) photolyases are blue-light-activated enzymes that selectively bind to DNA and initiate spl...
Damage to the heterocyclic bases of DNA in the genome is mainly corrected by the base excision repai...
The repair of the multitude of single-base lesions formed daily in the cells of all living organisms...