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Molecular and Cellular Biology, May 2000, p. 2996-3003, Vol. 20, No. 9
0270-7306/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Ku Recruits the XRCC4-Ligase IV Complex to
DNA Ends
Stephanie A.
Nick
McElhinny,1
Carey M.
Snowden,2
Joseph
McCarville,1 and
Dale A.
Ramsden1,2,3,*
Department of Biochemistry and
Biophysics,1 Curriculum in Genetics and
Molecular Biology,2 and Lineberger
Comprehensive Cancer Center,3 University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Received 6 December 1999/Returned for modification 10 January
2000/Accepted 2 February 2000
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ABSTRACT |
Genetic experiments have determined that Ku, XRCC4, and ligase IV
are required for repair of double-strand breaks by the end-joining pathway. The last two factors form a tight complex in cells. However, ligase IV is only one of three known mammalian ligases and is intrinsically the least active in intermolecular ligation; thus, the
biochemical basis for requiring this ligase has been unclear. We
demonstrate here a direct physical interaction between the XRCC4-ligase
IV complex and Ku. This interaction is stimulated once Ku binds to DNA
ends. Since XRCC4-ligase IV alone has very low DNA binding activity, Ku
is required for effective recruitment of this ligase to DNA ends. We
further show that this recruitment is critical for efficient
end-joining activity in vitro. Preformation of a complex containing Ku
and XRCC4-ligase IV increases the initial ligation rate 20-fold,
indicating that recruitment of the ligase is an important limiting step
in intermolecular ligation. Recruitment by Ku also allows XRCC4-ligase
IV to use Ku's high affinity for DNA ends to rapidly locate and ligate
ends in an excess of unbroken DNA, a necessity for end joining in
cells. These properties are conferred only on ligase IV, because Ku
does not similarly interact with the other mammalian ligases. We have
therefore defined cell-free conditions that reflect the genetic
requirement for ligase IV in cellular end joining and consequently can
explain in molecular terms why this factor is required.
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INTRODUCTION |
A double-strand break (DSB) is the
most lethal form of cellular DNA damage. Such breaks can be caused by
exposure to certain exogenous damaging agents, like ionizing radiation.
DSBs are also normal intermediates in several cellular recombination
processes, including meiotic recombination, mating type switching in
yeast, and antigen receptor gene rearrangement [V(D)J recombination] in vertebrates. Regardless of the source, DSBs are repaired by one of
two pathways. End joining (also termed nonhomologous end joining)
rejoins broken ends, removing damaged nucleotides as necessary. In
contrast, homologous recombination uses an intact copy (homolog or
sister chromatid) of the broken chromosome as a template for repair
dependent on processive DNA synthesis. End joining is likely to be the
more error-prone pathway; nevertheless, in vertebrates it is a major
pathway for general repair of DSBs. It is also the only pathway used to
resolve intermediates in V(D)J recombination (reviewed, e.g., in
reference 16).
Genetic experiments indicate that the Ku heterodimer, XRCC4, and ligase
IV are required for efficient end-joining DSB repair in all eukaryotic
species examined so far. Mutation of any one of these three factors in
both the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae (15, 32)
and mammalian cells (excepting neurological lineages) (9, 11,
13) have roughly equivalent effects, arguing that the functions
of these three factors in the end-joining pathway are interdependent
(reviewed in reference 20). Studies of S. cerevisiae also implicate a variety of additional factors in end joining, including the MRE11-RAD50-XRS2 complex. A complex containing orthologs to MRE11 and RAD50 has been identified in vertebrates, and
although it is clearly linked in some way to DSB repair, it is not yet
certain that the vertebrate version of the MRE11 complex is required
for end joining (reference 33 and references therein).
In mammalian cells, end joining also typically requires the catalytic
subunit of DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PKcs, or XRCC7). However,
an ortholog for this factor has not been found in the fully sequenced
genome of S. cerevisiae or the nearly complete genome of
Caenorhabditis elegans (29). Even in species with a DNA-PKcs ortholog there are circumstances where its mutation still
allows much greater levels of end joining than are observed when Ku,
XRCC4, or ligase IV is mutated. Mice completely deficient in DNA-PKcs
can join signal end intermediates in V(D)J recombination (2, 10,
30), and embryonic stem cells from such mice possess a normal
level of resistance to ionizing radiation (10). The function
of DNA-PKcs in end joining therefore may be more dispensable than that
of Ku, XRCC4, or ligase IV, depending on the organism, cell type, and
molecular context of the ends to be joined.
Ku is perhaps the best biochemically characterized of the factors
required for end joining. Ku is a heterodimer of 83- and 70-kDa
subunits (encoded by the XRCC5 and XRCC6 genes, respectively) that
binds to DNA ends, including forks, single-stranded overhangs, and
hairpins, with high specificity and affinity (reviewed in reference
8). Ku can juxtapose DNA ends (5, 24,
25), likely explaining its ability to generally stimulate
intermolecular ligation (25).
Ku also recruits DNA-PKcs to DNA ends. DNA-PKcs is a 460-kDa
serine/threonine protein kinase that is activated upon binding to DNA
ends. Although DNA-PKcs is most efficiently recruited to and activated
through formation of a complex on DNA ends with Ku, end binding and
kinase activation can also occur in vitro in a Ku-independent manner
(14, 34). Kinase activity is required for the role of
DNA-PKcs in cellular end joining, but the biologically relevant
substrates are not yet known (17).
XRCC4 forms a tight complex with ligase IV in cells (7, 12)
(we will subsequently refer to this complex as X4-LIV). By itself,
XRCC4 binds weakly to DNA, but this property has no apparent effect on
the ligation activity of the X4-LIV complex (23). XRCC4 also
interacts weakly with (19) and is phosphorylated by DNA-PK
in vitro (7, 19, 23). However, interaction with DNA-PKcs is
not essential for XRCC4 function, as mutant XRCC4 lacking these
phosphorylation sites is capable of complementing XRCC4-deficient cells
(22, 23) and some XRCC4-dependent repair pathways are intact
in cells lacking DNA-PKcs (10).
Ligase IV protein is not stable in XRCC4-deficient cells, either in
mammals or yeast (4, 15). While interaction of XRCC4 with
ligase IV results in a modest stimulation of ligase IV activity in
vitro (12, 23), even this complex is less effective at joining DSBs than either of the other two more abundant mammalian ligases (ligase I and ligase III) (25, 27). Nevertheless, both genetic (9, 13) and biochemical (1)
experiments argue that it is the primary ligase used for end joining.
Moreover, cells defective in ligase IV cannot be complemented by
overexpression of the other two ligases (13). Ligase IV
(presumably with XRCC4) may thus interact with one or more other DSB
repair factors in cells and consequently becomes much more effective
than the other ligases at joining DNA ends.
We demonstrate here that X4-LIV directly interacts with Ku in vitro. Ku
specifically recruits X4-LIV to DNA ends, and together these proteins
are capable of efficient end joining under conditions where Ku and the
other mammalian ligases are not. Ku, XRCC4, and ligase IV thus
cooperate to form a complex that greatly facilitates intermolecular
ligation, consistent with the coordinate requirement for all three
components for efficient end joining in eukaryotic species from yeast
to mammals.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
DNA constructs.
Full-length ligase IV (911 amino acids
[12]) was amplified from a cDNA (the gift of T. Lindahl) and inserted into pFASTBAC1 (Life Technologies, Bethesda,
Md.). The coding sequence was modified to introduce a short DNA
encoding the hexahistidine tag-containing sequence LEIEGRHHHHHH
immediately before the stop codon. The 70-kDa subunit of Ku was also
amplified from a cloned cDNA (the gift of D. Capra), inserted into
pFASTBAC1, and modified to include the same tag sequence at the C
terminus. The 83-kDa subunit of Ku was transferred from a cDNA to
pFASTBAC1 without an affinity tag sequence. XRCC4 was amplified from
pMMX4 (the gift of M. Modesti), and the hexahistidine tag already
present in this construct was removed prior to insertion into
pFASTBAC1. Each of these constructs was verified by sequencing the
entire coding region.
Protein purification.
Viral isolates for insect cell
expression of ligase IV, XRCC4, Ku70, and Ku80 were prepared from
pFASTBAC1 constructs according to the manufacturer's instructions.
SF-9 cells were coinfected with either XRCC4 and ligase IV virus at a
1:1 ratio or with Ku70 and Ku80 virus at a 1:2 ratio. Extracts were
made in 50 mM sodium phosphate (pH 8.0), 1 M KCl, 10% glycerol, 0.25%
Triton X-100 (Sigma), and 7 mM
-mercaptoethanol. Under these
conditions, the amount of tagged protein (Ku70 for the Ku70-Ku80
infection or ligase IV for the X4-LIV infection) was limiting for both
coinfections (see Fig. 1A, lane 1).
Extracts were supplemented with imidazole to 10 mM, loaded onto a
Ni-NTA Superflow (Qiagen) column, and eluted with extraction buffer
plus 350 mM imidazole. Ku- or X4-LIV-containing fractions were dialyzed
against buffer A (25 mM Tris [pH 8.0], 150 mM KCl, 10% glycerol,
0.05% Triton X-100, and 2 mM dithiothreitol [DTT] [Calbiochem]),
loaded onto a Mono Q HR5/5 column (Pharmacia) preequilibrated in buffer
A, and eluted with a linear gradient to 400 mM KCl over 20 column
volumes. Ku was further purified by chromatography over a native DNA
cellulose column as previously described (25). XRCC4 and
ligases I and III were expressed in bacteria and purified as previously
described (23, 25).
A filter binding assay was used to test for the presence of
contaminating nucleic acids in our Ku and X4-LIV preparations. No
nucleic acids were detected in 5-µg samples of each protein preparation, while parallel spotting with control DNA-containing samples indicated that this assay had a detection limit of 10 ng. We
conclude that nucleic acid contamination of our protein preparations is
less than 1:500, by mass, compared with the amount of protein and thus
could not significantly impact our results.
Ku (purified as described in reference 6) and ligase
IV (the gift of J. Turchi, Wright State University) from HeLa cells formed a complex equivalent to that shown with recombinant Ku and
X4-LIV by the electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) (unpublished
data). In addition, a similar complex was detected in whole-cell
extracts from HeLa cells (see Fig. 4). This complex is therefore not a
consequence of the presence of hexahistidine tags or the recombinant
source. All proteins were frozen in small aliquots on liquid nitrogen
and stored at
80°C. Protein concentrations were estimated by a
modified Bradford assay (Coomassie Plus; Pierce) and comparison to a
standard curve generated using serial dilutions of bovine serum albumin
(BSA). Molar concentrations were calculated assuming a heterodimer for
Ku (150 kDa), monomers for ligase I (125 kDa) and ligase III (100 kDa),
and a heterotetramer with two molecules each for X4-LIV (280 kDa; our
gel filtration data suggest this is likely a lower limit for the size
of X4-LIV in solution). Proteins were diluted in buffer A plus 50 µg
of BSA (New England Biolabs)/ml for use in all assays.
Gel filtration analysis was performed on a 1- by 30-cm Superdex 200 column (Pharmacia) using a 100-µl aliquot of X4-LIV at 0.3 mg/ml,
both in buffer A and in buffer A with 1 M KCl. Thyroglobulin (669 kDa),
apoferritin (443 kDa),
-amylase (200 kDa), alcohol dehydrogenase
(150 kDa), and BSA (66 kDa) were used as standards, and the excluded
volume (7.89 ml) for this column was determined by using blue dextran
(2,000 kDa; Sigma).
EMSA.
A radiolabeled 60-bp double-stranded (ds) DNA
substrate was made by 5' 32P end labeling DAR166
(5'-CAGCTGGGAATTCCATATGAGTACTGCAGATGCACTTGCTCGATAGATCTAACATGAGCC-3') and annealing the labeled DNA to DAR167
(5'-GTAGGGCTCATGTTAGATCTATCGAGCAAGTGCATCTGCAGTACTCATATGGAATTCCCAGCTGAG-3'). The DNA was incubated with the various proteins for 30 min
on ice in a volume of 10 µl in our standard reaction buffer (standard buffer; 25 mM Tris [pH 7.5], 100 mM NaCl, 30 mM KCl, 0.1 mM EDTA, 0.05% Triton X-100, 50 µg of BSA/ml, 2% glycerol, and 2 mM DTT). Samples were subjected to electrophoresis for 25 min at 18 V/cm using a
3.5% polyacrylamide gel in a buffer containing 45 mM Tris-acetate (pH
8.0) and 1 mM EDTA. Antibody supershifts were performed by adding 1 µl of antibodies to each reaction mixture after the 30-min complex
formation step and incubating the reaction mixtures for a further 10 min before electrophoresis. Sera were used after a 1:25 dilution, while
monoclonal-antibody-expressing hybridoma supernatants were used
undiluted. Electrophoresis of antibody-containing complexes was
performed as described above, except that 90 mM Tris-borate (pH 8.2)
and 1 mM EDTA were used as the electrophoresis buffer. Antibodies used
included an anti-XRCC4 rabbit serum (Serotec), normal rabbit serum
(Sigma), a monoclonal antibody to Ku (antibody 162; the gift of W. Reeves) and a monoclonal antibody to simian virus 40 (SV40) T antigen
(antibody 101; the gift of W. Reeves).
Immunoprecipitations.
For the initial immunoprecipitation
assay using purified protein, a sample of X4-LIV was deadenylated by
treatment with sodium pyrophosphate, dialyzed, and then radiolabeled by
incubation on ice for 30 min in buffer A plus 5 mM Mg2+ and
approximately 1 µM [
-32P]ATP (3,000 Ci/mmol;
Amersham). Radiolabeled X4-LIV was incubated with Ku and/or DNA in a
volume of 500 µl of standard buffer for 30 min on ice. Aliquots of
antibody-protein A-Sepharose complexes (made with 50 µl of protein
A-Sepharose [Sigma] and 50 µl of hybridoma supernatant) for each
reaction were prepared and washed twice in standard buffer. The
reaction mixtures were added directly to antibody-protein A-Sepharose
pellets and incubated for an additional 20 min at 4°C with constant
mixing. Immune complexes were washed four times in standard buffer,
pelleted by brief centrifugation, released from the beads by incubation
at 95°C for 5 min in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) sample buffer, and electrophoresed on an
SDS-8% PAGE gel. The gel was stained with Coomassie blue,
photographed, and dried, and radiolabeled proteins were detected with a
PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics).
Immunoprecipitation assays were also performed using whole-cell
extracts from HeLa cells harvested from a 70% confluent 15-cm-diameter dish. The cells were washed twice with cold phosphate-buffered saline,
and the washed cell pellet was resuspended in 0.5 ml of a buffer
containing 25 mM Tris, 500 mM NaCl, 150 mM KCl, 0.5 mM EDTA, 0.25%
Triton X-100, 2 mM DTT, and a mixture of protease inhibitors (Complete
protease inhibitors; Boehringer Mannheim) and lysed by sonication. The
extract was then diluted with 2 ml of a buffer containing 25 mM Tris
(pH 7.5) and 2 mM DTT and clarified by centrifugation at
15,000 × g for 10 min. This produced a whole-cell extract with soluble protein at a concentration of approximately 1.5 mg/ml in a buffer roughly equivalent to the previously described standard buffer. Aliquots (0.5 ml) of extract were then precleared with
protein A-Sepharose for 30 min before being added to antibody-protein A-Sepharose pellets prepared as described above. Where indicated, ethidium bromide was also added to a final concentration of 50 µg/ml;
this concentration completely disrupted the independent association of
Ku, Oct2, and a 110-kDa protein with DNA in a similar immunoprecipitation experiment (18). Immune complexes were
purified as described above, but after a 1-h incubation with rotation
at 4°C. Seventy percent of the material from each
immunoprecipitation, as well as a 20-ng aliquot of recombinant X4-LIV
complex and a 20-µg aliquot of the input extract, was electrophoresed
on an SDS-6% PAGE gel, transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane using a semidry transfer apparatus (Hoeffer), and probed with a polyclonal rabbit antiserum raised against purified X4-LIV complex (Cocalico Biologicals). This antiserum did not cross-react with recombinant ligase I or III (unpublished data). The remainder of the material (30%) from each immunoprecipitation, as well as a 20-ng aliquot of
recombinant Ku and a 20-µg aliquot of input extract, was separately electrophoresed, blotted, and probed with a polyclonal rabbit antiserum
raised against purified Ku70 (Serotec). Both Ku and ligase IV were then
detected with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-rabbit
immunoglobulin and Lumiglo peroxidase substrate (New England Biolabs).
Ligation assays.
Substrate L is a pair of dsDNA molecules: a
radiolabeled 60-bp duplex, described above for use in the EMSA (DAR166
annealed to DAR167) as well as a 30-bp duplex made by annealing
5'-phosphorylated DAR 165 (5'-ACTGCAGTTCTAGACCTCATCGAGGGATTA-3')
to DAR 164 (5'-GATGTAATCCCTCGATGAGGTCTAGAACTGCAGTCT-3'). Substrate S is a second pair of dsDNA molecules, including 5' 32P-labeled DAR296
(5'-CAGC TGGGAAT TCCATATGAG TAC TGCAGATGCAC T TGC TCGATAGATCTAACATGAG-3')
annealed to DAR281
(5'-GTAGGGCTCATGTTAGATCTATCGAGCAAGTGCATCTGCAGTACTCATATGGAATTCCCAGCTGGA-3') and 5'-phosphorylated DAR 165 (also used to make substrate L) annealed to DAR297 (5'-GATGTAATCCCTCGATGAGGTCTAGAACTGCAGTTC-3'). Preincubations were performed in standard buffer supplemented with 10% (wt/vol) polyethylene glycol (molecular mass, greater than
8,000 kDa), and ligation was initiated by the addition of Mg2+ and ATP to a final concentration of 5 and 0.1 mM,
respectively. The reactions were stopped by addition of an equal volume
of 20 mM Tris (pH 8.0), 100 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, and 0.2% SDS,
incubated at 80°C for 5 min, extracted with 2 volumes of chloroform,
and electrophoresed on a denaturing 8% polyacrylamide gel.
Radiolabeled DNA was detected and quantified using a PhosphorImager and
ImagequaNT software (Molecular Dynamics).
 |
RESULTS |
XRCC4 and ligase IV form a complex with Ku on DNA ends.
As
might be predicted from the instability of ligase IV protein in
XRCC4-deficient cells (4, 15), overexpression of recombinant ligase IV without XRCC4 resulted in low solubility and relatively inactive protein. We therefore generated a highly purified preparation of the X4-LIV complex by coexpressing human ligase IV and human XRCC4
in insect cells (Fig. 1). Although XRCC4
was observed in excess over ligase IV to varying degrees in extracts
from different preparations, purification on the basis of an affinity
tag in ligase IV always recovered the two proteins at an approximately 1:1 ratio (e.g., Fig. 1A, lane 3). Gel filtration chromatography and
comparison to a series of globular protein standards indicates that
XRCC4 and ligase IV form a homogeneous oligomer with an apparent molecular mass of 400 kDa, suggesting it possesses at least two molecules of each of the two proteins (Fig. 1B and C). This species was
very stable, eluting as a single peak (without significant aggregation
or the presence of free XRCC4 or ligase IV) upon gel filtration in 150 mM KCl (Fig. 1B) or 1 M KCl (unpublished data). Taken together, these
data are suggestive of a very strong association and a highly favored
architecture. Recombinant human Ku heterodimer was also purified from
insect cells, as previously described (25).

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FIG. 1.
Purification of X4-LIV. (A) SDS-PAGE gel of protein
fractions stained with Coomassie blue. Lane 1, total soluble extract
(xt); lane 2, peak fractions from Ni column; lane 3, peak fractions
from Mono Q column; lane 4, molecular weight marker (M). X4, XRCC4,
LIV, ligase IV. (B) Gel filtration of purified X4-LIV. A280, UV
absorbance at 280 nm; Ve, volume eluted after injection of sample. (C)
Elution plot of X4-LIV relative to mass standards (in kilodaltons). Vo,
excluded volume for this column. The Ve/Vo ratios for five molecular
mass standards are marked by diamonds. The determined Ve/Vo ratio for
X4-LIV is noted relative to a line derived from regression of the five
standards.
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We initially examined interaction between X4-LIV and Ku using an EMSA.
Ku, X4-LIV, or combinations of the two factors were incubated with a
32P-labeled 60-bp DNA duplex for 30 min on ice. We detected
DNA binding upon addition of Ku alone (Fig.
2A, lane 1, species I) but not X4-LIV
alone (Fig. 2A, lane 2). However, addition of both the Ku heterodimer
and an excess of X4-LIV eliminated the Ku-plus-DNA species and produced
a species of even slower mobility (a supershift [Fig. 2A, lane 3, species II]).

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FIG. 2.
EMSA of Ku and X4-LIV. 5' 32P-labeled 60-bp
DNA duplex (50 nM) was present in all reactions. F, free DNA probe.
Species I and II are DNA-protein complexes. (A) Formation of
DNA-protein complexes with Ku and X4-LIV. The concentration of Ku, when
present (+), was 5 nM. X4-LIV was added to a concentration of 50 (lanes
2 and 3), 25 (lane 4), 12.5 (lane 5), 5 (lane 6), and 2.5 nM (lane 7).
(B) Characterization of DNA-protein complexes with antibodies. Ku (5 nM) was present in all reactions. The concentration of X4-LIV when
present was 25 nM. X4, polyclonal antiserum to XRCC4; NRS, normal
rabbit serum; Ku, monoclonal antibody to Ku; SV, monoclonal
antibody to SV40 T antigen.
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The presence of both X4-LIV and Ku in species II was verified by using
antibodies. Addition of polyclonal antiserum against XRCC4 retarded
some of species II (Fig. 2B, lane 2) but not species I (Fig. 2B, lane
1); higher concentrations of this antiserum shifted all of species II,
but the immune complex no longer entered the gel (unpublished data).
Association of XRCC4 and ligase IV is stable under these conditions;
therefore, we conclude that the X4-LIV complex is present in species
II. The participation of Ku in these DNA-protein complexes was verified
by using a monoclonal antibody to the Ku heterodimer, which retarded
species I (containing only Ku and DNA [Fig. 2B, lane 4]) but produced
an even slower migrating species when added to reactions with Ku,
X4-LIV, and DNA (Fig. 2B, compare lane 4 to lane 5). Control
experiments with normal rabbit serum (Fig. 2B, lane 3) or an
isotype-matched monoclonal antibody (Fig. 2B, lane 6) demonstrated that
both the anti-XRCC4 and anti-Ku reagents, respectively, were specific
for these antigens. Species II therefore represents a DNA-protein
complex containing both Ku and X4-LIV.
Taken together, these results suggest that X4-LIV binds stably to DNA
only in the context of a ternary complex including Ku. This Ku-X4-LIV
complex could form efficiently even at low concentrations of X4-LIV (5 nM; equimolar to Ku [Fig. 2A, lane 6]). At concentrations lower than
25 nM, X4-LIV apparently progressively disassociates from Ku-bound DNA
during electrophoresis, resulting in more heterogeneous retardation of
the Ku-plus-DNA species. Thus, while X4-LIV was recruited to Ku-bound
DNA when present at as low as 5 nM, X4-LIV alone was unable to bind
DNA, even in reactions where X4-LIV was present at a 20-fold-higher
concentration (Fig. 2A, compare lane 2 to lane 7). Moreover, in
reactions containing equimolar amounts of both Ku and X4-LIV but
10-fold more molecules of DNA, X4-LIV supershifts Ku-bound DNA and does
not bind to free DNA (Fig. 2A, lane 6). These results are not
consistent with independent or coincident binding of X4-LIV and Ku to
the same DNA molecule. We therefore conclude that X4-LIV has high
affinity only for Ku-bound DNA, presumably because its recruitment to
the DNA molecule has been facilitated by a direct protein-protein
interaction between X4-LIV and Ku.
We used immunoprecipitation to assess the relative contributions of
protein-protein interactions and DNA-protein interactions in formation
of the Ku-X4-LIV complex. For this experiment, we radiolabeled X4-LIV
by adenylation of the ligase with [
-32P]ATP and also
confirmed that neither the Ku nor the X4-LIV preparations contained
significant amounts of contaminating nucleic acids (see Materials and
Methods). An antibody to Ku was able to coimmunoprecipitate X4-LIV in
the absence of added DNA (Fig. 3B, lane
3), indicating that interaction of these two factors is not completely
dependent on DNA and is mediated at least in part by protein-protein
contacts. However, inclusion of DNA ends, but not supercoiled DNA,
stimulated X4-LIV's ability to interact with Ku over fivefold (Fig.
3B, compare lane 3 to lane 4 or lane 5 to lane 6). Controls performed
in the absence of Ku or using an isotype-matched control antibody
(against SV40 T antigen) failed to recover significant amounts of
either Ku or X4-LIV (Fig. 3A and B, lanes 1 and 2).

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FIG. 3.
Detection of protein complexes by immunoprecipitation.
All reactions contained 25 nM 32P-labeled X4-LIV. When
present (+), Ku was at 5 nM. DNA species included in the reactions were
e, a 60-bp duplex at 25 nM (0.5 µg), and sc, 0.5 µg of a
supercoiled plasmid. Ab, antibody. Protein A-Sepharose and a monoclonal
antibody to Ku ( Ku) or an isotype-matched control antibody to SV40 T
antigen ( SV; lane 1) were used to precipitate DNA-protein complexes.
(A) Coomassie blue-stained gel of precipitated complexes. Ku80, 83-kDa
subunit of Ku; Ku70, 70-kDa subunit of Ku. BSA was present due to its
inclusion in the wash buffer. (B) Phosphorimage of dried gel. L-IV,
ligase IV.
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To determine if this interaction could be detected in a more
physiological context, we repeated the immunoprecipitation, using whole-cell extracts from HeLa cells instead of purified proteins. An
antibody to Ku, but not the control antibody, recovered both ligase IV
(Fig. 4, lanes 3 and 4) and XRCC4
(unpublished data). We wished to once again address the role of DNA in
the interaction between Ku and X4-LIV, but whole-cell extracts are
typically already rich in nucleic acids. We therefore added ethidium
bromide to an immunoprecipitation at a concentration that has
previously been shown to disrupt DNA-protein interactions
(18). Addition of ethidium bromide reduced, but did not
eliminate, recovery of X4-LIV with the antibody to Ku (Fig. 4, compare
lane 4 to lane 5). This is consistent with the previous in vitro
immunoprecipitation result showing that while interaction between Ku
and X4-LIV is stimulated by DNA, DNA is not required (Fig. 3, lanes 3 and 4).

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FIG. 4.
Immunoprecipitation of Ku from HeLa cell extracts. A
20-ng aliquot of the appropriate recombinant antigen (rAg; recombinant
70-kDa subunit of Ku or recombinant ligase IV), a 20-µg aliquot of
the input extract (xt), and material recovered from
immunoprecipitations (IPs) were electrophoresed and blotted onto a
nitrocellulose membrane. Ku, immunoprecipitation with a monoclonal
antibody to Ku; SV, immunoprecipitation with an isotype-matched
monoclonal antibody to SV40 T antigen; +EtBr, immunoprecipitation
supplemented with 50 µg of ethidium bromide/ml. Recombinant antigens
migrate slightly slower than the native antigens from HeLa cells due to
the presence of C-terminal hexahistidine tags. Immunoblotting with the
appropriate polyclonal antisera was used to detect Ku70 (A) and ligase
IV (B).
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Formation of the Ku-plus-X4-LIV complex facilitates end
joining.
To determine whether the Ku-X4-LIV complex was
functional, we devised a competition assay to see if preloading Ku and
X4-LIV on a ligation substrate committed X4-LIV to joining that
substrate (Fig. 5A). However, Ku is
generally required for ligation activity (25) (see Fig. 7)
irrespective of its possible role in the recruitment of X4-LIV. To
allow us to distinguish the possible functional effects of complex
formation on ligation activity from general effects of Ku on ligation
activity, it was therefore necessary to preform the Ku-X4-LIV complex
on one substrate and compare X4-LIV activity on that substrate to
activity on a competitor substrate also preloaded with Ku.

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FIG. 5.
Functional test for formation of Ku-X4-LIV complexes.
(A) Competition assay design. Substrate L is a pair of dsDNA molecules.
One dsDNA is 5' 32P labeled on a 60-nucleotide (nt) strand,
which can be ligated only to the 36-nt strand of a second dsDNA due to
complementary 2-bp 3' overhangs. Substrate S is another pair of dsDNA
molecules. One dsDNA is 5' 32P labeled on a 58-nt strand
that can be ligated only to a 36-nt strand of a second dsDNA due to a
different pair of complementary 2-bp 3' overhangs. Asterisks show the
locations of a 5' 32P label. Step 1, substrates are
preincubated on ice for 20 min, with or without Ku and/or X4-LIV,
varied for each of the three reactions as noted. Step 2, preincubations
are mixed together. In reaction I only, Ku is added after mixing. All
three reactions are now equivalent and contain a final concentration of
5 nM for each of the four DNA molecules, 2.5 nM X4-LIV, and 10 nM Ku.
Step 3, ligation is initiated by addition of 5 mM Mg2+ and
0.1 mM ATP and incubation at 37°C. Step 4, aliquots of each reaction
are taken at successive time points and analyzed by denaturing gel
electrophoresis. (B) Results of competition assay. Reactions I, II, and
III were assembled as described above. Time is noted in minutes after
the start of the reaction. The positions of the labeled strands of the
substrates and products for both L and S pairs are marked. (C) Effect
of preincubation on reaction kinetics. Reaction mixtures were
preincubated with substrate L (described above; 5 nM each duplex) and
(i) 5 nM Ku, and 2.5 nM X4-LIV, (ii) 2.5 nM X4-LIV only, (iii) 5 nM Ku
only, or (iv) no protein (No Pre.) for 20 min on ice. Ku and/or X4-LIV
was then added so that all four reaction mixtures were equivalent, and
the reactions were initiated by the addition of Mg2+.
Aliquots of each reaction mixture were taken at the indicated times (in
minutes), and the ligation product was quantified as a percentage of
the total starting substrate.
|
|
Formation of a complex was promoted during a preincubation step where
X4-LIV was added to a Ku-bound substrate under conditions that do not
permit ligation (0.1 mM EDTA and no Mg2+ or ATP [Fig. 5A,
step 1]). Potential ternary (Ku-X4-LIV-plus-substrate) complexes were
then mixed (Fig. 5A, step 2) with a similarly preincubated competitor
lacking only X4-LIV before ligation was initiated by the addition of
Mg2+, ATP, and incubation at 37°C (Fig. 5A, step 3). We
used two labeled ligation substrates, S and L, that differ such that
(i) labeled strands of the two substrates and their ligation products
are distinguishable by a 2-bp difference in size and (ii) they can form
only one ligation product each due to differences in sequence of 2-bp
overhangs (Fig. 5A). This allowed us to compare within the same
reaction the extent to which recruitment of X4-LIV to a substrate
committed X4-LIV to acting on that substrate.
In reaction II (Fig. 5A), we prepared two preincubations: one contained
Ku, X4-LIV, and ligation substrate S, while the competitor reaction
contained only Ku and substrate L. Complex formation in reaction II was
detected by a strong preference for ligation of substrate S,
preincubated with both X4-LIV and Ku, at the expense of substrate L,
preincubated with Ku only (Fig. 5B; compare product S to product L for
reaction II). This was most evident early in the reaction, presumably
due to a progressive redistribution of X4-LIV to both substrates over
time. Preferential ligation was not due to the subtle difference
between the two substrates, as preincubation of X4-LIV with substrate L
led to the expected reciprocal result (Fig. 5B; compare reaction II to
reaction III). The preference in ligation was also not due to
recruitment of X4-LIV to the substrate during preincubation independent
of Ku, as no significant substrate preference was observed in a
reaction where X4-LIV was included in a preincubation and Ku was added
only after mixing (Fig. 5B, reaction I). This control argues that
although XRCC4 may have a low intrinsic DNA binding potential, it is
not sufficient to commit X4-LIV to a DNA substrate.
Failure to form the ternary complex in the preincubation also generally
reduced the initial rate of the reaction. This was examined in greater
detail by comparing reactions without preincubation to reactions with
only Ku, only X4-LIV, or with both components included in the
preincubation. Each reaction was then made equivalent by addition of
the missing components, and ligation was initiated by addition of
Mg2+. As expected, no significant difference was observed
between reactions with no preincubation and reactions where only X4-LIV was included (Fig. 5C). A modest (approximately fourfold) increase in
early product formation was observed when only Ku was included, possibly reflecting the time required for Ku to bind DNA ends. However,
addition of both components to the preincubation increased the initial
rate approximately 20-fold compared to that of a control with no preincubation.
Ku specifically recruits ligase IV to DNA ends.
The ability of
a preincubation step with Ku and X4-LIV to increase the initial
reaction rate is in contrast to a similar experiment using ligase I,
where preincubation with Ku did not have this effect (25).
We therefore used the EMSA to determine if the ability to form a
complex between Ku and a mammalian DNA ligase was specific to X4-LIV.
Neither ligase I (Fig. 6, lane 3) nor ligase III (Fig. 6, lane 5) was capable of supershifting Ku-bound DNA,
despite being tested under the same conditions and at a 10-fold-higher concentration than that required to observe complex formation with
X4-LIV. Similar negative results were observed when association of
ligase I to Ku-bound DNA was tested using the pull-down assay described
in the legend to Fig. 3 (unpublished data).

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|
FIG. 6.
Specificity of complex formation. A 5'
32P-labeled 60-bp DNA duplex was present in all reactions
at a concentration of 50 nM. F, free DNA probe. The mobilities of
DNA-protein complexes are noted for species I and II. When present (+),
Ku was added to a concentration of 5 nM. LI, 50 nM ligase I; LIII, 50 nM ligase III; X4-LIV, 25 nM XRCC4 plus ligase IV.
|
|
A significant problem for end joining in a cellular context is the need
to rapidly locate and repair rare DNA DSBs in the presence of a large,
mostly unbroken DNA genome. Since X4-LIV has only low intrinsic
affinity for DNA ends, we supposed its participation in the complex
could make use of Ku's high affinity and specificity for DNA ends to
become much more effective than the other ligases in solving this
problem. We therefore prebound Ku to a labeled ligation substrate. The
activities of similar amounts of the three mammalian ligases added
directly to this substrate were then compared to the activities when
they were added following the addition of a large excess of unbroken
DNA. Addition of unbroken DNA reduced the activity of ligase I by a factor of 10 (Fig. 7, compare lane 2 to
lane 3) and reduced that of ligase III by a factor of 5 (compare lane 6 to lane 7). X4-LIV activity was hardly affected (reduced by one-third;
compare lane 10 to lane 11). Moreover, only X4-LIV displayed
significant levels of activity shortly after addition (compare lanes 4 and 8 to lane 12). The ability of X4-LIV to form a complex with Ku thus
confers an ability to quickly join ends in an excess of unbroken DNA on this ligase alone.

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|
FIG. 7.
Effect of unbroken competitor DNA on activities of
different ligases. Substrate L (Fig. 5A) was present in all reactions
at 5 nM for each of the two duplex DNAs. Ku, when present (+), was
added to a concentration of 10 nM and preincubated with the ligation
substrate for 15 min at 25°C. Two micrograms of supercoiled DNA was
added when noted, and ligation was initiated by the subsequent addition
of 20 nM ligase I (lanes 1 to 4), 5 nM ligase III (lanes 5 to 8), or
2.5 nM X4-LIV (lanes 9 to 12). Reaction mixtures were incubated for the
indicated times (in minutes) at 37°C, and product formation was
assessed by denaturing gel electrophoresis.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
We have shown that Ku physically interacts with X4-LIV and
specifically recruits this ligase to DNA ends. The interaction could be
detected in cell extracts (Fig. 4) as well as in several assays (EMSA,
immunoprecipitation assay. and activity assay) using purified
components at low concentrations of each component (less than 10 nM Ku,
X4-LIV, and DNA). The advantages the Ku-X4-LIV complex confers upon
ligation in vitro can therefore explain why these factors, and in
particular ligase IV, are required for cellular end joining: ligation
is fast and efficient, even at low enzyme and substrate concentrations
and in the presence of large amounts of unbroken DNA. Ligase I and
ligase III are much less capable than X4-LIV by these criteria, as they
are both much slower at performing intermolecular ligation and more
sensitive to unbroken competitor. This also may explain why previous
work argued that ligase I was the most effective ligase for end joining
(25, 26), as these experiments were performed for extended
periods of time and in the absence of excess unbroken DNA. Just as Ku targets X4-LIV to DSBs, the involvement of ligases I and III in DSB
repair is likely further precluded in cells by specific targeting of
these ligases to replication forks or other types of DNA damage by
factors specific to these processes (reviewed in reference 31).
XRCC4 alone possesses a weak DNA binding activity, raising the
possibility that ligase IV could be recruited to DNA ends independently of Ku (23). However, modification of XRCC4 such that it no
longer bound DNA had no effect on its ability to stimulate ligase IV activity (23). Consistent with this, we demonstrate here
that preincubation of a DNA substrate and the X4-LIV complex does not commit X4-LIV to joining that substrate (Fig. 5B, reaction I), nor does
such a preincubation increase the rate of substrate ligation (Fig. 5C).
We therefore argue that Ku is required for functionally effective
recruitment of the X4-LIV complex to DNA ends. This does not exclude
the possibility that XRCC4's DNA binding activity may help stabilize
the ternary (Ku-X4-LIV-DNA) complex. The extra stability provided by
this DNA-protein contact, in addition to the already high affinity that
Ku has for DNA, could explain why DNA stimulates the interaction
between X4-LIV and Ku. However, it must be emphasized that the
interaction between X4-LIV and Ku is not a simple consequence of
independent or coincident binding to the same DNA molecule. We cannot
detect binding of X4-LIV to DNA independently of Ku in our assays, even
when the concentration of X4-LIV added is 20-fold higher than that
needed to form the ternary complex with Ku (Fig. 2A), nor is the
ability to detect an interaction between X4-LIV and Ku wholly dependent
on the presence of DNA (Fig. 3 and 4).
Ku thus has at least three distinct and separable functions in
end-joining DSB repair that can be identified in vitro. It generally
facilitates end joining by aligning DNA ends (25), and it
specifically recruits both X4-LIV (as described here) and DNA-PKcs
(29) to DNA ends. Recruitment of both DNA-PKcs and X4-LIV is
stimulated by the prior binding of Ku to DNA ends. This suggests that
Ku might act very early in DSB repair, possibly as a first step by
sensing the presence of a DSB and subsequently recruiting other DSB
repair factors. Initial recognition of DNA ends by Ku could thus be
important in nucleating formation of an active DSB repair complex, much
as similar damage recognition steps trigger formation of higher-order
complexes in other DNA repair pathways (e.g., nucleotide excision
repair [28]). Consistent with this argument, the
activity of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT), a factor
involved in the joining of coding-end DSB intermediates in V(D)J
recombination, is dependent on the presence of Ku (3).
Direct association of TdT with Ku in cells has also recently been
demonstrated (21).
Interaction between X4-LIV and Ku links the end recognition and
alignment functions of Ku to ligase activity. This potentially reversible arrangement may provide important advantages over the alternative
a single factor possessing all of these activities
for the following reason. Joining of ends that need modification prior to
ligation (e.g., mismatched ends, hairpins, and ends with damaged nucleotides) requires the temporary removal or relocation of the ligase
to allow modifying factors access to the ends. The ability to uncouple
ligase activity from Ku allows Ku to remain associated with the pair of
DNA ends and to align them, possibly also recruiting different
modifying factors, until the ends are a substrate for ligation.
This model argues that a "remodeling" activity presumably must be
present to remove or temporarily relocate X4-LIV from Ku-bound ends
when the ends need to be processed. The differential effects of
DNA-PKcs mutation on joining different types of ends in cells (2,
3, 10, 30) suggest this factor may be important in remodeling.
The ability of DNA-PKcs to phosphorylate XRCC4 and consequently modify
XRCC4's DNA binding activity further suggests a specific mechanism by
which DNA-PKcs could perform this function. In vitro experiments
testing for modification of the stability and activity of the Ku-X4-LIV
complex at DNA ends can now be used to investigate this possibility, as
well as the roles of other factors involved in this pathway.
Both genetic and biochemical evidence indicates several factors in
addition to Ku, XRCC4, and ligase IV will be required for the full
reconstitution of end joining as it occurs in cells (1, 16,
29). Ku and X4-LIV alone join blunt ends less efficiently than
ends with complementary overhangs (25; unpublished
data), suggesting that the alignment of blunt ends may require
additional stabilization over that already provided by Ku. As
previously discussed, processing factors will also be required for the
joining of ends with more complex structures than those used in the
experiments described here.
A ligation step is nevertheless common to all cellular end-joining
reactions, regardless of the structure or context of the broken DNA.
Our work establishes in vitro conditions that specifically require Ku,
XRCC4, and ligase IV to cooperate for efficient ligation of DSBs. Once
the complex is formed, ligation is extremely fast, reaching
half-maximal levels in less than 1 min (Fig. 5C). We therefore suggest
that these factors together constitute a core complex that is essential
for efficient end joining and alone may be sufficient for the repair of
a significant proportion of cellular DSBs (i.e., broken ends with
matching overlaps, similar to the substrates used in the experiments
described here). This is consistent with the genetic requirement for
Ku, XRCC4, and ligase IV for all types of end joining reactions in both
yeast and mammalian cells.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank John Turchi for the gift of HeLa cell ligase IV, W. Reeves for the gifts of monoclonal antibodies, and T. Lindahl, D. Capra, and M. Modesti for the gifts of the various cDNAs. We thank K. Griffin and R. Johnson for expert technical assistance, the members of
B. Mitchell's lab for helpful discussion, and M. Gellert, L. Mechanic,
and K. Hiom for critical reading of the manuscript.
This work was supported by Public Health Service grant CA84442-01 and a
Searle Scholar award to D.A.R.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Rm. 32-044, Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, Campus Box 7295, Mason Farm
Rd., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC
27599-7295. Phone: (919) 966-9839. Fax: (919) 966-3015. E-mail:
Dale_Ramsden{at}med.unc.edu.
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Molecular and Cellular Biology, May 2000, p. 2996-3003, Vol. 20, No. 9
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