The 2001 JMB study demonstrates, by negative-stain EM, single-particle averaging and IHRSR helical reconstruction, that Sulfolobus solfataricus RadA forms two DNA‑bound architectures—octameric rings (no nucleotide) and ATP/analog‑dependent helical filaments (extended and compressed states). The data (tens of thousands of images/segments) and analyses are internally consistent, provide plausible docking of an N‑terminal Rad51‑like domain, and offer a strong evolutionary-ready hypothesis that RadA bridges the ring (Dmc1-like) and filament (Rad51-like) families, but interpretations about N‑terminal disorder, functional states and evolutionary scenarios need further high-resolution and functional validation.
Key experimental counts extracted directly from the paper (used to construct visual figures below): rings (no DNA): 14,035 images; rings on DNA: 2,083 images; ring 3D‑reconstruction used 12,600 images; DNA‑bound ring asymmetric reconstruction used 12,912 images; helical filament segments for compressed state: 5,274 segments; IHRSR groups: 1,516; 1,924; 1,742; 2,758 segments with refined pitches 100.3, 104.8, 105.6, 109.6 Å respectively; compressed filament group pitch ~71.4 Å from 1,019 segments.
Figure: raw EM counts used for averages/reconstructions. Source data are the counts reported in the paper's Methods and Results sections. These large counts support statistical averaging but note variable SNR between symmetric and asymmetric reconstructions.
Figure: refined helical pitches from IHRSR and compressed filament; twist (subunits per turn) is relatively constrained (~6.5) across extended groups despite pitch variation, consistent with the authors' suggestion of coupling between pitch and twist. Scaling on secondary axis to display both measures visually.
Evidence: reference‑free averaging of 14,035 ring images shows clear 8‑fold symmetry; 3D reconstruction using 12,600 particles produced a ~140 Å × 80 Å ring with a ~50 Å central channel. Asymmetric reconstruction of DNA‑bound rings (12,912 images) shows off‑axis density in the channel contacting the globular core and the protruding lobe (interpreted as NTD), consistent with DNA positioned in the central hole and contacting specific subunit regions. These results robustly support ring formation and DNA threading in the absence of nucleotide cofactor.
Evidence: Helical filaments form only with DNA + nucleotide analogs; ATPgS yields compressed filaments (pitch ~65–80 Å) and ATP+AlF4− yields extended filaments (pitches ~100–110 Å). IHRSR helical reconstructions from multiple subset sizes converge to refined pitch/twist values and show backbone similarity between compressed and extended filaments, with the main difference being pendulous N‑terminal lobes visible in compressed but absent (or disordered) in extended forms. The authors link compressed ↔ extended to nucleotide state (ADP vs ATP-like), consistent with precedent from RecA/Rad51 literature, but note ATPgS does not mimic ATP for RadA in strand exchange assays, highlighting caveats of analog use.
Evidence & limits: Docking of the human Rad51 N‑terminal domain into the Octamer reconstruction visually fits the prominent lobe; DNA contact with this lobe is seen in asymmetric DNA‑bound ring maps. For filaments, the compressed state shows similar lobes while the extended ATP‑like state lacks them at the 16 Å scale. Authors considered proteolysis (excluded by gels) and conformational mobility/unfolding; they favor mobility/disorder in extended filaments as the parsimonious explanation. This interpretation is plausible but limited by EM resolution (~16 Å) and by use of docking across species (human Rad51 NTD into archaeal RadA map) — a reasonable but not definitive assignment. Higher-resolution cryo‑EM or NMR/X‑ray of RadA filaments would be needed to confirm NTD conformation and dynamics.
Strength: evolutionary hypothesis is attractive: RadA is sequence‑closer to Rad51/Dmc1 than bacterial RecA, RadA shows both ring and filament DNA‑binding forms, and human Dmc1 has been observed as octameric rings binding DNA. However, this is a hypothesis requiring further phylogenetic, functional, and cross‑species structural corroboration; alternative explanations (e.g., RadA retains biophysical flexibility not reflective of a bifurcation in the eukaryotic lineage) are equally plausible. Good follow‑up: comparative structural + functional experiments across archaeal RadA orthologs, and examination of functional consequences (strand exchange competence) of ring vs filament forms under physiological ionic/nucleotide conditions.
Methods are described with buffer compositions, incubation ratios, and imaging details (microscope, pixel size). Software used (SPIDER, IHRSR) is standard and cited. The paper reports concrete particle counts and reconstruction parameters enabling conceptual reproducibility; however, raw micrographs and final maps/coordinates are not deposited in public repositories (typical for 2001 publications), which reduces direct re-analysis reproducibility by modern standards. Providing raw stacks/half‑maps would improve reproducibility significantly.
For the core structural observations (rings vs filaments, DNA in ring channel, distinct filament pitches and twist) I assign high confidence given the data volume and internal cross‑checks; for mechanistic claims tying nucleotide hydrolysis states and functional recombination activity to the observed EM states I assign moderate confidence because (a) nucleotide analogs were used and (b) functional correlation (strand-exchange competence of each state) is not fully demonstrated in the paper.
The paper robustly documents two structural modes of RadA bound to DNA and supplies a rich EM dataset. To progress: (1) acquire cryo‑EM maps at higher resolution; (2) link structural states to strand‑exchange biochemistry using defined cofactors; (3) test NTD mutants to confirm its role in DNA binding and filament dynamics.
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