Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.11.1 (protein kinase)
81,284 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have studied the effect of protein phosphokinase (EC 2.7.1.37; ATP:protein phosphotransferase) and phosphoprotein phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.16; phosphoprotein phosphohydrolase) on reverse transcriptase (RNA-dependent DNA nucleotidyltransferase) activity of Rous sarcoma virus. Protein kinase from Rous sarcoma virus-transformed chick embryo fibroblasts was purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, Sephadex gel filtration, and isoelectric focusing. Purified reverse transcriptase from Rouse sarcoma virus was preincubated with protein kinase and ATP under conditions allowing incorporation of phosphate into substrate protein. After the preincubation, reverse transcriptase activity was assayed in the presence of poly(rA).oligo(dT) as template. A 2- to 5-fold increase of reverse transcriptase activity was found after the preincubation of reverse transcriptase with protein kinase and ATP. Incubation of reverse transcriptase with heat-treated, inactive protein kinase and ATP had no effect on transcriptase activity. When the transcriptase preparation was incubated with protein kinase and [gamma-32P]ATP and subsequently purified by chromatography on phosphocellulose and Sephadex gel filtration, significant amounts of 32P-labeled proteins were found in the fractions exhibiting reverse transcriptase activity, suggesting 32P incorporation into transcriptase or transcriptase-associated proteins. A 20-60% decrease of reverse transcriptase activity was observed after incubation of reverse transcriptase with phosphatase. The results suggest that phosphorylative modification of reverse transcriptase may be critical in the regulation of reverse transcriptase-catalyzed DNA synthesis.
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PMID:Protein kinase and its regulatory effect on reverse transcriptase activity of Rous sarcoma virus. 5 72

Both E. coli and calf thymus DNA polymerase can be phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase and phosphorylation appears to stimulate the DNA polymerase reaction. Conversely, dephosphorylation of the polymerase molecule, by a protein phosphatase, inhibits the polymerase reaction.
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PMID:Phosphorylation of DNA polymerase. 17 41

A protein of 30000-35000 molecular weight was isolated from mouse ascites cells. This protein binds preferentially to single-stranded DNA. Evidence is presented that this protein maintains single-stranded DNA in an extended configuration. In the presence of single-stranded template the protein stimulates mammalian DNA polymerase alpha but not the mammalian DNA polymerase beta and not some microbial DNA polymerases. The protein is phosphorylated in vitro by a chromatin-associated protein kinase. The modified DNA-binding protein does not stimulate the DNA polymerase alpha.
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PMID:A single-strand-specific DNA-binding protein from mouse cells that stimulates DNA polymerase. 83 35

The nonhistone proteins of Ehrlich ascites tumor chromatin have been separated into a loosely bound and two tightly bound protein fractions by sequential extraction of chromatin with 0.35 M NaCl and 2 M NaCl:5 M urea. The nonhistone proteins thus obtained were examined for their chemical composition and distribution of DNA polymerase, RNA polymerase, and protein kinase activities. In addition, the effect of these nonhistone proteins on transcription of DNA in vitro has been determined. The results indicate that these nonhistone proteins, fractionated on the basis of their extractability, exhibit varied compositional characteristics and play different functional roles in the synthesis of DNA and RNA and in the possible control of gene activity.
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PMID:A comparison of the loosely bound and tightly bound nonhistone proteins from Ehrlich ascites tumor chromatin. 97 79

Incorporation of labeled thymidine into testicular DNA of hypophysectomized rats began to increase after the administration of testosterone propionate and choriogenic gonadotrophin. While the thymidine incorporation reached maximum in 4 days, the DNA polymerase activity did not culminate until 8 days after the initiation of hormone treatment. The high molecular weight (6--8 S), presumably cytoplasmic DNA polymerase accounted almost entirely for this increase. Administration of testosterone propionate and chorionic gonadotrophin to hypophysectomized rats results in an increase of testicular RNA polymerase and chromatin templating activity. Chain elongation and initiation studies revealed that the increased templating capacity of androgen-stimulated testicular chromatin was almost entirely caused by the increase in the number of initiation sites. While the nuclear polymerase I responded relatively rapidly to hormone stimulation and reached a prominent maximum in about three days, the activity of polymerase II was more sluggish and not as prominent. The in vivo incorporation of ortho[32P]phosphate into chromosomal phosphoproteins occurred early during the androgen treatment and reached a maximum in about 20 h. The protein phosphokinase activity peaked later, approx. 72 h after the first administration of hormones.
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PMID:Testicular chromatin activation in hypophysectomized rats. 127 99

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) contains a particle-associated DNA polymerase/reverse transcriptase activity encoded by the P (pol) open reading frame. Due to its low abundance, the corresponding protein has so far escaped direct detection and structural analysis. As a first step to overcome these difficulties, a series of recombinant vaccinia viruses was constructed and used for the synthesis in human hepatoma cells of both the authentic full length protein and of its functional domains. Pulse chase experiments demonstrated that the P-proteins had very short half lives in striking contrast to the viral core protein expressed in parallel with the same system. No evidence was obtained for a specific proteolytic processing of the P-protein as occurring with retroviral pol gene products. Overexpression of P-protein by recombinant vaccinia viruses was then employed to develop a highly sensitive detection method based on the in vitro phosphorylation of newly introduced target sites for protein kinase A. The usefulness of this method was demonstrated in the analysis of encapsidated P-gene products that were transiently expressed from an appropriately modified HBV genome. The results obtained indicate that the P-protein acts unprocessed, at least during the initial steps of nucleocapsid assembly and reverse transcription, and that a fraction of the P-protein molecules is linked as such to the viral DNA. Direct detection of the hepadnaviral P-protein by in vitro phosphorylation should greatly facilitate future analyses on P-protein structure and function.
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PMID:Expression of the P-protein of the human hepatitis B virus in a vaccinia virus system and detection of the nucleocapsid-associated P-gene product by radiolabelling at newly introduced phosphorylation sites. 137 44

A molecular cDNA clone (P1 KIN) was isolated that encodes the human RNA-dependent P1/eIF-2 alpha protein kinase. The complete cDNA sequence of the P1 KIN cDNA was determined; the longest open reading frame (ORF) encoded a 551 amino acid protein with a deduced molecular weight of 62055 Da. Transcripts prepared from the P1 KIN cDNA by transcription in vitro with T7 RNA polymerase programmed the cell-free synthesis of a protein indistinguishable by immunoprecipitation and immunoblot gel analyses from the authentic 67-kDa P1 protein synthesized in human U cells treated with interferon (IFN). Furthermore, by use of a sensitive primer extension assay with T7 DNA polymerase, the major site of translation initiation within the deduced ORF of the P1 KIN cDNA was directly identified. Northern RNA gel-blot analysis revealed that the P1 KIN cDNA strongly hybridized to two IFN-induced mRNAs present in both human amnion U cells and HeLa cells; their sizes were 2.5 and 6 kb. Both transcripts were efficiently induced by IFN-alpha, but poorly by IFN-gamma. Polyclonal antibody was prepared against the product of the P1 KIN cDNA expressed in Escherichia coli. In Western blot analysis the antibody recognized a 67-kDa protein induced in human cells by IFN-alpha and, in addition, a 90-kDa protein whose level was not greatly altered by IFN treatment. The IFN-induced 67-kDa protein was found associated with the ribosomal salt-wash fraction of IFN-treated human cells, whereas the 90-kDa protein was predominantly in the S100 soluble fraction. The time course for the induction by IFN-alpha of RNA-dependent protein P1 kinase activity measured by immunoprecipitation was comparable to the time course for protein P1 induction measured by Western immunoblot analysis. The amino acid sequence of P1/eIF-2 alpha protein kinase deduced from the cDNA was 62% identical with the 518-residue murine TIK kinase and contained, within the carboxy-terminal half of the protein, the motifs commonly conserved among protein-serine/threonine kinases. The amino-terminal half of the P1 protein did not possess conserved kinase motifs, but did show extensive homology with vaccinia virus-predicted protein E3L.
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PMID:Mechanism of interferon action: cDNA structure, expression, and regulation of the interferon-induced, RNA-dependent P1/eIF-2 alpha protein kinase from human cells. 137 53

Many cell division cycle (cdc) mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae exhibit elevated mitotic loss of pDK243, a 14-kilobase minichromosome with a centromere and one autonomous replicating sequence (ARS). Tandem copies of different ARSs were added to pDK243. The addition of these ARS clusters to pDK243 had no effect on its mitotic loss in cdc7 (protein kinase), cdc9 (DNA ligase), or cdc16 or cdc17 (DNA polymerase) mutants. However, in cdc6 and cdc14 mutants, the mitotic loss of pDK243 with an ARS cluster was suppressed by a factor of 6-8 compared to pDK243 without the cluster. This suppression was dependent upon the number of ARSs in the cluster and the integrity of the ARS consensus sequence in each ARS of the cluster. ARSs are known to be DNA replication origins. Therefore, the suppression of mini-chromosome loss by ARSs in cdc6 and cdc14 mutants suggests that these mutants are defective in the initiation of DNA replication. Since the CDC6 protein appears to act at the G1/S phase transition, the CDC6 protein may be a factor required at the beginning of S phase to initiate DNA replication at origins. In contrast, the CDC14 protein acts after mitosis. We suggest that the CDC14 protein performs a function late in the cell cycle that may be required for efficient initiation of DNA replication during S phase of the next cell cycle.
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PMID:Addition of extra origins of replication to a minichromosome suppresses its mitotic loss in cdc6 and cdc14 mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 155 17

The gene for the mammalian DNA repair enzyme DNA polymerase beta (beta-pol) is constitutively expressed in most cells, but is regulated in a tissue-specific fashion and can be induced in response to some types of DNA damaging agents. The promoter for the human beta-pol gene has been characterized and found to be TATA-less, but it does have multiple GC boxes and one ATF/CRE-binding site located within 50 residues 5' of the major mRNA start site. The ATF/CRE-binding site has been found to be essential for activity of the cloned promoter. We report that a bovine testes DNA-binding protein with specificity for the beta-pol promoter ATF/CRE-binding site is phosphorylated in vivo and contains several phosphorylation sites. Sequence specific DNA-binding by the purified protein is reduced when the natural protein is dephosphorylated or when it is hyperphosphorylated by protein kinase A (cKA) in vitro. These results suggest the possibility that phosphorylation systems may change binding of this ATF/CRE-binding protein to the beta-pol promoter and in turn modulate the promoter. Possible correlation of the results with transient expression activity of the cloned beta-pol promoter fusion gene was obtained in 293 cells. Cotransfection with a cKA expression plasmid to elevate phosphorylation was found to strongly reduce promoter activity.
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PMID:Mammalian beta-polymerase promoter: phosphorylation of ATF/CRE-binding protein and regulation of DNA binding. 182 17

A 48-kDa protein from the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is antigenically and structurally similar to S-antigen from retina. Eight anti-S-antigen monoclonal antibodies, directed against distinct epitopes, cross-reacted with a yeast 48-kDa protein. Structural similarity between the bovine and yeast proteins was further demonstrated by comparison of tryptic peptide fragments containing one of these epitopes. This 48-kDa yeast protein appears to be a component of the replicative complex of the cell. It was found associated with immunoaffinity-purified yeast DNA polymerase I-primase and with yeast DNA-replicative complex. The 48-kDa protein was phosphorylated by a protein kinase activity endogenous to the replicative complex preparation. This phosphorylation was dependent on the cell division cycle gene CDC7. In addition, authentic bovine S-antigen, when added to yeast DNA polymerase I-primase, stimulated polymerase activity. These findings suggest that the yeast S-antigen-like protein may play a role in replication, and they raise the possibility that it may be involved in traversal of the G1/S boundary of the cell cycle.
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PMID:A 48-kDa, S-antigen-like phosphoprotein in yeast DNA-replicative complex preparations. 186 Aug 66


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