Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
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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)
DNA topoisomerase I (topo I) is a member of a group of essential nuclear enzymes which control and modify the topological state of DNA and is recognized as the target for anticancer drugs. During the course of the catalytic activity of topo I, a covalent bond is formed between a tyrosine group at the active site of the enzyme and a 3' phosphate group along the DNA backbone. This chemical reaction resembles the
protein kinase
-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation process. We assumed, therefore, that tyrphostins, potent and selective blockers of protein tyrosine kinases, might affect topo I activity. We found that of three derivatives of tyrphostins (AG-555, AG-18, and AG-213) that inhibited topo I activity in an in vitro assay, AG-555 was the most active. Examination of the mechanism by which these compounds act as topo I inhibitors revealed that AG-555 blocked the binding of this enzyme to the DNA due to its interaction with the topo I enzyme. We showed that its mode of action differed from that observed for camptothecin, a known topo I inhibitor. However, AG-555 did not affect the activity of other major DNA binding enzymes (i.e., DNA ligase,
DNA polymerase I
, and reverse transcriptase). This study suggests that tyrphostins may serve as a new class of topo I inhibitors, and these results also present additional explanations for their antiproliferative effect.
...
PMID:Inhibition of topoisomerase I activity by tyrphostin derivatives, protein tyrosine kinase blockers: mechanism of action. 792 31
The same point mutation in the human cytomegalovirus UL97 open reading frame was found in three independently isolated ganciclovir-resistant mutants of strain AD169. Point mutations in the
DNA polymerase
genes of these strains have been previously identified (N.S. Lurain, K.D. Thompson, E.W. Holmes, and G.S. Read, J. Virol. 66:7146-7152, 1992). All three strains are, therefore, double mutants. To determine the contribution of the UL97 mutation to the high ganciclovir resistance of these mutants, the mutation from the ganciclovir-resistant strain D6/3/1 was transferred to the wild-type strain AD169 to produce the recombinant R6HS. The ganciclovir resistance of R6HS is 4-fold lower than that of D6/3/1 but 10-fold higher than that of AD169. R6HS, like AD169, is sensitive to the nucleotide analogs (S)-1-[(3-hydroxy-2-phosphonylmethoxy) propyl]adenine and (S)-1-[(3-hydroxy-2-phosphonylmethoxy)propyl]cytosine. Ganciclovir phosphorylation in R6HS-infected cells was at the same reduced level as that found in cells infected with the parental mutant D6/3/1. The same G-to-T transversion at nucleotide 1380 in the UL97 coding sequence is present in both R6HS and D6/3/1. This mutation results in the substitution of isoleucine for methionine at amino acid residue 460. In an alignment of the R6HS UL97 amino acid sequence with the amino acid sequences of a wide range of
protein kinase
family members, methionine 460 lies within a highly conserved region which may function in nucleotide binding and phosphate transfer.
...
PMID:Mutation in the UL97 open reading frame of human cytomegalovirus strains resistant to ganciclovir. 820 15
We have investigated the pathogenicity of a US3
protein kinase
-deficient mutant (L1 BR1) of herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) for 4-week-old ICR mice to define the role of the viral
protein kinase
in virus-host interaction. When mice were intraperitoneally infected with 10(5)PFU of L1 BR1, the virus disappeared from the peritoneal cavity by 2 days postinfection and failed to induce any significant histopathological changes in the liver and spleen although viral antigens were occasionally detected in the epithelial cells of small bile ducts and small vascular wall. The parental virus (HSV-2 186) and a revertant of the mutant (L1 B-11) both caused severe hepatitis, and viral antigens were clearly detected in the hepatocytes and Kupffer cells in the focal necrotic areas. Both of the virulent viruses, unlike L1 BR1, could produce infectious progeny and cytopathic effects in freshly harvested peritoneal macrophages. The growth of L1 BR1 in peritoneal macrophages was restricted at a stage of or prior to viral DNA synthesis but after the induction of viral
DNA polymerase
. In addition, the production and/or the spread of mutant in mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEF) was found to be much more effectively suppressed by cocultivation of peritoneal macrophages than that of 186. An almost complete inhibition of L1 BR1-plaque formation was observed at a macrophage-to-MEF ratio of 4:1. These results suggest that the attenuation of L1 BR1 following intraperitoneal infection is primarily due to its high sensitivity to intrinsic and extrinsic inhibition of peritoneal macrophages and that the US3
protein kinase
may play a role in viral DNA replication in peritoneal macrophages.
...
PMID:The pathogenicity of a US3 protein kinase-deficient mutant of herpes simplex virus type 2 in mice. 825 88
Protein kinase activity was revealed in complex forms of rat liver
DNA polymerase alpha
containing 3'-5'-exonuclease, primase, helicase, DNA ligase. Protein kinase (mol. mass about 200 kDa) has been partially purified from a specimen of high molecular mass
DNA polymerase alpha
of nuclear membrane of regenerating liver. The
protein kinase
activity of the complex form of
DNA polymerase alpha
was maximal in the cytosol in normal rat liver cells and in the nuclear membrane in dividing cells (40 h after partial hepatectomy). The main phosphokinase properties of this enzyme were determined.
...
PMID:[Isolation of protein phosphokinase from a complex form of DNA polymerase alpha from rat liver]. 831 39
Adenovirus
DNA polymerase
(AdPol) exists as a complex with the preterminal protein (pTP) and is essential for both initiation and elongation stages of viral DNA replication. Recent evidence from our laboratory indicates that AdPol is a phosphoprotein and that the major in vivo phosphorylation site, serine 67, occurs within the consensus substrate recognition sequence for cdc2 kinases. In this study, we found that a
protein kinase
which also exhibits histone H1 phosphorylation activity is stably associated with AdPol. AdPol forms a multimeric complex with this histone H1 kinase and pTP in HeLa cells infected with adenovirus or coinfected with recombinant vaccinia viruses encoding AdPol and pTP. The associated
protein kinase
and the p34cdc2 kinase phosphorylate AdPol at the same sites which are utilized in vivo, suggesting that the p34cdc2 kinase or a related kinase may be involved in the in vivo phosphorylation of AdPol. Serine 67 is also one of the major in vitro phosphorylation sites, and the substitution of alanine for serine at this position abolishes DNA replication initiation activity of AdPol.
...
PMID:Adenovirus DNA polymerase is phosphorylated by a stably associated histone H1 kinase. 834 26
Initiation of chromosomal DNA replication must be carefully regulated during the cell cycle. We report that Drosophila embryo
DNA polymerase alpha
complex, isolated by immunological techniques, contains a
protein kinase
activity. The kinase will phosphorylate histone H1, but prefers peptides contained in the
DNA polymerase alpha
-kinase complex. Renaturation experiments determined that the kinase activity resides in a 56-kDa peptide.
...
PMID:A DNA polymerase alpha-associated 56 kDa protein kinase. 842 78
Treatment of cells with the DNA-alkylating agent N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) induces expression of the endogenous mammalian
DNA polymerase beta
(beta-pol) gene and of the cloned promoter in transient expression studies. The lone cAMP response element (CRE) in the core promoter, along with functional
protein kinase A
, is critical for the MNNG-induced up-regulation. Recently, we described a kinetic mechanism for transcriptional regulation of the beta-pol promoter in vitro and found that CRE-binding protein (CREB) from MNNG-treated cells differentially up-regulates the promoter by stimulating formation of closed preinitiation complex (RPc). Here, using a CRE-dependent chimeric beta-pol promoter, we purified the RPc assembled with nuclear extract from MNNG-treated and control HeLa cells. Comparison of proteins in the purified RPc samples revealed that the MNNG induction is associated with a strong increase in the Ser133-phosphorylated form of recombinant CREB (CREB-1). CREB depletion of the nuclear extracts diminished transcriptional activity, and addition of purified Ser133-phosphorylated CREB-1 restored activity, whereas unphosphorylated CREB-1 did not. Addition of phosphorylated CREB-1 to the control cell extract mimicked the MNNG-induced up-regulation of transcriptional activity. These results indicate that phosphorylation of CREB-1 is the probable mechanism of activation of the beta-pol promoter after treatment of cells with the DNA-alkylating agent MNNG.
...
PMID:Activation of the human DNA polymerase beta promoter by a DNA-alkylating agent through induced phosphorylation of cAMP response element-binding protein-1. 870 97
Anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) is a distinct clinicopathologic variant of intermediate grade non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL) composed of large pleomorphic cells that usually express the CD30 antigen and interleukin (IL)-2 receptors, and is characterized by frequent cutaneous and extranodal involvement. With variable frequency ALCL bear the t(2;5)(p23;q35) chromosomal translocation that fuses the nucleophosmin (NPM) gene on chromosome 5q35 to a novel
protein kinase
gene, Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase (ALK), on chromosome 2p23. We determined the frequency of this translocation with a novel
DNA polymerase
chain reaction (PCR) technique using 0.5 microgram of genomic DNA, 5'-primers derived from the NPM gene and 3'-primers derived from the ALK gene and hybridization with internal probes. The presence of amplifiable DNA in the samples was tested with the inclusion in the PCR reaction of oligonucleotide primers designed to amplify a 3016-bp fragment from the beta-globin locus. NMP-ALK fusion amplicons were detected using DNA isolated either from all three ALCL cell lines tested, or from all four primary ALCL tumors known to contain the t(2;5)(p23;q35) translocation. Nested amplicons were detected by hybridization in 100% of specimens diluted 10(4)-fold and in 20% of those diluted 10(5)-fold. We subsequently examined archival genomic DNA from 20 patients with ALCL, 39 with diffuse large cell, 2 with mantle cell, 20 with peripheral T cell, 13 with low-grade NHL, 31 with Hodgkin's disease (HD), and 6 with lymphomatoid papulosis. Fusion of the NPM and ALK genes was detected in three of 18 patients with ALCL who had amplifiable DNA (17%, 95% confidence intervals 4% to 41%), but not in any patients with other NHL, HD, or lymphomatoid papulosis. The amplicon sizes were different in all cell lines and patients reflecting unique genomic DNA breakpoints. We conclude that with genomic DNA-PCR the rearrangement of the NPM and ALK loci is restricted to patients with ALCL. Further studies are needed to determine the prognostic significance of the NPM-ALK rearrangement, to determine whether its detection can aid in the differential diagnosis between ALCL. Hodgkin's disease, and lymphomatoid papulosis, and to establish the usefulness of the genomic DNA PCR in the monitoring of minimal residual disease in those patients whose tumors bear the t(2;5).
...
PMID:Amplification of genomic DNA demonstrates the presence of the t(2;5) (p23;q35) in anaplastic large cell lymphoma, but not in other non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, Hodgkin's disease, or lymphomatoid papulosis. 926 95
The purpose of this review is to summarize information published since 1990 on DNA replication, recombination and repair of vaccinia virus, a poxvirus. Temperature-sensitive mutations reveal four essential genes related to viral DNA replication: the E9L
DNA polymerase
, B1R
protein kinase
, D5R protein, and D4R uracil DNA glycosylase. Other proteins are likely to be also involved in viral DNA replication: the H6R DNA topoisomerase, I3L single stranded-DNA binding protein, H5R virosome-associated protein, and A50R DNA ligase. In addition, several viral-encoded proteins do regulate the level of the deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate pool: the J2R thymidine kinase, A48R thymidylate kinase, 14L and F4L subunits of ribonucleotide reductase, and F2L dUTPase. Despite the apparent simplicity of the mechanism of vaccinia virus DNA replication, several important questions related to the three Rs remain unsolved.
...
PMID:Vaccinia virus DNA replication: a short review. 882 74
In recent years, work from a large number of laboratories has greatly expanded our knowledge of the biochemical characteristics and the genetic structure of the DNA polymerases used during papovavirus DNA replication. The development of in vitro DNA replication systems for both SV40 and polyoma virus has been paramount in facilitating the development of the current models describing how
DNA polymerase alpha
and delta function to replicate the genomes of these two viruses. Our studies have demonstrated that the proteins recognized to be essential for both in vitro SV40 and polyoma viral origin-dependent DNA synthesis can be isolated from cells as an intact complex. We have shown that the human cell MRC closely resembles the murine cell MRC, in both its protein composition and its fractionation and chromatographic profile. In addition, our data regarding both the human and the murine MRC support the dipolymerase model proposed from in vitro DNA replication studies using reconstituted assay systems. In addition, analysis of the nucleotide sequence of the genes encoding
DNA polymerase alpha
and delta has revealed that the amino acids encoded by several regions of these two genes have been rigorously maintained across evolutionary lines. This information has permitted the identification of protein domains which mediate the complex series of protein-protein interactions that direct the DNA polymerases to the cell nucleus, specify complete or partial exonuclease active sites, and participate in the interaction of each
DNA polymerase
with the DNA template. Expression studies examining each of the genes encoding
DNA polymerase alpha
and delta clearly indicate that both DNA polymerases are cell cycle regulated and undergo a dramatic induction in their expression when quiescent cells are stimulated to enter the cell cycle. This is in contrast to the two- to three-fold upregulation in the level of expression of these two genes when cycling cells cross the G1/S boundary. In addition, both proteins are phosphorylated in a cell cycle-dependent manner, and phosphorylation appears to be mediated through the action of a cdc2-dependent
protein kinase
. Despite all of this new information, much remains to be learned about how papovavirus DNA replication is regulated and how these two DNA polymerases act in vivo to faithfully copy the viral genomes. Studies have yet to be performed which identify all of the cellular factors which potentially mediate papovavirus DNA replication. The reconstituted replication systems have yielded a minimum number of proteins which are required to replicate SV40 and polyoma viral genomes in vitro. However, further studies are needed to identify additional factors which may participate in each step of the initiation, elongation, and termination phases of viral genome replication. As an example, models describing the potential role of cellular helicases, which are components of the MRC isolated from murine and human cells, have yet to be described. It is also conceivable that there are a number of other proteins which serve to attach the MRC to the nuclear matrix, stimulate viral DNA replication, and potentially regulate various aspects of the activity of the MRC throughout viral DNA replication. We are currently working toward characterizing the biochemical composition of the MRC from both murine and human cells. Our goals are to identify all of the structural components of the MRC and to define the role of these components in regulating papovavirus and cellular DNA replication. We have also begun studies to visualize the spatial organization of these protein components within the MRC, examine the regulatory processes controlling the activity of the various components of the MRC, and then develop this information into a coherent picture of the higher order structure of the MRC within the cell nucleus. We believe that this information will enable us to develop an accurate view of the detailed processes mediating both pa
...
PMID:Expression, purification, and characterization of DNA polymerases involved in papovavirus replication. 902 36
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