Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.7 (DNA polymerase)
17,007 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Bis[platinum(II)] [Cl2Pt(LL)PtCl2] complexes 2,5 and 8 with chiral non-racemic ligands: 1a-c (LL = (R,R), (S,S) and (R,S) N,N'-bis(3,4-diaminobutyl)hexanediamide); 4a,b (LL = (R,R) and (S,S) N,N'-bis[3,4-bis(diaminobutyl)] urea); 7a-d (LL' = (R,R), (S,S), (R,S) and (S,R) 4,5-diamino-N-(3,4-diaminobutyl) pentanamide) and bis[platinum(IV)] complex 10-13 with ligands 1a,b and 4a,b have been prepared and characterized by IR, 1H, 13C and 195Pt NMR spectra. The interactions of 2a-c, 5a, 5b, 8a-d and 10a with dsDNA were investigated with the goal of examining whether the chirality, the nature of the spacer and the oxidation state have an influence on platinum-DNA binding properties. All the bis[platinum(II)] complexes form with dsDNA intra- and interstrand crosslinks and crosslinks over sticky ends, whereas the bis[platinum(IV)] complex 10a only forms intra- and interstrand crosslinks. The platinum-DNA coordination sites were determined by the T4 DNA polymerase footprinting method. The results show that all investigated bis(platinum) complexes have high preference towards distinct purines. All isomeric bis(amide) 2a-c and mono(amide) 8a-d complexes exhibit nearly the same binding pattern, whereas the ureide complexes 5a and 5b have other coordination sites with higher sequence preference. Interestingly, the ureides 5a and 5b differ in their coordination sites not only in comparison to the bis(amides) 2a-c and mono(amides) 8a-d, but also between each other. The bis[platinum(IV)] complex 10a also differs in coordination sites in comparison to all the bis[platinum(II)] compounds.
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PMID:Bis[platinum(II)] and bis[platinum(IV)] complexes with optically active bis(vicinal-1,2-diamines) and their interaction with DNA. 1049 90

One mechanism for the origin of UV-induced -1 deletion mutations involves the bypass of a nonadjacent cis-syn cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer containing a single intervening nucleotide. To begin to investigate this mechanism, we required a method for obtaining a single, site-specific, nonadjacent dimer. One approach to the preparation of a nonadjacent dimer is to irradiate a DNA duplex containing a centrally located TNT sequence in which the two T's are paired to an AA sequence in an otherwise fully complementary strand. Triplet-sensitized irradiation of the duplex formed between the 13-mer d(GAGTATCTATGAG) and the 12-mer d(CTCATAATACTC) on ice gave a major product that could be reverted to the parent 13-mer by 254 nm irradiation. Proton NMR experiments established the major product to be the nonadjacent cis-syn cyclobutane dimer formed between the two T's of the TCT sequence. Melting temperature studies show that the nonadjacent dimer is more destabilizing to DNA duplex structure than a normal cis-syn dimer and is as stable as the parental bulged DNA duplex. The nonadjacent dimer-containing 13-mer was ligated into a 51-mer and used as a template for primer-extension studies by DNA polymerases. The nonadjacent dimer could not be bypassed by Sequenase Version 2.0 and terminated synthesis primarily prior to and opposite the 3'-T of the dimer. In contrast, approximately 30% of the dimer was bypassed by an exonuclease-deficient (exo-) Klenow fragment, and termination occurred primarily opposite the 3'- and 5'-T's of the dimer. Bypass of the nonadjacent dimer by exo(-) Klenow fragment led primarily to a single-nucleotide deletion mutation as well as small amounts of a full-length product and a four-nucleotide deletion that could be explained by a primer misalignment mechanism.
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PMID:Preparation and characterization of DNA containing a site-specific nonadjacent cyclobutane thymine dimer of the type implicated in UV-induced -1 frameshift mutagenesis. 1052 Dec 79

Human Replication Protein A (hsRPA) is required for multiple cellular processes in DNA metabolism including DNA repair, replication and recombination. It binds single-stranded DNA with high affinity and interacts specifically with multiple proteins. hsRPA forms a heterotrimeric complex composed of 70-, 32- and 14-kDa subunits (henceforth RPA70, RPA32, and RPA14). The N-terminal 168 residues of RPA70 form a structurally distinct domain that stimulates DNA polymerase alpha activity, interacts with several transcriptional activators including tumor suppressor p53, and during the cell cycle it signals escape from the DNA damage induced G2/M checkpoint. We have solved the global fold of the fragment corresponding to this domain (RPA70 delta 169) and we find residues 8-108 of the N-terminal domain are structured. The remaining C-terminal residues are unstructured and may form a flexible linker to the DNA-binding domain of RPA70. The globular region forms a five-stranded anti-parallel beta-barrel. The ends of the barrel are capped by short helices. Two loops on one side of the barrel form a large basic cleft which is a likely site for binding the acidic motifs of transcriptional activators. Many lethal or conditional lethal yeast point mutants map to this cleft, whereas no mutations with severe phenotype have been found in the linker region.
J Biomol NMR 1999 Aug
PMID:Human replication protein A: global fold of the N-terminal RPA-70 domain reveals a basic cleft and flexible C-terminal linker. 1052 7

Mammalian DNA polymerase beta functions in the base excision DNA repair pathway filling in short patches (1-5 nt) in damaged DNA and removing deoxyribose 5'-phosphate from the 5'-side of damaged DNA. The backbone dynamics and the refined solution structure of the N-terminal domain of beta-Pol have been characterized in order to establish the potential contribution(s) of backbone motion to the DNA binding and deoxyribose 5'-phosphate lyase function of this domain. The N-terminal domain is formed from four helices packed as two antiparallel pairs with a 60 degrees crossing between the pairs. The RMSD of the NMR conformers (residues 13-80) is 0.37 A for the backbone heavy atoms and 0.78 A for all heavy atoms. NMR characterization of the binding site(s) for a ssDNA-5mer, ssDNA-8mer, ssDNA-9mer, and dsDNA-12mer shows a consensus surface for the binding of these various DNA oligomers, that surrounds and includes the deoxyribose 5'-phosphate lyase active site region. Connection segments between helices 1 and 2 and between helices 3 and 4 each contribute to DNA binding. Helix-3-turn-helix-4 forms a helix-hairpin-helix motif. The highly conserved hairpin sequence (LPGVG) displays a significant degree of picosecond time-scale motion within the backbone, that is possibly important for DNA binding at the phosphodiester backbone. An Omega-loop connecting helices 1 and 2 and helix-2 itself display significant exchange contributions (R(ex)) at the backbone amides due to apparent conformational type motion on a millisecond time-scale. This motion is likely important in allowing the Omega-loop and helix-2 to shift toward, and productively interact with, gapped DNA. The deoxyribose 5'-phosphate lyase catalytic residues that include K72 which forms the Schiff's base, Y39 which is postulated to promote proton transfer to the aldehyde, and K35 which assists in phosphate elimination, show highly restricted backbone motion. H34, which apparently participates in detection of the abasic site hole and assists in the opening of the hemiacetal, shows conformational exchange.
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PMID:Backbone dynamics and refined solution structure of the N-terminal domain of DNA polymerase beta. Correlation with DNA binding and dRP lyase activity. 1065 29

The catalytic core of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase III contains three tightly associated subunits (alpha, epsilon, and theta). The theta subunit is the smallest, but the least understood of the three. As a first step in a program aimed at understanding its function, the structure of the theta subunit has been determined by triple-resonance multidimensional NMR spectroscopy. Although only a small protein, theta was difficult to assign fully because approximately one-third of the protein is unstructured, and some sections of the remaining structured parts undergo intermediate intramolecular exchange. The secondary structure was deduced from the characteristic nuclear Overhauser effect patterns, the 3J(HN alpha) coupling constants and the consensus chemical shift index. The C-terminal third of the protein, which has many charged and hydrophilic amino acid residues, has no well-defined secondary structure and exists in a highly dynamic state. The N-terminal two-thirds has three helical segments (Gln10-Asp19, Glu38-Glu43, and His47-Glu54), one short extended segment (Pro34-Ala37), and a long loop (Ala20-Glu29), of which part may undergo intermediate conformational exchange. Solution of the three-dimensional structure by NMR techniques revealed that the helices fold in such a way that the surface of theta is bipolar, with one face of the protein containing most of the acidic residues and the other face containing most of the long chain basic residues. Preliminary chemical shift mapping experiments with a domain of the epsilon subunit have identified a loop region (Ala20-Glu29) in theta as the site of association with epsilon.
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PMID:NMR solution structure of the theta subunit of DNA polymerase III from Escherichia coli. 1079 14

DNA prepared from soil usually contains a brown-tinted inhibitor of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) which limits the sensitivity of this technique for specific detection of microorganisms. To localize the inhibitor, soil fractions were tested for their inhibitory effect on the PCR reaction. A highly inhibitory activity, sufficient to account for the inhibition typically exhibited by soil DNA, was found to be tightly associated with the soil microorganism fraction. After cell breakage, the inhibitory material became soluble, and was not separable from DNA by standard purification procedures. A method was derived by which most of the inhibitory material could be selectively solubilized from the microorganism fraction without cell breakage, using successive washes with buffers differing in EDTA concentration. This technique was used to isolate a substance with characteristics suggesting that it is the major PCR inhibitor contaminating DNA purified from soil. It was found to be an organic, water-soluble compound of high molecular weight, and was present in a variety of soil types from different locations. It was found to be distinctly different in its solubility properties from humic and fulvic acids, and also in its FT-IR and NMR spectra. It forms a complex with protein and may inhibit the PCR reaction by an interaction with Taq DNA polymerase.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of a common soil component which inhibits the polymerase chain reaction. 1093 57

The purpose of this study was to investigate the molecular action of lithocholic acid (LCA), known as a selective inhibitor of DNA polymerase beta (pol beta). The 39-kDa pol beta was separated proteolytically into two fragments of the template-primer binding domain (8 kDa) and the catalytic domain (31 kDa). LCA bound tightly to the 8-kDa fragment but not to the 31-kDa fragment. We examined the structural interaction with the 8-kDa domain using LCA. On (1)H-(15)N HMQC NMR analysis of pol beta with LCA, the 8-kDa domain bound to LCA as a 1:1 complex with a dissociation constant (K(D)) of 1.56 mM. The chemical shifts were observed only in residues mainly in helix-3, helix-4, and the 79-87 turn of the same face. No significant shifts were observed for helix-1, helix-2, and other loops of the 8-kDa domain. This region was composed mainly of three amino acid residues (Lys60, Leu77, and Thr79) of pol beta on the LCA interaction interface. The inhibition mechanism and the structure-function relationship between pol beta and LCA is discussed.
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PMID:Structure of lithocholic acid binding to the N-terminal 8-kDa domain of DNA polymerase beta. 1102 40

The structured core of the N-terminal 3'-5' exonuclease domain of epsilon, the proofreading subunit of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase III, was defined by multidimensional NMR experiments with uniformly (15)N-labeled protein: it comprises residues between Ile-4 and Gln-181. A 185-residue fragment, termed epsilon(1-185), was crystallized by the hanging drop vapor diffusion method in the presence of thymidine-5'-monophosphate, a product inhibitor, and Mn(2+) at pH 5.8. The crystals are tetragonal, with typical dimensions 0.2 mm x 0.2 mm x 1.0 mm, grow over about 2 weeks at 4 degrees C, and diffract X-rays to 2.0 A. The space group was determined to be P4(n)2(1)2 (n = 0, 1, 2, 3), with unit cell dimensions a = 60.8 A, c = 111.4 A.
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PMID:Preliminary X-ray crystallographic and NMR studies on the exonuclease domain of the epsilon subunit of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase III. 1104 88

Bioassay-guided fractionation of extracts prepared from Brackenridgea nitida and Bleasdalea bleasdalei, using an assay to detect DNA polymerase beta inhibition, resulted in the isolation of the inhibitory principle, (24E)-3beta-hydroxy-7,24-euphadien-26-oic acid (1), a new euphane triterpenoid. The structure of 1 was established on the basis of HRMS and 1D and 2D NMR spectroscopic methods and was confirmed further by X-ray crystallographic analysis. Compound 1 inhibited rat DNA polymerase beta with an IC(50) value of 23 microM in the presence of bovine serum albumin (BSA) and 9.7 microM in the absence of BSA, consistent with the possibility that 1 may be of utility in vivo. This possibility was further supported by the finding that 1 potentiated the inhibitory action of the anticancer drug bleomycin in cultured P-388D(1) cells, reducing the number of viable cells by 48% when employed at a concentration of 25 microM in the presence of an otherwise nontoxic (75 nM) concentration of bleomycin. Compound 1 is the first euphane-type triterpenoid found to inhibit DNA polymerase beta.
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PMID:A new 7,8-euphadien-type triterpenoid from Brackenridgea nitida and Bleasdalea bleasdalei that inhibits DNA polymerase beta. 1107 51

The specific catalytic roles of two groups of DNA polymerase beta active site residues identified from crystal structures were investigated: residues possibly involved in DNA template positioning (Lys280, Asn294, and Glu295) and residues possibly involved in binding the triphosphate moiety of the incoming dNTP (Arg149, Ser180, Arg183, and Ser188). Eight site-specific mutants were constructed: K280A, N294A, N294Q, E295A, R149A, S180A, R183A, and S188A. Two-dimensional NMR analysis was employed to show that the global conformation of the mutants has not been perturbed significantly. Pre-steady-state kinetic analyses with single-nucleotide gapped DNA substrates were then performed to obtain the rate of catalysis at saturating dNTP (k(pol)), the apparent dissociation constant for dNTP (K(d)), catalytic efficiency k(pol)/K(d), and fidelity. Of the three template-positioning residues, Asn294 and Glu295 (but not Lys280) contribute significantly to k(pol). Taken together with other data, the results suggest that these two residues help to stabilize the transition state during catalysis even though they interact with the DNA template backbone rather than directly with the incoming dNTP or the opposite base on the template. Furthermore, the fidelity increases by up to 19-fold for N294Q due to differential k(pol) effects between correct and incorrect nucleotides. Of the four potential triphosphate-binding residues, Ser180 and Arg183 contribute significantly to k(pol) while the effects of R149A are relatively small and are primarily on K(d), and Ser188 appears to play a minimal role in the catalysis by Pol beta. These results identify several residues important for catalysis and quantitate the contributions of each of those residues. The functional data are discussed in relation to the prediction on the basis of available crystal structures.
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PMID:DNA polymerase beta: contributions of template-positioning and dNTP triphosphate-binding residues to catalysis and fidelity. 1112 28


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