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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)
Bioassay-directed fractionation of a n-hexane extract of Couepia polyandra using an assay to detect inhibitors of the lyase activity of
DNA polymerase beta
resulted in the isolation of the new triterpene 3beta,16beta,23-triacetoxyolean-12-en-28-oic acid (1) and four known compounds, oleanolic acid, betulinic acid, stigmasterol, and beta-sitosterol. The structure of the new compound was established on the basis of extensive 1D and 2D
NMR
spectroscopic interpretation. All five compounds inhibited
DNA polymerase beta
lyase activity.
...
PMID:A new acylated oleanane triterpenoid from Couepia polyandra that inhibits the lyase activity of DNA polymerase beta. 1464 May 19
A novel strategy for fast
NMR
resonance assignment of (15)N HSQC spectra of proteins is presented. It requires the structure coordinates of the protein, a paramagnetic center, and one or more residue-selectively (15)N-labeled samples. Comparison of sensitive undecoupled (15)N HSQC spectra recorded of paramagnetic and diamagnetic samples yields data for every cross-peak on pseudocontact shift, paramagnetic relaxation enhancement, cross-correlation between Curie-spin and dipole-dipole relaxation, and residual dipolar coupling. Comparison of these four different paramagnetic quantities with predictions from the three-dimensional structure simultaneously yields the resonance assignment and the anisotropy of the susceptibility tensor of the paramagnetic center. The method is demonstrated with the 30 kDa complex between the N-terminal domain of the epsilon subunit and the theta subunit of Escherichia coli
DNA polymerase III
. The program PLATYPUS was developed to perform the assignment, provide a measure of reliability of the assignment, and determine the susceptibility tensor anisotropy.
...
PMID:Fast structure-based assignment of 15N HSQC spectra of selectively 15N-labeled paramagnetic proteins. 1499 14
The T7 DNA primase synthesizes tetraribonucleotides that prime DNA synthesis by T7
DNA polymerase
but only on the condition that the primase stabilizes the primed DNA template in the polymerase active site. We used
NMR
experiments and alanine scanning mutagenesis to identify residues in the zinc binding domain of T7 primase that engage the primed DNA template to initiate DNA synthesis by T7
DNA polymerase
. These residues cover one face of the zinc binding domain and include a number of aromatic amino acids that are conserved in bacteriophage primases. The phage T7 single-stranded DNA-binding protein gp2.5 specifically interfered with the utilization of tetraribonucleotide primers by interacting with T7
DNA polymerase
and preventing a productive interaction with the primed template. We propose that the opposing effects of gp2.5 and T7 primase on the initiation of DNA synthesis reflect a sequence of mutually exclusive interactions that occur during the recycling of the polymerase on the lagging strand of the replication fork.
...
PMID:A molecular handoff between bacteriophage T7 DNA primase and T7 DNA polymerase initiates DNA synthesis. 1513 47
Crystallographic characterization of
DNA polymerase beta
(pol beta) has suggested that multiple-domain and subdomain motions occur during substrate binding and catalysis.
NMR
studies of [methyl-(13)C]methionine-labeled pol beta were conducted to characterize the structural and dynamic response to ligand binding. The enzyme contains seven methionine residues, one of which is at the amino terminus and is partially removed by the expression system. Three of the methyl resonances were readily assigned using site-directed mutants. Assignment of the resonances of Met155, Met158, and Met191 was more difficult due to the spatial proximity of these residues, so that assignments were based on NOESY-HSQC data and on the response to paramagnetic Co(2+) addition, as well as shift perturbations observed for the site-directed mutants. The response of the methyl resonances to substrate binding was evaluated by the serial addition of a template oligonucleotide, a downstream 5'-phosphorylated oligonucleotide, and a primer oligonucleotide to create a two-nucleotide-gapped DNA substrate. Addition of the single-stranded template DNA resulted in selective broadening of the methyl resonance of Met18 in the 8 kDa lyase domain, and this resonance then shifted and sharpened upon addition of a 5'-phosphate-terminated downstream complementary oligonucleotide. Conversion of the two-nucleotide-gapped DNA substrate to a single-nucleotide-gapped substrate by incorporation of ddCMP produced a small perturbation of the Met236 resonance, which makes contact with the primer strand in the crystal structure. The addition of a second equivalent of ddCTP to form the pol beta-DNA-ddCTP ternary complex resulted in significant shifts for the resonances corresponding to Met155, Met191, Met236, and Met282. The Met155 methyl resonance is severely broadened, while the Met191 and Met282 resonances exhibit significant but less extreme broadening. Since only Met236 makes contact with the substrate, the effects on Met155, Met236, and Met282 result from indirect conformational and dynamic perturbations. Previous crystallographic characterization of this abortive complex indicated that a polymerase subdomain or segment (alpha-helix N) repositions itself to form one face of the binding pocket for the nascent base pair. Met282 serves as a probe for motion in this segment. Addition of Mg(2+)-dATP to pol beta in the absence of DNA produced qualitatively similar but much smaller effects on Met191 and Met155, but did not strongly perturb Met282, leading to the conclusion that Mg(2+)-dATP alone is insufficient to produce the large conformational changes that are observed in the abortive complex involving the gapped DNA with a blocked primer and ddNTP. Thus, the
NMR
data indicate that the nucleotide-DNA interaction appears to be essential for conformational activation.
...
PMID:Dynamic characterization of a DNA repair enzyme: NMR studies of [methyl-13C]methionine-labeled DNA polymerase beta. 1524 49
DNA polymerase beta
(beta-pol) plays a central role in repair of damaged DNA bases by base excision repair (BER) pathways. A predominant phenotype of beta-pol null mouse fibroblasts is hypersensitivity to the DNA-methylating agent methyl methanesulfonate. Residues in the 8-kDa domain of beta-pol that seem to interact with a known natural product beta-pol inhibitor, koetjapic acid, were identified by
NMR
chemical shift mapping. The data implicate the binding pocket as the hydrophobic cleft between helix-2 and helix-4, which provides the DNA binding and deoxyribose phosphate lyase activities of the enzyme. Nine structurally related synthetic compounds, containing aromatic or other hydrophobic groups in combination with two carboxylate groups, were then tested. They were found to bind to the same or a very similar region on the surface of the enzyme. The ability of these compounds to potentiate methyl methanesulfonate cytotoxicity, an indicator of cellular BER capacity, in wild-type and beta-pol null mouse fibroblasts, was next ascertained. The most active and beta-pol-specific of these agents, pamoic acid, was further characterized and found to be an inhibitor of the deoxyribose phosphate lyase and
DNA polymerase
activities of purified beta-pol on a BER substrate. Our results illustrate that
NMR
-based mapping techniques can be used in the design of small molecule enzyme inhibitors including those with potential use in a clinical setting.
...
PMID:Identification of small molecule synthetic inhibitors of DNA polymerase beta by NMR chemical shift mapping. 1525 44
Heart muscle cells and cerebral neurons are known to lose the ability to proliferate and are called terminally differentiated cells. They are generated in appropriate numbers during embryogenesis and retained throughout adult life without turnover. We are interested in such a long-lived DNA. We isolated DNA from chick heart and cerebrum and compared it with DNA from other organs after incubation with DNase I. Single-strand breaks were assessed using a reaction system composed of DNA and Escherichia coli
DNA polymerase
. The DNA of both organs was relatively resistant to DNase I, and DNA modification occurred during embryogenesis. CIMS (chemical ionization mass spectrometry) indicated that the molecular mass of the deoxynucleoside of both DNAs was larger than that of the corresponding canonical deoxyribonucleoside by m/z 28 (or 30 for the protonated form). The difference between these deoxynucleosides is based on a difference in sugar constituents. Cerebral deoxynucleotides were analyzed by (13)C
NMR
. An extra signal near 173 ppm was observed, which was assigned to the amide carbonyl. We propose a model of the deoxynucleoside where a carbonyl residue exists between the base and the 2-deoxyribose moiety of the canonical deoxyribonucleoside.
...
PMID:DNA modification in chick heart and cerebrum. 1527 49
The major malondialdehyde-derived adduct in DNA is 3-(2'-deoxy-beta-D-erythro-pentofuranosyl)pyrimido[1,2-alpha]purin-10(3H)-one (M(1)dG). M(1)dG undergoes hydrolytic ring opening in duplex DNA to 9-(2'-deoxy-beta-D-erythro-pentofuranosyl)-N(2)-(3-oxo-1-propenyl)guanine (N(2)OPdG). Template-primers were constructed containing M(1)dG or N(2)OPdG in a (CpG)(4) repeat sequence and replicated with the
Klenow fragment
of
DNA polymerase I
(Kf). Incorporation opposite the lesion and replication beyond the adduct sites by Kf was reduced compared to unadducted controls. The amount of bypass to full-length products was significantly greater with the acyclic adduct, N(2)OPdG, than with the cyclic adduct, M(1)dG. Sequence analysis indicated that the fully extended primers contained dC opposite both adducts when replication was conducted with Kf exo(+). In contrast, with Kf exo(-), primers extended past M(1)dG contained T opposite the adduct, but primers extended past N(2)OPdG contained dC opposite the adduct. Single nucleotide incorporation experiments indicated that Kf exo(-) incorporates all four nucleotides opposite M(1)dG or N(2)OPdG. Kf exo(+) removed dA, dG, and T opposite M(1)dG and N(2)OPdG but was much less active when dC was opposite the adduct.
NMR
studies on duplex DNA indicated that N(2)OPdG hydrogen bonds with dC in the complementary strand. The fact that base pairing can occur for the acyclic adduct may explain why N(2)OPdG is less blocking than M(1)dG. These results support in vivo findings that the ring-closed adduct, M(1)dG, is more mutagenic than the ring-opened adduct, N(2)OPdG. They also provide a detailed picture of in vitro replication in which the outcome is determined primarily by the selectivity of template-primer extension beyond rather than insertion opposite the adducts.
...
PMID:In vitro bypass of malondialdehyde-deoxyguanosine adducts: differential base selection during extension by the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I is the critical determinant of replication outcome. 1536 68
The X-ray crystal structure of dehydroaltenusin, a specific inhibitor of mammalian
DNA polymerase alpha
, has previously been reported. We show that dehydroaltenusin exists in an equilibrium mixture of two tautomers possessing gamma-lactone or delta-lactone in polar solvents by
NMR
experiments. Acetylation of dehydroaltenusin afforded two types of diacetates and two types of monoacetate, possessing gamma-lactone or delta-lactone, respectively. The inhibitory activities of these acetate derivatives against
DNA polymerase alpha
were all much weaker than that of dehydroaltenusin.
...
PMID:Precise structural elucidation of dehydroaltenusin, a specific inhibitor of mammalian DNA polymerase alpha. 1538 63
Bioassay-directed fractionation of a methyl ethyl ketone extract of Solidago canadensis L. (Asteraceae), using an assay to detect the lyase activity of
DNA polymerase beta
, resulted in the isolation of the four new lupane triterpenoids 1-4 and the seven known compounds lupeol, lupeyl acetate, ursolic acid, cycloartenol, cycloartenyl palmitate, alpha-amyrin acetate, and stigmasterol. The structures of the new compounds were established as 3beta-(3R-acetoxyhexadecanoyloxy)-lup-20(29)-ene (1), 3beta-(3-ketohexadecanoyloxy)-lup-20(29)-ene (2), 3beta-(3R-acetoxyhexadecanoyloxy)-29-nor-lupan-20-one (3), and 3beta-(3-hetohexadecanoyloxy)-29-nor-lupan-20-one (4), respectively, on the basis of extensive 1D and 2D
NMR
spectroscopic interpretation and chemical modification studies. All 11 compounds were inhibitory to the lyase activity of
DNA polymerase beta
.
...
PMID:New lupane triterpenoids from Solidago canadensis that inhibit the lyase activity of DNA polymerase beta. 1551 69
DNA polymerase III
, the main replicative polymerase of E. coli, contains a small subunit, theta, that binds to the epsilon proofreading subunit and appears to enhance the enzyme's proofreading function--especially under extreme conditions. It was recently discovered that E. coli bacteriophage P1 encodes a theta homolog, named HOT. The (1)H-(15)N HSQC spectrum of HOT exhibits more uniform intensities and less evidence of conformational exchange than that of theta; this uniformity facilitates a determination of the HOT solution structure by
NMR
. The structure contains three alpha helices, as reported previously for theta; however, the folding topology of the two proteins is very different. Residual dipolar coupling measurements on labeled theta support the conclusion that it is structurally homologous with HOT. As judged by CD measurements, the melting temperature of HOT was 62 degrees C, compared to 56 degrees C for theta, consistent with other data suggesting greater thermal stability of the HOT protein.
...
PMID:Phage like it HOT: solution structure of the bacteriophage P1-encoded HOT protein, a homolog of the theta subunit of E. coli DNA polymerase III. 1557 35
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