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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)
DNA primase synthesizes short RNA primers that are required to initiate DNA synthesis on the parental template strands during DNA replication. Eukaryotic primase contains two subunits, p48 and p58, and is normally tightly associated with
DNA polymerase alpha
. Despite the fundamental importance of primase in DNA replication, structural data on eukaryotic DNA primase are lacking. The p48/p58 dimer was subjected to limited proteolysis, which produced two stable structural domains: one containing the bulk of p48 and the other corresponding to the C-terminal fragment of p58. These domains were identified by mass spectrometry and N-terminal sequencing. The C-terminal p58 domain (p58C) was expressed, purified, and characterized. CD and
NMR
spectroscopy experiments demonstrated that p58C forms a well folded structure. The protein has a distinctive brownish color, and evidence from inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, UV-visible spectrophotometry, and EPR spectroscopy revealed characteristics consistent with the presence of a [4Fe-4S] high potential iron protein cluster. Four putative cysteine ligands were identified using a multiple sequence alignment, and substitution of just one was sufficient to cause loss of the iron-sulfur cluster and a reduction in primase enzymatic activity relative to the wild-type protein. The discovery of an iron-sulfur cluster in DNA primase that contributes to enzymatic activity provides the first suggestion that the DNA replication machinery may have redox-sensitive activities. Our results offer new horizons in which to investigate the function of high potential [4Fe-4S] clusters in DNA-processing machinery.
...
PMID:An iron-sulfur cluster in the C-terminal domain of the p58 subunit of human DNA primase. 1789 44
Pseudocontact shift (PCS) effects induced by a paramagnetic lanthanide bound to a protein have become increasingly popular in
NMR
spectroscopy as they yield a complementary set of orientational and long-range structural restraints. PCS are a manifestation of the chi-tensor anisotropy, the Deltachi-tensor, which in turn can be determined from the PCS. Once the Deltachi-tensor has been determined, PCS become powerful long-range restraints for the study of protein structure and protein-ligand complexes. Here we present the newly developed package Numbat (New User-friendly Method Built for Automatic Deltachi-Tensor determination). With a Graphical User Interface (GUI) that allows a high degree of interactivity, Numbat is specifically designed for the computation of the complete set of Deltachi-tensor parameters (including shape, location and orientation with respect to the protein) from a set of experimentally measured PCS and the protein structure coordinates. Use of the program for Linux and Windows operating systems is illustrated by building a model of the complex between the E. coli
DNA polymerase III
subunits epsilon186 and theta using PCS.
J Biomol
NMR
2008 Jul
PMID:Numbat: an interactive software tool for fitting Deltachi-tensors to molecular coordinates using pseudocontact shifts. 1857 99
DNA polymerase
selectivity is crucial for the survival of any living species, yet varies significantly among different DNA polymerases. Errors within
DNA polymerase
-catalyzed DNA synthesis result from the insertion of noncanonical nucleotides and extension of misaligned DNA substrates. The substrate binding characteristics among DNA polymerases are believed to vary in properties such as shape and tightness of the binding pocket, which might account for the observed differences in fidelity. Here, we employed 4'-alkylated nucleotides and primer strands bearing 4'-alkylated nucleotides at the 3'-terminal position as steric probes to investigate differential active site properties of human
DNA polymerase beta
(Pol beta) and the 3'-->5'-exonuclease-deficient
Klenow fragment
of E. coli
DNA polymerase I
(KF(exo-)). Transient kinetic measurements indicate that both enzymes vary significantly in active site tightness at both positions. While small 4'-methyl and -ethyl modifications of the nucleoside triphosphate perturb Pol beta catalysis, extension of modified primer strands is only marginally affected. Just the opposite was observed for KF(exo-). Here, incorporation of the modified nucleotides is only slightly reduced, whereas size augmentation of the 3'-terminal nucleotide in the primer reduces the catalytic efficiency by more than 7000- and 260,000-fold, respectively.
NMR
studies support the notion that the observed effects derive from enzyme substrate interactions rather than inherent properties of the modified substrates. These findings are consistent with the observed differential capability of the investigated DNA polymerases in fidelity such as processing misaligned DNA substrates. The results presented provide direct evidence for the involvement of varied steric effects among different DNA polymerases on their fidelity.
...
PMID:Opposed steric constraints in human DNA polymerase beta and E. coli DNA polymerase I. 1862 54
Escherichia coli
DNA polymerase III
holoenzyme is composed of 10 different subunits linked by noncovalent interactions. The polymerase activity resides in the alpha-subunit. The epsilon-subunit, which contains the proofreading exonuclease site within its N-terminal 185 residues, binds to alpha via a segment of 57 additional C-terminal residues, and also to theta, whose function is less well defined. The present study shows that theta greatly enhances the solubility of epsilon during cell-free synthesis. In addition, synthesis of epsilon in the presence of theta and alpha resulted in a soluble ternary complex that could readily be purified and analyzed by
NMR
spectroscopy. Cell-free synthesis of epsilon from PCR-amplified DNA coupled with site-directed mutagenesis and selective 15N-labeling provided site-specific assignments of
NMR
resonances of epsilon that were confirmed by lanthanide-induced pseudocontact shifts. The data show that the proofreading domain of epsilon is connected to alpha via a flexible linker peptide comprising over 20 residues. This distinguishes the alpha : epsilon complex from other proofreading polymerases, which have a more rigid multidomain structure.
...
PMID:The proofreading exonuclease subunit epsilon of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase III is tethered to the polymerase subunit alpha via a flexible linker. 1866 10
Mcm10 is an essential eukaryotic DNA replication protein required for assembly and progression of the replication fork. The highly conserved internal domain (Mcm10-ID) has been shown to physically interact with single-stranded (ss) DNA,
DNA polymerase alpha
, and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). The crystal structure of Xenopus laevis Mcm10-ID presented here reveals a DNA binding architecture composed of an oligonucleotide/oligosaccharide-fold followed in tandem by a variant and highly basic zinc finger.
NMR
chemical shift perturbation and mutational studies of DNA binding activity in vitro reveal how Mcm10 uses this unique surface to engage ssDNA. Corresponding mutations in Saccharomyces cerevisiae result in increased sensitivity to replication stress, demonstrating the functional importance of DNA binding by this region of Mcm10 to replication. In addition, mapping Mcm10 mutations known to disrupt PCNA, polymerase alpha, and DNA interactions onto the crystal structure provides insight into how Mcm10 might coordinate protein and DNA binding within the replisome.
...
PMID:Structural basis for DNA binding by replication initiator Mcm10. 1908 Oct 65
Two inhibitors of
Taq DNA polymerase
were isolated from the marine red alga Symphyocladia latiuscula. The inhibitors were purified by methanol extraction, molecular fractionation below 3000 MW and reverse-phase HPLC. The purified compound SL-1 containing three bromines was identified as 2,3,6-tribromo-4,5-dihydroxybenzyl alcohol (C7H5Br3O3: MW374) by
NMR
and MS analyses. The purified compound SL-2 was identified as 2,3, 6-tribromo-4,5-dihydroxybenzyl methyl ether(C8H7Br3O3: MW388). In a 25-microl reaction mixture containing 1.5 units of
Taq DNA polymerase
, the enzyme was completely inhibited by 0.5 microg SL-1 or 5 microg SL-2.
...
PMID:Identification of a Taq DNA polymerase inhibitor from the red seaweed Symphyocladia latiuscula. 1919 84
African swine fever virus polymerase X (pol X) is the smallest
DNA polymerase
known (174 amino acids), and its tertiary structure resembles the C-terminal half of prototypical X-family pol beta, which includes a catalytic dNTP-binding site (palm domain) and a finger domain. This structural similarity and the presence of viral genes coding for other base excision repair proteins suggest that pol X functions in a manner similar to pol beta, but inconsistencies concerning pol X catalysis have been reported. We examined the structural and functional properties of two forms of pol X using spectroscopic and kinetic analysis. Using (1)H-(15)N correlated
NMR
, we unambiguously demonstrated the slow interconversion of pol X between a reduced (pol X(red)) and an oxidized form (pol X(ox)), confirmed by mass spectrometry. Steady-state kinetic analysis revealed that pol X(ox), with a disulfide bond between Cys-81 and Cys-86, has approximately 10-fold lower fidelity than pol X(red) during dNTP insertion opposite a template G. The disulfide linkage is located between two beta-strands in the palm domain, near the putative dNTP-binding site. Structural alignment of pol X with a pol beta ternary structure suggests that the disulfide switch may modulate fidelity by altering the ability of the palm domain to align and stabilize the primer terminus and catalytic metal ion for deprotonation of the 3'-OH group and subsequent phosphoryl transfer. Thus,
DNA polymerase
fidelity is altered by the redox state of the enzyme and its related conformational changes.
...
PMID:Modulation of the structure, catalytic activity, and fidelity of African swine fever virus DNA polymerase X by a reversible disulfide switch. 1941 58
DNA polymerase beta
is a multifunctional enzyme involved in base excision repair of nuclear DNA invertebrate cells. We present here the first assignments of the full-length protein (335 residues, 39 kDa) in the presence of a double gap--double hairpin DNA (22 nucleotides, 7 kDa).
Biomol
NMR
Assign 2007 Jul
PMID:NMR assignment of polymerase beta labeled with 2H, 13C, and 15N in complex with substrate DNA. 1942 23
Mcm10 is an essential eukaryotic protein required for the initiation and elongation phases of chromosomal replication. Specifically, Mcm10 is required for the association of several replication proteins, including
DNA polymerase alpha
(pol alpha), with chromatin. We showed previously that the internal (ID) and C-terminal (CTD) domains of Mcm10 physically interact with both single-stranded (ss) DNA and the catalytic p180 subunit of pol alpha. However, the mechanism by which Mcm10 interacts with pol alpha on and off DNA is unclear. As a first step toward understanding the structural details for these critical intermolecular interactions, x-ray crystallography and
NMR
spectroscopy were used to map the binary interfaces between Mcm10-ID, ssDNA, and p180. The crystal structure of an Mcm10-ID*ssDNA complex confirmed and extended our previous evidence that ssDNA binds within the oligonucleotide/oligosaccharide binding-fold cleft of Mcm10-ID. We show using
NMR
chemical shift perturbation and fluorescence spectroscopy that p180 also binds to the OB-fold and that ssDNA and p180 compete for binding to this motif. In addition, we map a minimal Mcm10 binding site on p180 to a small region within the p180 N-terminal domain (residues 286-310). These findings, together with data for DNA and p180 binding to an Mcm10 construct that contains both the ID and CTD, provide the first mechanistic insight into how Mcm10 might use a handoff mechanism to load and stabilize pol alpha within the replication fork.
...
PMID:Physical interactions between Mcm10, DNA, and DNA polymerase alpha. 1960 46
We present a novel structure determination approach that exploits the global orientational restraints from RDCs to resolve ambiguous NOE assignments. Unlike traditional approaches that bootstrap the initial fold from ambiguous NOE assignments, we start by using RDCs to compute accurate secondary structure element (SSE) backbones at the beginning of structure calculation. Our structure determination package, called RDC-PANDA: (RDC-based SSE PAcking with NOEs for Structure Determination and NOE Assignment), consists of three modules: (1) RDC-EXACT: ; (2) PACKER: ; and (3) HANA: (HAusdorff-based NOE Assignment). RDC-EXACT: computes the global optimal solution of backbone dihedral angles for each secondary structure element by exactly solving a system of quartic RDC equations derived by Wang and Donald (Proceedings of the IEEE computational systems bioinformatics conference (CSB), Stanford, CA, 2004a; J Biomol
NMR
29(3):223-242, 2004b), and systematically searching over the roots, each of which is a backbone dihedral varphi- or psi-angle consistent with the RDC data. Using a small number of unambiguous inter-SSE NOEs extracted using only chemical shift information, PACKER: performs a systematic search for the core structure, including all SSE backbone conformations. HANA: uses a Hausdorff-based scoring function to measure the similarity between the experimental spectra and the back-computed NOE pattern for each side-chain from a statistically-diverse rotamer library, and drives the selection of optimal position-specific rotamers for filtering ambiguous NOE assignments. Finally, a local minimization approach is used to compute the loops and refine side-chain conformations by fixing the core structure as a rigid body while allowing movement of loops and side-chains. RDC-PANDA: was applied to
NMR
data for the FF Domain 2 of human transcription elongation factor CA150 (RNA polymerase II C-terminal domain interacting protein), human ubiquitin, the ubiquitin-binding zinc finger domain of the human Y-family
DNA polymerase
Eta (pol eta UBZ), and the human Set2-Rpb1 interacting domain (hSRI). These results demonstrated the efficiency and accuracy of our algorithm, and show that RDC-PANDA: can be successfully applied for high-resolution protein structure determination using only a limited set of
NMR
data by first computing RDC-defined backbones.
J Biomol
NMR
2009 Nov
PMID:High-resolution protein structure determination starting with a global fold calculated from exact solutions to the RDC equations. 1971 Nov 85
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