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)

The crystal structure of the processivity factor required by eukaryotic DNA polymerase delta, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) from S. cerevisiae, has been determined at 2.3 A resolution. Three PCNA molecules, each containing two topologically identical domains, are tightly associated to form a closed ring. The dimensions and electrostatic properties of the ring suggest that PCNA encircles duplex DNA, providing a DNA-bound platform for the attachment of the polymerase. The trimeric PCNA ring is strikingly similar to the dimeric ring formed by the beta subunit (processivity factor) of E. coli DNA polymerase III holoenzyme, with which it shares no significant sequence identity. This structural correspondence further substantiates the mechanistic connection between eukaryotic and prokaryotic DNA replication that has been suggested on biochemical grounds.
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PMID:Crystal structure of the eukaryotic DNA polymerase processivity factor PCNA. 800 Nov 57

Synthesis of an Okazaki fragment occurs once every 1 or 2 s at the Escherichia coli replication fork. To account for the rapid recycling required of the lagging-strand polymerase, it has been proposed that it is held at the replication fork by protein-protein interactions with the leading-strand polymerase as part of a dimeric polymerase assembly. Solution studies showed that the replicative polymerase, the DNA polymerase III holoenzyme, was indeed a dimer with two catalytic cores held together by the tau subunit. However, the functionality of this arrangement at the replication fork has never been demonstrated. We showed previously that the lagging-strand polymerase acted processively during multiple rounds of Okazaki fragment synthesis, i.e. the same polymerase core assembly synthesized each and every fragment made by the fork. Using extreme dilution of active replication forks and the isolation of protein-DNA complexes capable of supporting coupled leading- and lagging-strand synthesis, we demonstrate here that this coupling of leading- and lagging-strand synthesis is, in fact, mediated by the tau subunit of the holoenzyme acting as a physical bridge between the core assemblies synthesizing the leading and lagging strands.
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PMID:tau couples the leading- and lagging-strand polymerases at the Escherichia coli DNA replication fork. 870 22

The linear single-stranded DNA genome of the minute virus of mice (MVM) is replicated via a double-stranded replicative form (RF) intermediate. Amplification of this RF is initiated by the folding-back of palindromic sequences serving as primers for strand-displacement synthesis and formation of dimeric RF DNA. Using an in vitro replication assay and a cloned MVM DNA template, we observed hairpin-primed DNA replication at both MVM DNA termini, with a bias toward right-end initiation. Initiation of DNA replication is favored by nuclear components of A9 cell extract and highly stimulated by the MVM nonstructural protein NS1. Hairpin-primed DNA replication is also observed in the presence of NS1 and the Klenow fragment of the Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I. Addition of ATPgammaS (adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate)) blocks the initiation of DNA replication but not the extension of pre-existing hairpin primers formed in the presence of NS1 only. The NS1-mediated unwinding of the right-end palindrome may account for the recently reported capacity of NS1 for driving dimer RF synthesis in vitro.
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PMID:Initiation of DNA replication at palindromic telomeres is mediated by a duplex-to-hairpin transition induced by the minute virus of mice nonstructural protein NS1. 942 83

We previously reported the development of an in vitro adeno-associated virus (AAV) DNA replication system. The system required one of the p5 Rep proteins encoded by AAV (either Rep78 or Rep68) and a crude adenovirus (Ad)-infected HeLa cell cytoplasmic extract to catalyze origin of replication-dependent AAV DNA replication. However, in addition to fully permissive DNA replication, which occurs in the presence of Ad, AAV is also capable of partially permissive DNA replication in the absence of the helper virus in cells that have been treated with genotoxic agents. Limited DNA replication also occurs in the absence of Ad during the process of establishing a latent infection. In an attempt to isolate uninfected extracts that would support AAV DNA replication, we discovered that HeLa cell extracts grown to high density can occasionally display as much in vitro replication activity as Ad-infected extracts. This finding confirmed previous genetic analyses which suggested that no Ad-encoded proteins were absolutely essential for AAV DNA replication and that the uninfected extracts should be useful for studying the differences between helper-dependent and helper-independent AAV DNA replication. Using specific chemical inhibitors and monoclonal antibodies, as well as the fractionation of uninfected HeLa extracts, we identified several of the cellular enzymes involved in AAV DNA replication. They were the single-stranded DNA binding protein, replication protein A (RFA), the 3' primer binding complex, replication factor C (RFC), and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). Consistent with the current model for AAV DNA replication, which requires only leading-strand DNA synthesis, we found no requirement for DNA polymerase alpha-primase. AAV DNA replication could be reconstituted with purified Rep78, RPA, RFC, and PCNA and a phosphocellulose chromatography fraction (IIA) that contained DNA polymerase activity. As both RFC and PCNA are known to be accessory proteins for polymerase delta and epsilon, we attempted to reconstitute AAV DNA replication by substituting either purified polymerase delta or polymerase epsilon for fraction IIA. These attempts were unsuccessful and suggested that some novel cellular protein or modification was required for AAV DNA replication that had not been previously identified. Finally, we also further characterized the in vitro DNA replication assay and demonstrated by two-dimensional (2D) gel electrophoresis that all of the intermediates commonly seen in vivo are generated in the in vitro system. The only difference was an accumulation of single-stranded DNA in vivo that was not seen in vitro. The 2D data also suggested that although both Rep78 and Rep68 can generate dimeric intermediates in vitro, Rep68 is more efficient in processing dimers to monomer duplex DNA. Regardless of the Rep that was used in vitro, we found evidence of an interaction between the elongation complex and the terminal repeats. Nicking at the terminal repeats of a replicating molecule appeared to be inhibited until after elongation was complete.
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PMID:Cellular proteins required for adeno-associated virus DNA replication in the absence of adenovirus coinfection. 952 97

The coordinated synthesis of both leading and lagging DNA strands is thought to involve a dimeric DNA polymerase and a looping of the lagging strand so that both strands can be synthesized in the same direction. We have constructed a minicircle with a replication fork that permits an assessment of the stoichiometry of the proteins and a measurement of the synthesis of each strand. The replisome consisting of bacteriophage T7 DNA polymerase, helicase, primase, and single-stranded DNA-binding protein mediates coordinated replication. The criteria for coordination are fulfilled: (1) a replication loop is formed, (2) leading and lagging strand synthesis are coupled, (3) the lagging strand polymerase recycles from one Okazaki fragment to another, and (4) the length of Okazaki fragments is regulated. T7 single-stranded DNA-binding protein is essential for coordination.
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PMID:Coordinated leading and lagging strand DNA synthesis on a minicircular template. 965 83

The beta protein, a dimeric ring-shaped clamp essential for processive DNA replication by Escherichia coli DNA polymerase III holoenzyme, is assembled onto DNA by the gamma complex. This study examines the clamp loading pathway in real time, using pre-steady state fluorescent depolarization measurements to investigate the loading reaction and ATP requirements for the assembly of beta onto DNA. Two beta dimer interface mutants, L273A and L108A, and a nonhydrolyzable ATP analog, adenosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (ATPgammaS), have been used to show that ATP binding is required for gamma complex and beta to associate with DNA, but that a gamma complex-catalyzed ATP hydrolysis is required for gamma complex to release the beta.DNA complex and complete the reaction. In the presence of ATP and gamma complex, the beta mutants associate with DNA as efficiently as wild type beta. However, completion of the reaction is much slower with the beta mutants because of decreased ATP hydrolysis by the gamma complex, resulting in a much slower release of the mutants onto DNA. The effects of mutations in the dimer interface were similar to the effects of replacing ATP with ATPgammaS in reactions using wild type beta. Thus, the assembly of beta around DNA is coupled tightly to the ATPase activity of the gamma complex, and completion of the assembly process requires ATP hydrolysis for turnover of the catalytic clamp loader.
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PMID:Pre-steady state analysis of the assembly of wild type and mutant circular clamps of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase III onto DNA. 973 51

Duplication or expansion of directly repeated sequence elements is associated with a number of human genetic diseases. To study the mechanisms of repeat expansion, we have developed a plasmid assay in Escherichia coli. Our assay involves two simple repeats of 787 bp in length; expansion to three or more copies of the repeat can be selected by restoration of an intact tetracycline-resistance gene. Expansions occurred at relatively high rates, >10(-5), in the population. Both RecA-dependent recombination and RecA-independent slipped misalignments contributed to the observed expansion events. Mutations that impair DNA polymerase III (DnaE, DnaQ subunits) or the replication fork helicase, DnaB, stimulated both RecA-dependent and RecA-independent expansion events. In these respects, the properties of repeat expansion resemble repeat deletion and suggest that difficulties in DNA replication may trigger both classes of rearrangements. About 20% of the RecA-independent expansion events are accompanied by reciprocal sister-chromosome exchange, producing dimeric plasmids carrying one triplicated and one deleted locus. These products are explained by a model involving misaligned strands across the replication fork. This model predicts that the location of a replication stall site may govern the types of resulting rearrangements. The specific location of such a stall site can also, in theory, account for propensity towards expansion or deletion of repeat arrays. This may have relevance to trinucleotide repeat expansion in human genetic disease.
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PMID:Expansion of DNA repeats in Escherichia coli: effects of recombination and replication functions. 1033 2

Reverse transcriptase (RT) preparations containing various molecular forms of the enzyme consisting of alpha- and/or beta-subunits have been isolated from E. coli cells transformed with plasmid pMF14 containing the Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) pol gene. The three possible dimeric forms of the enzyme demonstrated DNA polymerase activity, the relative activities of the alphaalpha, betabeta, and alphabeta forms being about 1:3:4. RNase H activity is associated with the betabeta and alphabeta dimers but not with the alphaalpha dimer. Comparison of the enzymic properties of the various dimers and dissociation--reassociation results suggest that the betabeta and alphabeta dimers of the RSV recombinant reverse transcriptase are similar to the corresponding virion RT forms.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of Rous sarcoma virus recombinant reverse transcriptase dimers. 1049 11

The binding of the benzo[a]pyrene metabolite anti-BPDE (r7, t8-dihydroxy-t9,10-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene) to the N(2) group of 2'-deoxyguanosine residues (dG) is known to adversely affect the Michaelis-Menten primer extension kinetics catalyzed by DNA Pol I and other polymerases. In this work, the impact of site-specific, anti-BPDE-modified DNA template strands on the formation of Pol I (Klenow fragment, KF)/template-primer complexes has been investigated. The 23-mer template strand 5'-d(AAC GC-(1) T(-)(2) ACC ATC CGA ATT CGC CC), I (dG = (+)-trans- and (-)-trans-anti-BPDE-N(2)-dG), was annealed with primer strands 18, 19, or 20 bases long. Complex formation of these template-primer strands with KF(-) (exonuclease-free) at different enzyme concentrations was determined using polyacrylamide gel mobility shift assays in the absence of dNTPs. The lesion dG causes an increase in the dissociation constants, K(d), of the monomeric, 1:1 KF(-)/DNA template-primer complexes by factors of 10-15 when the 3'-end base of the primer strand is positioned either opposite dG, or opposite dC(-)(1) in I, and the shapes of the binding isotherms are sigmoidal. The sigmoidal shapes are attributed to the formation of dimeric 2:1 KF(-)/DNA template-primer complexes. In contrast, when the 3'-end of the primer strand extends only to dT(-)(2) in I, the K(d) of 1:1 complexes is increased by factors of only 2-3, the shapes of the binding isotherms are hyperbolic and nonsigmoidal and are similar to those observed with the unmodified control, and monomeric KF(-)/DNA complexes are dominant. The impact of bulky lesions on polymerase/DNA complex formation in polymerase-catalyzed primer extension reactions needs to be taken into account in interpreting the site-specific Michaelis-Menten kinetics of these reactions.
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PMID:Primer length dependence of binding of DNA polymerase I Klenow fragment to template-primer complexes containing site-specific bulky lesions. 1051 40

The possibility of increasing the affinity of a Taq DNA polymerase specific binding protein (affibody) was investigated by an alpha-helix shuffling strategy. The primary affibody was from a naive combinatorial library of the three-helix bundle Z domain derived from staphylococcal protein A. A hierarchical library was constructed through selective re-randomization of six amino acid positions in one of the two alpha-helices of the domain, making up the Taq DNA polymerase binding surface. After selections using monovalent phage display technology, second generation variants were identified having affinities (K(D)) for Taq DNA polymerase in the range of 30-50 nM as determined by biosensor technology. Analysis of binding data indicated that the increases in affinity were predominantly due to decreased dissociation rate kinetics. Interestingly, the affinities observed for the second generation Taq DNA polymerase specific affibodies are of similar strength as the affinity between the original protein A domain and the Fc domain of human immunoglobulin G. Further, the possibilities of increasing the apparent affinity through multimerization of affibodies was demonstrated for a dimeric version of one of the second generation affibodies, constructed by head-to-tail gene fusion. As compared with its monomeric counterpart, the binding to sensor chip immobilized Taq DNA polymerase was characterized by a threefold higher apparent affinity, due to slower off-rate kinetics. The results show that the binding specificity of the protein A domain can be re-directed to an entirely different target, without loss of binding strength.
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PMID:Affinity maturation of a Taq DNA polymerase specific affibody by helix shuffling. 1055 48


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