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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)

African swine fever virus (ASFV) encodes a novel DNA polymerase, constituted of only 174 amino acids, belonging to the polymerase (pol) X family of DNA polymerases. Biochemical analyses of the purified enzyme indicate that ASFV pol X is a monomeric DNA-directed DNA polymerase, highly distributive, lacking a proofreading 3'-5'-exonuclease, and with a poor discrimination against dideoxynucleotides. A multiple alignment of family X DNA polymerases, together with the extrapolation to the crystal structure of mammalian DNA polymerase beta (pol beta), showed the conservation in ASFV pol X of the most critical residues involved in DNA binding, nucleotide binding, and catalysis of the polymerization reaction. Therefore, the 20-kDa ASFV pol X most likely represents the minimal functional version of an evolutionarily conserved pol beta-type DNA polymerase core, constituted by only the "palm" and "thumb" subdomains. It is worth noting that such an "unfingered" DNA polymerase is able to handle templated DNA polymerization with a considerable high fidelity at the base discrimination level. Base excision repair is considered to be a cellular defense mechanism repairing modified bases in DNA. Interestingly, the fact that ASFV pol X is able to conduct filling of a single nucleotide gap points to a putative role in base excision repair during the ASFV life cycle.
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PMID:Characterization of an African swine fever virus 20-kDa DNA polymerase involved in DNA repair. 938 36

DNA viruses as their host cells require a DNA-dependent DNA polymerase (Pol) to faithfully replicate their genomic information. Large eukaryotic DNA viruses as well as bacterial viruses encode a specific Pol equipped with a proofreading 3'-5'-exonuclease, and other replication proteins. All known viral Pol belong to family A and family B Pol. Common to all viral Pol is the conservation of the 3'-5'-exonuclease domain manifested by the three sequence motifs Exo I, Exo II, and Exo III. The polymerase domain of family A and B Pol is clearly distinguishable. Family A Pol share 9 distinct consensus sequences, only two of them are convincingly homologous to sequence motif B of family B Pol. The putative sequence motifs A, B, and C of the polymerase domain are located near the C-terminus in family A Pol and more central in family B Pol. Thus, family A Pol show a significant greater spacing between the Exo III motif and the Pol motif A that is especially extended in the case of the mitochondrial Pol gamma. From each host and virus family whenever possible the consensus sequences of two distantly related polymerase species were aligned for assessment of phylogenetic trees, using both maximum parsimony and distance methods, and evaluated by bootstrap analysis. Three alternative methods yielded trees with identical major groupings. A subdivision of viral family B Pol was achieved resulting in a branch with Pol carrying out a protein-primed mechanism of DNA replication, including adenoviruses, bacteriophages and linear plasmids of plant and fungal origin. Archaebacterial Pol and cellular Pol epsilon were consistently found at the base of this branch. Another major branch comprised alpha- and delta-like viral Pol from mammalian herpesviruses, fish lymphocystis disease virus, insect ascovirus, and chlorella virus. Due to a lower branch integrity Pol of T-even bacteriophages, poxviruses, African swine fever virus, fish herpesvirus, and baculoviruses were not clearly resolved and placed in alternate groupings. A composite and rooted tree of family A and B Pol shows that viral Pol with a protein-priming requirement represent the oldest viral Pol species suggesting that the protein-primed mechanism is one of the earliest modes of viral DNA replication.
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PMID:Evolution of viral DNA-dependent DNA polymerases. 956 90

Iridoviruses belong to the group of large cytoplasmic deoxyriboviruses and infect either insects or vertebrates. In analogy to other large DNA viruses of eucaryotes it was found that iridoviruses encode a number of cellular protein homologues. The majority of these proteins represent orthologues of cellular enzymes involved in transcription, replication, and nucleotide metabolism. Others may have the potential to interfere with cell cycle regulation or immune defence mechanisms of the host. This raises the question about the phylogenetic origin of the corresponding viral genes. During the evolution of large cytoplasmic DNA viruses such as iridoviruses, poxviruses, and African swine fever virus the acquirement of cellular genes appears to be a crucial event. Each member of this group of viruses encodes a DNA polymerase, two subunits of the DNA-dependent RNA polymerase, and two subunits of the ribonucleotide reductase. It is important to note that all of these viral proteins show a high level of multidomain structure conservation as compared to their cellular orthologues. As a consequence the large cytoplasmic DNAviruses have the ability to replicate independently of the cellular nucleus in the cytoplasm of the infected cell. Assuming a common cellular origin of viral DNA polymerase genes the corresponding amino acid sequences were chosen to construct a phylogenetic tree showing the relatedness among large DNA viruses of eucaryotes.
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PMID:Iridovirus homologues of cellular genes--implications for the molecular evolution of large DNA viruses. 1102 91

DNA polymerase X (Pol X) from the African swine fever virus (ASFV) specifically binds intermediates in the single-nucleotide base-excision repair process, an activity indicative of repair function. In addition, Pol X catalyzes DNA polymerization with low nucleotide-insertion fidelity. The structural mechanisms by which DNA polymerases confer high or low fidelity in DNA polymerization remain to be elucidated. The three-dimensional structure of Pol X has been determined. Unlike other DNA polymerases, Pol X is formed from only a palm and a C-terminal subdomain. Pol X has a novel palm subdomain fold, containing a positively charged helix at the DNA binding surface. Purine deoxynucleoside triphosphate (dNTP) substrates bind between the palm and C-terminal subdomain, at a dNTP-binding helix, and induce a unique conformation in Pol X. The purine dNTP-bound conformation and high binding affinity for dGTP-Mg(2+) of Pol X may contribute to its low fidelity.
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PMID:Solution structure of a viral DNA repair polymerase. 1168 31

The African swine fever virus DNA polymerase X (ASFV Pol X or Pol X), the smallest known nucleotide polymerase, has recently been reported to be an extremely low fidelity polymerase that may be involved in strategic mutagenesis of the viral genome. Here we report the solution structure of Pol X. The structure, unique within the realm of nucleotide polymerases, consists of only palm and fingers subdomains. Despite the absence of a thumb subdomain, which is important for DNA binding in other polymerases, we show that Pol X binds DNA with very high affinity. Further structural analyses suggest a novel mode of DNA binding that may contribute to low fidelity synthesis. We also demonstrate that the ASFV DNA ligase is a low fidelity ligase capable of sealing a nick that contains a G-G mismatch. This supports the hypothesis of a virus-encoded, mutagenic base excision repair pathway consisting of a tandem Pol X/ligase mutator.
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PMID:Solution structure of a viral DNA polymerase X and evidence for a mutagenic function. 1168 31

The double-stranded DNA genomes of the viruses SIRV1 and SIRV2, which infect the extremely thermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus and belong to the family Rudiviridae, were sequenced. They are linear, covalently closed at the ends, and 32,312 and 35,502 bp long, respectively, with an A+T content of 75%. The genomes of SIRV1 and SIRV2 carry inverted terminal repeats of 2029 and 1628 bp, respectively, which contain multiple direct repeats. SIRV1 and SIRV2 genomes contain 45 and 54 ORFs, respectively, of which 44 are homologous to one another. Their predicted functions include a DNA polymerase, a Holliday junction resolvase, and a dUTPase. The genomes consist of blocks with well-conserved sequences separated by nonconserved sequences. Recombination, gene duplication, horizontal gene transfer, and substitution of viral genes by homologous host genes have contributed to their evolution. The finding of head-to-head and tail-to-tail linked replicative intermediates suggests that the linear genomes replicate by the same mechanism as the similarly organized linear genomes of the eukaryal poxviruses, African swine fever virus and Chlorella viruses. SIRV1 and SIRV2 both contain motifs that resemble the binding sites for Holliday junction resolvases of eukaryal viruses and may use common mechanisms for resolution of replicative intermediates. The results suggest a common origin of the replication machineries of the archaeal rudiviruses and the above-mentioned eukaryal viruses. About 1/3 of the ORFs of each rudivirus have homologs in the Sulfolobus virus SIFV of the family Lipothrixviridae, indicating that the two viral families form a superfamily. The finding of inverted repeats of at least 0.8 kb at the termini of the linear genome of SIFV supports this inference.
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PMID:Sequences and replication of genomes of the archaeal rudiviruses SIRV1 and SIRV2: relationships to the archaeal lipothrixvirus SIFV and some eukaryal viruses. 1187 92

Presented here is the development a semi-rational protein engineering approach that uses information from protein structure coupled with established DNA manipulation techniques to design and create multiple crossover libraries from non-homologous genes. The utility of structure-based combinatorial protein engineering (SCOPE) was demonstrated by its application to two distantly related members of the X-family of DNA polymerases: rat DNA polymerase beta (Pol beta) and African swine fever virus DNA polymerase X (Pol X). These proteins share similar folds but have low sequence identity, and differ greatly in both size and activity. "Equivalent" subdomain elements of structure were designed on the basis of the tertiary structure of Pol beta and the corresponding regions of Pol X were inferred from homology modeling and sequence alignment analysis. Libraries of chimeric genes with up to five crossovers were synthesized in a series of PCR reactions by employing hybrid oligonucleotides that code for variable connections between structural elements. Genetic complementation in Escherichia coli enabled identification of several novel DNA polymerases with enhanced phenotypes. Both the composition of structural elements and the manner in which they were linked were shown to be essential for this property, indicating the importance of these aspects of design.
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PMID:Structure-based combinatorial protein engineering (SCOPE). 1220 82

DNA polymerase X (pol X) from African swine fever virus (ASFV) is the smallest naturally ocurring DNA-directed DNA polymerase (174 amino acid residues) described so far. Previous biochemical analysis has shown that ASFV pol X is a highly distributive, monomeric enzyme, lacking a proofreading 3'-5' exonuclease. Also, ASFV pol X binds intermediates of the single-nucleotide base excision repair (BER) process, and is able to efficiently repair single-nucleotide gapped DNA. In this work, we perform an extensive kinetic analysis of single correct and incorrect nucleotide insertions by ASFV pol X using different DNA substrates: (i) a primer/template DNA; (ii) a 1nt gapped DNA; (iii) a 5'-phosphorylated 1nt gapped DNA. The results obtained indicate that ASFV pol X exhibits a general preference for insertion of purine deoxynucleotides, especially dGTP opposite template C. Moreover, ASFV pol X shows higher catalytic efficiencies when filling in gapped substrates, which are increased when a phosphate group is present at the 5'-margin of the gap. Interestingly, ASFV pol X misinserts nucleotides with frequencies from 10(-4) to 10(-5), and the insertion fidelity varies depending on the substrate, being more faithful on a phosphorylated 1nt gapped substrate. We have analyzed the capacity of ASFV pol X to act on intermediates of BER repair. Although no lyase activity could be detected on preincised 5'-deoxyribose phosphate termini, ASFV pol X has lyase activity on unincised abasic sites. Altogether, the results support a role for ASFV pol X in reparative BER of damaged viral DNA during ASFV infection.
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PMID:DNA polymerase X of African swine fever virus: insertion fidelity on gapped DNA substrates and AP lyase activity support a role in base excision repair of viral DNA. 1259 53

Ascoviruses (family Ascoviridae) are large, enveloped, double-stranded (ds)DNA viruses that attack lepidopteran larvae and pupae, and are unusual in that they are transmitted by parasitic wasps during oviposition. Previous comparisons of DNA polymerase sequences from vertebrate and invertebrate viruses suggested that ascoviruses are closely related to iridoviruses. This relationship was unexpected because these viruses differ markedly in virion symmetry, genome configuration and cellular pathology. Here we present evidence based on sequence comparisons and phylogenetic analyses of a greater range of ascovirus proteins and their homologues in other large dsDNA viruses that ascoviruses evolved from iridoviruses. Consensus trees for the major capsid protein, DNA polymerase, thymidine kinase and ATPase III from representative ascoviruses, algal viruses (family Phycodnaviridae), vertebrate and invertebrate iridoviruses (family Iridoviridae) and African swine fever virus (ASFV; family Asfarviridae) showed that ascovirus proteins clustered most closely with those of the lepidopteran iridovirus Chilo iridescent virus (CIV) (Invertebrate iridescent virus 6). Moreover, analysis of the presence or absence of homologues of an additional 50 proteins encoded in the genome of Spodoptera frugiperda ascovirus (SfAV-1a) showed that about 40 % occurred in CIV, with lower percentages encoded by the genomes of, respectively, vertebrate iridoviruses, phycodnaviruses and ASFV. The occurrence of three of these genes in SfAV-1a but not CIV was indicative of the evolutionary differentiation of ascoviruses from invertebrate iridoviruses.
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PMID:Evidence for the evolution of ascoviruses from iridoviruses. 1457 5

Our recent demonstration that DNA polymerase X (Pol X), the DNA repair polymerase encoded by the African swine fever virus (ASFV), is extremely error prone during single-nucleotide gap filling led us to hypothesize that it might contribute to genetic variability in ASFV. For the infidelity of Pol X to be relevant, however, the DNA ligase working downstream of it would need to be capable of sealing nicks containing 3'-OH mismatches. We therefore examined the nick ligation capabilities of the ASFV-encoded DNA ligase and here report the first complete 3' fidelity analysis, employing catalytic parameters, for any DNA ligase. The catalytic efficiency of nick sealing by both ASFV DNA ligase and bacteriophage T4 DNA ligase was determined in the steady state for substrates containing all 16 possible matched and mismatched base pair combinations at the 3' side of a nick. Our results indicate that ASFV DNA ligase is the lowest-fidelity DNA ligase ever reported, capable of ligating a 3' C:T mismatched nick (where C and T are the templating and nascent nucleotides, respectively) more efficiently than nicks containing Watson-Crick base pairs. Comparison of the mismatch specificity of Pol X with that of ASFV DNA ligase suggests that the latter may have evolved toward low fidelity for the purpose of generating the broadest possible spectrum of sealed mismatches. These findings are discussed in light of the genetic and antigenic variability observed among some ASFV isolates. Two novel assays for determining the concentration of active DNA ligase are also reported.
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PMID:An error-prone viral DNA ligase. 1593 30


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