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)

Possible relations between hyperthermic inactivation of alpha and beta DNA polymerase activity and hyperthermic cell killing or hyperthermic radiosensitization were investigated. Ehrlich Ascites Tumor (EAT) cells and HeLa S3 cells were treated with fractionated doses of hyperthermia. The heating schedules were chosen such that the initial heat treatment resulted in either thermotolerance or thermosensitization (step-down heating) for the second heat treatment. The results show that for DNA polymerase activity and heat radiosensitization (cell survival) no thermotolerance or thermosensitization is observed. Thus hyperthermic cell killing and DNA polymerase activity are not correlated. The correlation of hyperthermic radiosensitization and DNA polymerase activity was substantially less than observed in previous experiments with normotolerant and thermotolerant HeLa S3 cells. We conclude that alpha and beta DNA polymerase inactivation is not always the critical cellular process responsible for hyperthermic cell killing or hyperthermic radiosensitization. Other possible cellular systems that might determine these processes are discussed.
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PMID:DNA polymerase activity in heat killing and hyperthermic radiosensitization of mammalian cells as observed after fractionated heat treatments. 375 38

Ehrlich Ascites Tumor (EAT) chalone has been shown to inhibit nascent DNA synthesis by inhibiting DNA polymerase alpha and beta (Nakai, 1976), but one of the problems in studying eurkaryotic DNA replication has been the relative impermeability of the cell membrane to precursors and macromolecules; hence, to circumvent this restriction without sacrificing the integrity of the replication process, a broken cell system utilizing nuclei in aqueous media was investigated. Isolated nuclei appear to continue the process of DNA replication that was proceeding in vivo before their isolation and under optimal concitions are able to initiate new synthesis (Fraser & Huberman, 1977). The effects of partially purified EAT chalone on nascent DNA could be studied directly in this nuclear system, which excluded effects of the cell membrane, nucleotide pools and other cytosol elements. A concentration-related inhibition of [3H]thymidine triphosphate ([3H]dTTP) incorporation was noted over a chalone range of 50-200 micrograms/ml. It appears that chalone can inhibit DNA polymerase alpha directly within the nucleus without an intermediate step such as a cell membrane receptor.
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PMID:Effect of Ehrlich ascites cell chalone on nascent DNA synthesis in isolated nuclei. 644 31