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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)
Two approaches have been explored for the synthesis of double-stranded DNA from single-stranded DNA template complementary to rabbit 9S globin mRNA (cDNA). (i) cDNA was elongated with dCMP or dTMP homopolymeric tracts using terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase (
EC 2.7.7.31
; nucleosidetriphosphate:DNA deoxynucleotidylexotransferase). cDNA-dC, in the presence of an oligo(dG)10 primer, was an efficient template with either
DNA polymerase
of Escherichia coli (
EC 2.7.7.7
; deoxynucleosidetriphosphate:DNA deoxynucleotidyltransferase) or RNA-directed DNA polymerase of avian myeloblastosis virus. cDNA-dT [ with an oligo(dA)10 primer] functioned as template only with E. coli polymerase. (ii) cDNA, without homopolymeric tails, was also efficiently copied in the absence of oligonucleotide primer, by
DNA polymerase
of avian myeloblastosis virus or of E. coli. The product of the reaction consisted of long hairpin molecules which could be converted into DNA duplex (melting temperature, 93 degrees) by digestion with single-strand nuclease S1. The data indicate that a loop structure on the 3' end of cDNA allowed DNA synthesis to take place by a "self-priming" mechanism. Some of the double-stranded DNA synthesized corresponded to the entire sequence of the 9S mRNA template. The synthesis of full-length double-stranded DNA from mouse globin mRNA and immunoglobulin light chain mRNA is also discussed.
...
PMID:Stepwise biosynthesis in vitro of globin genes from globin mRNA by DNA polymerase of avian myeloblastosis virus. 6 60
Phosphonoacetic acid has been shown to suppress replication of DNA tumor viruses by inhibiting the activity of virus-induced
DNA polymerase
and consequently viral DNA synthesis. We now have evidence to show that phosphonoacetic acid inhibits also the cellular DNA polymerases alpha, beta, and gamma of L1210 cells as well as reverse transcriptases of two type C viruses. Particularly, the
DNA polymerase alpha
is just as sensitive as the herpes virus induced
DNA polymerase
. The DNA polymerases beta and gamma required seven times more phosphonoacetic acid for a 50% inhibition of their activities. Phosphonoacetic acid inhibited the activities of the reverse transcriptase and
terminal deoxyribonucleotidyltransferase
only at higher concentrations. Kinetic analysis with the
DNA polymerase alpha
showed that the compound is a non-competitive inhibitor with respect to the substrates and uncompetitive inhibitor with the activated DNA template. Studies on time course of phosphonoacetic acid inhibition revealed that the compound is inhibitory even after the initiation of DNA synthesis. Phosphonoacetic acid also inhibited cell growth as well as the type C virus production; at concentrations above 50 microgram/ml, the inhibitory effect was more profound on the type C virus production than on cell growth.
...
PMID:Inhibition of activities of DNA polymerase alpha, beta, gamma, and reverse transcriptase of L1210 cells by phosphonoacetic acid. 8 50
Pyrans are co-polymers of divinyl ether and maleic anhydride. Four pyrans of various molecular weights more potently inhibited
terminal deoxyribonucleotidyltransferase
(
EC 2.7.7.31
) from a human cell line of acute lymphoblastic leukemia origin (Molt-4) than they did DNA polymerases alpha, beta and gamma from these cells and
DNA polymerase
from simian sarcoma virus. For example, the concentrations of one pyran required for 50% inhibition of terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase, DNA polymerases alpha, beta and gamma and viral
DNA polymerase
were 0.9, 110, 125, 35 and 47 microgram/ml respectively. Quantitatively similar results were obtained with the other pyrans. Inhibition of these enzymes by pyran was dependent on the concentrations of both the bivalent cation and template/primer or initiator in assay mixtures, but not on the concentrations of the substrate (deoxyribonucleoside 5'-triphosphate), enzyme, or bovine serum albumin. These results suggested that pyran inhibited these enzymes by complexing bivalent cations, which caused a decreased affinity of template/primer or initiator for each enzyme and a decrease in enzyme activity.
...
PMID:Inhibition of deoxyribonucleic acid polymerases from human cells and from simian sarcoma virus by pyran. 21 45
Specificity of TdT5 as a marker for ALL was evaluated by determining its activity in cells from normal control subjects and from 35 pediatric patients with ALL, AML, Hodgkin's disease and disseminated Burkitt's lymphoma. We evaluated the
DNA polymerase
activity, cell surface phenotypes (E rosettes, EAC rosettes, Smlg and la-like, HTLA and cALL antigens), and hematological and cytochemical characteristics in both the normal and patient groups.
DNA polymerase alpha
+ beta and
DNA polymerase gamma
activity were indiscriminately high in all immature cells as found in ALL, AML, Burkitt's lymphoma and phytohemagglutinin-stimulated normal lymphocytes, when compared to mature leukocytes found in normal individuals or in patients whose cancer was in remission. High
TdT
activity was found in 24 of 26 T and non-T/non-B ALL patients in active phase as well as in two of three AML patients one of whom had Auer rods. Thus,
TdT
, although valuable for monitoring ALL patients, may have limitations in separating AML from ALL.
...
PMID:High terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase activity in pediatric patients with acute lymphocytic and acute myelocytic leukemias. 27 33
A pyrimidine octanucleotide complementary to one of the cohesive ends of P2 DNA was chemically synthesized. Its sequence, d(C-T-T-T-C-C-C-C-OH), was verified by labeling it at the 5' end, followed by partial enzyme digestion and separation by a two-dimensional fingerprinting system. A single ribo-G residue was added to its 3' end using calf thymus
deoxynucleotidyl terminal transferase
. The resulting nonanucleotide primer was used in a detailed study on the stability of the duplexes formed in the partial as well as complete repair synthesis catalyzed by
DNA polymerase I
, at 5 degrees C in the presence of 70 mM potassium phosphate and 70 mM NaCl. The nonanucleotide primer was able to form a stable duplex with P2 DNA template only in the presence of
DNA polymerase I
. When the chain lengths of pyrimidine oligonucleotides were varied from 4 to 8 to test their abilities to serve as primers for the enzymatic repair synthesis, it was revealed that the minimum length required for the primer function is 8. Using the nonanucleotide as the primer and the right-hand cohesive end of the DNA as the template, repair synthesis was initiated simultaneously at the 3' end of the primer as well as at the right-hand 3' end of the DNA. This resulted in a decrease in the efficiency of repair synthesis at the 3' end of the primer, possibly due to the displacement of the primer by the enzyme. The enzyme was unable to displace the primer, when the primer was extended to a 13-mer prior to the initiation of repair synthesis at the 3'-OH end of the DNA. These data suggest that the strand displacement by
DNA polymerase I
at 5 degrees C in the presence of 70 mM potassium phosphate and 70 mM NaCl is not significant when the duplex is at least 13 nucleotides long. The efficiency of the repair synthesis at the 3'-OH end of the DNA-primer duplex could be increased by blocking the repair synthesis at the 3'-OH end of the DNA by converting it to 3'- phosphate. This method could be useful in DNA sequence analysis, where such specific repair synthesis is desired.
...
PMID:Chemical synthesis of an octanucleotide complementary to a portion of the cohesive end of P2 DNA and studies on the stability of duplex formation with P2 DNA. 85 84
The ability to overproduce terminal transferase through recombinant DNA technology should provide alternate means for generating sufficient quantities for structural and mechanistic study of this creative
DNA polymerase
. In this work we have investigated, at electron microscope level, the morphological modification and ultrastructural localization of synthesized human terminal transferase occurring in Sf-9 cells during recombinant baculovirus infection time. The results obtained showed that
TdT
is localized and stored only at the cytoplasmic level; the nucleus did not show any specific site able to link the neosynthesized
TdT
. The amount of the enzyme, estimate by immunostaining analysis, increased with the viral infection time. Morphological changes occurring during viral infection consist mainly of variations of cellular surface, different size and shape of cytoplasmic organelles and modification of nuclear components.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemical study of recombinant terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) synthesized by baculovirus-infected insect cells. 147 58
Within normal hemopoiesis, the intranuclear
DNA polymerase
TdT
seems to be exclusively expressed by T and B lymphoid precursor cells. Double staining experiments showed that
TdT
can also be expressed in blast cells of certain acute myeloid leukemias. Recent reports described a very strong association between
TdT
expression and rearrangements of IgH and TcR genes in such AML specimens, suggesting a predominant lymphoid commitment of these
TdT
positive AML blasts. When submitting 24 serologically and morphologically well-characterized
TdT
positive AML specimens for additional genotypic analysis to determine the IgH and TcR gene configuration, we observed that only four had clonally rearranged IgH and/or TcR genes, whereas 20 had germ line configuration. This frequency is clearly lower than previously reported and not necessarily different from rearrangement frequencies reported for
TdT
negative AML (4-40%). It would seem to us, therefore, that the expression of
TdT
in otherwise well-defined AML blasts is not necessarily associated with a higher frequency of immunoglobulin and/or T cell receptor gene rearrangement.
...
PMID:Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase and CD7 expression in acute myeloid leukemias are not associated with a high frequency of immunoglobulin and/or T cell receptor gene rearrangement. 169 41
3'-Mercapto-3'-deoxy-TTP was synthesized and tested as DNA chain terminator nucleotide for calf thymus alpha
DNA polymerase
, E. coli
DNA polymerase I
(
Klenow fragment
),
terminal deoxyribonucleotidyltransferase
(Bollum enzyme) and reverse transcriptase from AMV- and HIV-I-viruses. It was shown that the compound terminates DNA chain elongation by reverse transcriptases selectively and irreversibly. Other tested DNA polymerases do not use this nucleotide analogue as a substrate. 3'-Mercapto-3'-deoxythymidine was tested on lymphoblastoid T-cell line MT-4 with HIV-viruses and shown to suppress viruses as efficiently as 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine.
...
PMID:[3'-Mercapto-3'-deoxythymidine-5'-triphosphate as a terminator of DNA synthesis catalyzed by RNA-dependent DNA-polymerases]. 171 4
A photoaffinity analogue of dATP, 8-azido-2'-deoxyadenosine 5'-triphosphate (8-azido-dATP), was used to probe the nucleotide binding site of the non-template-directed
DNA polymerase
terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (
EC 2.7.7.31
). The Mg2+ form of 8-azido-dATP was shown to be an efficient enzyme substrate with a Km of 53 microM. Loss of enzyme activity occurred during UV photolysis only in the presence of 8-azido-dATP. At saturation (120 microM 8-azido-dATP), 54% of the protein molecules were modified as determined by inhibition of enzyme activity. Kinetic analysis of enzyme inhibition induced by photoincorporation of 8-azido-dATP indicated an apparent Kd of approximately 38 microM. Addition of 2 mM dATP to 120 microM 8-azido-dATP resulted in greater than 90% protection from photoinduced loss of enzyme activity. In contrast, no protection was observed with the addition of 2 mM dAMP. Enzyme inactivation was directly correlated with incorporation of radiolabeled 8-azido-dATP into the protein and UV-induced destruction of the azido group. Photoincorporation of 8-azido-dATP into terminal transferase was reduced by all purine and pyrimidine deoxynucleoside triphosphates of which dGTP was the most effective. The alpha and beta polypeptides of calf terminal transferase were specifically photolabeled by [gamma-32P]-8-azido-dATP, and both polypeptides were equally protected by all four deoxynucleoside triphosphates. This suggests that the nucleotide binding domain involves components from both polypeptides.
...
PMID:Photoaffinity labeling of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase. 1. Active site directed interactions with 8-azido-2'-deoxyadenosine 5'-triphosphate. 271 38
Human
terminal deoxyribonucleotidyltransferase
(
nucleoside-triphosphate:DNA deoxynucleotidylexotransferase
,
EC 2.7.7.31
) cDNA contains an open reading frame of 1530 base pairs (bp) corresponding to a protein containing 510 amino acids. The encoded protein is a template-independent
DNA polymerase
found only in a restricted population of normal and malignant prelymphocytes. To begin to investigate the genetic elements responsible for the tissue-specific expression of
terminal deoxyribonucleotidyltransferase
, genomic clones containing the entire human gene were isolated and characterized. Initially, cDNA clones were isolated from a library generated from the human lymphoblastoid cell line, MOLT-4R. A cDNA clone containing the entire coding region of the protein was used to isolate a series of overlapping clones from two human genomic libraries. The gene comprises 11 exons and 10 introns and spans 49.4 kilobases. The 5' flanking region (709 bp) including exon 1 was sequenced. Several putative transcription initiation sites were mapped. Within 500 nucleotides of the translation start site, a series of promoter elements was detected. "TATA" and "CAAT" sequences, respectively, were found to start at nucleotides -185 and -204, -328, and 465 and -505. Start sites were found for a cyclic AMP-dependent promoter analog at nucleotide -121, an eight-base sequence corresponding to the IgG promoter enhancer (cd) at nucleotide -455, and an analog of the IgG promoter (pd) at nucleotide -159. These findings suggest that transcripts coding for
terminal deoxyribonucleotidyltransferase
may be variable in length and that transcription may be influenced by a variety of genetic elements.
...
PMID:Human terminal deoxyribonucleotidyltransferase: molecular cloning and structural analysis of the gene and 5' flanking region. 283 41
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