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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)

2'-Deoxyoxanosine (dOxo) is a novel DNA lesion produced by the reaction of 2'-deoxyguanosine (dGuo) with nitrous acid and nitric oxide [Suzuki, T., Yamaoka, R., Nishi, M., Ide, H., and Makino, K. (1996) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 118, 2515-2516]. In this work, 2'-deoxyoxanosine 5'-triphosphate (dOTP) was prepared by nitrous acid treatment of 2'-deoxyguanosine 5'-triphosphate (dGTP), and its incorporation into DNA by DNA polymerases was investigated to elucidate the substrate and mutagenic properties of dOTP. Primed M13mp18 DNA was replicated by Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I Klenow fragment (Pol I Kf) in the presence of three normal dNTPs and dOTP or 2'-deoxyxanthosine 5'-triphosphate (dXTP), another major product of reaction of dGTP with nitrous acid and nitric oxide. dOTP substituted for dGTP and to a lesser extent for dATP, while dXTP substituted slightly for dGTP but not for dATP. Neither dOTP nor dXTP substituted for dCTP and dTTP. The similar results were obtained for the incorporation by T7 DNA polymerase deficient in 3'-5' exonuclease [T7(exo-)]. To quantify the substitution efficiency, kinetic parameters for incorporation of dOTP and dXTP opposite template C or T by Pol I Kf (exo-) were determined and compared with those for dGTP using oligodeoxynucleotide templates. Incorporation efficiencies (f = Vmax/Km) of dOTP (f = 0.28% min-1 microM-1) and dXTP (f = 0.10% min-1 microM-1) opposite template C were much lower than that of dGTP (f = 1506% min-1 microM-1). Frequencies of mutagenic incorporation of dOTP opposite template T were dependent on the nearest neighbor base pairs, and 1.6-3.9-fold higher than those for dGTP with the nearest neighbors containing G.C pairs. dXTP was not incorporated opposite template T with all four nearest neighbors. These data suggest that formation of dOTP, but not dXTP, from dGTP with nitrous acid or nitric oxide in the intracellular nucleotide pool would result in the elevation of the mutation frequency.
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PMID:Misincorporation of 2'-deoxyoxanosine 5'-triphosphate by DNA polymerases and its implication for mutagenesis. 970 96

The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is a versatile method to amplify specific DNA with oligonucleotide primers. By designing degenerate PCR primers based on amino acid sequences that are highly conserved among all known gene family members, new members of a multigene family can be identified. The inherent weakness of this approach is that the degenerate primers will amplify previously identified, in addition to new, family members. To specifically address this problem, we synthesized a specific RNA for each known family member so that it hybridized to one strand of the template, adjacent to the 3'-end of the primer, allowing the degenerate primer to bind yet preventing extension by DNA polymerase. To test our strategy, we used known members of the soluble, nitric oxide-sensitive guanylyl cyclase family as our templates and degenerate primers that discriminate this family from other guanylyl cyclases. We demonstrate that amplification of known members of this family is effectively and specifically inhibited by the corresponding RNAs, alone or in combination. This robust method can be adapted to any application where multiple PCR products are amplified, as long as the sequence of the desired and the undesired PCR product(s) is sufficiently distinct between the primers.
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PMID:RNA: a method to specifically inhibit PCR amplification of known members of a multigene family by degenerate primers. 1123 8

Peroxynitrite is a strong oxidizing agent that is formed in the reaction of nitric oxide and superoxide anion. It is capable of oxidizing and nitrating a variety of biological targets including DNA, and these modifications may be responsible for a number of pathological conditions and diseases. A recent study showed that peroxynitrite reacts with 2',3',5'-tri-O-acetylguanosine to yield a novel compound, tri-O-acetyl-1-(beta-D-erythro-pentafuranosyl)-5-guanidino-4-nitroimidazole, and, unlike other peroxynitrite-mediated guanine oxidation products, it is a stable and significant component formed even at low peroxynitrite concentrations. In this work, we studied the in vitro formation of the guanine-derived product, 5-guanidino-4-nitroimidazole, in synthetic oligonucleotides and DNA treated with peroxynitrite. When calf thymus DNA or oligonucleotides were reacted with peroxynitrite at ambient temperature, the modified base 5-guanidino-4-nitroimidazole was generated along with several other products. The oligonucleotides containing the 5-guanidino-4-nitroimidazole modification were purified by reverse-phase and anion-exchange HPLC and characterized by matrix-assisted laser desorption mass spectrometry. 5-Guanidino-4-nitroimidazole formation in peroxynitrite-treated DNA was characterized after enzymatic digestion of the reacted DNA to the nucleoside level. HPLC purification and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (with selected reaction monitoring) enabled the analysis of this modified nucleoside with high sensitivity. The yield of 5-guanidino-4-nitroimidazole formed in single-stranded DNA was approximately 10-fold higher than that found in duplex DNA. With calf thymus DNA, 5-guanidino-4-nitroimidazole was dose-dependently formed at low peroxynitrite concentrations. In stability tests, a synthetic oligonucleotide containing the 5-guanidino-4-nitroimidazole modification was only partially cleaved by hot piperidine and was a weak substrate for Fpg glycosylase repair enzyme; in addition, this site was not cleaved by endonuclease III. These results suggest that nuclear DNA containing 5-guanidino-4-nitroimidazole may not be quickly repaired by DNA repair enzyme systems. Finally, primer extension experiments revealed that this lesion is a potential DNA replication blocker when polymerization is catalyzed by polymerase alpha and polymerase I (Klenow fragment, lack of exonuclease activity) but not with human polymerase beta. Replication fidelity experiments further showed that 5-guanidino-4-nitroimidazole may cause G-->T and G-->C transversions in calf thymus polymerase alpha and E. coli polymerase I.
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PMID:Peroxynitrite-induced reactions of synthetic oligo 2'-deoxynucleotides and DNA containing guanine: formation and stability of a 5-guanidino-4-nitroimidazole lesion. 1204 85

Deamination of DNA bases can occur spontaneously, generating highly mutagenic lesions such as uracil, hypoxanthine, and xanthine. When cells are under oxidative stress that is induced either by oxidizing agents or by mitochondrial dysfunction, additional deamination products such as 5-hydroxymethyluracil (5-HMU) and 5-hydroxyuracil (5-OH-Ura) are formed. The cellular level of these highly mutagenic lesions is increased substantially when cells are exposed to DNA damaging agent, such as ionizing radiation, redox reagents, nitric oxide, and others. The cellular repair of deamination products is predominantly through the base excision repair (BER) pathway, a major cellular repair pathway that is initiated by lesion specific DNA glycosylases. In BER, the lesions are removed by the combined action of a DNA glycosylase and an AP endonuclease, leaving behind a one-base gap. The gapped product is then further repaired by the sequential action of DNA polymerase and DNA ligase. DNA glycosylases that recognize uracil, 5-OH-Ura, 5-HMU (derived from 5-methylcytosine) and a T/G mismatch (derived from a 5-methylcytosine/G pair) are present in most cells. Many of these glycosylases have been cloned and well characterized. In yeast and mammalian cells, hypoxanthine is efficiently removed by methylpurine N-glycosylase, and it is thought that BER might be an important pathway for the repair of hypoxanthine. In contrast, no glycosylase that can recognize xanthine has been identified in either yeast or mammalian cells. In Escherichia coli, the major enzyme activity that initiates the repair of hypoxanthine and xanthine is endonuclease V. Endonuclease V is an endonuclease that hydrolyzes the second phosphodiester bond 3' to the lesion. It is hypothesized that the cleaved DNA is further repaired through an alternative excision repair (AER) pathway that requires the participation of either a 5' endonuclease or a 3'-5' exonuclease to remove the damaged base. The repair process is then completed by the sequential actions of DNA polymerase and DNA ligase. Endonuclease V sequence homologs are present in all kingdoms, and it is conceivable that endonuclease V might also be a major enzyme that initiates the repair of hypoxanthine and xanthine in mammalian cells.
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PMID:Repair of deaminated bases in DNA. 1236

Apoptosis and necrosis represent two distinct types of cell death. Apoptosis possesses unique morphologic and biochemical features which distinguish this mechanism of programmed cell death from necrosis. Extrinsic apoptotic cell death is receptor-linked and initiates apoptosis by activating caspase 8. Intrinsic apoptotic cell death is mediated by the release of cytochrome c from mitochondrial and initiates apoptosis by activating caspase 3. Cancer chemotherapy utilizes apoptosis to eliminate tumor cells. Agents which bind to the minor groove of DNA, like camptothecin and Hoechst 33342, inhibit topoisomerase I, RNA polymerase II, DNA polymerase and initiate intrinsic apoptotic cell death. Hoechst 33342-induced apoptosis is associated with disruption of TATA box binding protein/TATA box complexes, replication protein A/single-stranded DNA complexes, topoisomerase I/DNA cleavable complexes and with an increased intracellular concentration of E2F-1 transcription factor and nitric oxide concentration. Nitric oxide and transcription factor activation or respression also regulate the two apoptotic pathways. Some human diseases are associated with excess or deficient rates of apoptosis, and therapeutic strategies to regulate the rate of apoptosis include inhibition or activation of caspases, mRNA antisense to reduce anti-apoptotic factors like Bcl-2 and survivin and recombinant TRAIL to activate pro-apoptotic receptors, DR4 and DR5.
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PMID:Apoptosis: biochemical aspects and clinical implications. 1241 95

Cellular DNA is damaged by nitric oxide (NO), a multifunctional bioregulator and an environmental pollutant that has been implicated in diseases associated with cancer and chronic inflammation. 2'-Deoxyxanthosine (dX) is a major NO-derived DNA lesion. To explore the mutagenic potential of dX, a 38-mer oligodeoxynucleotide ((5')CATGCTGATGAATTCCTTCXCTTCTTTCCTCTCCCTTT) modified site-specifically with dX at the X position was prepared post-synthetically and used as a DNA template in primer extension reactions catalyzed by calf thymus DNA polymerase (pol) alpha and human DNA pol beta, eta, and kappa. Primer extension reactions catalyzed by pol alpha or beta in the presence of four dNTPs were retarded at the dX lesion while pol eta and kappa readily bypassed the lesion. The fully extended products were analyzed to quantify the miscoding specificity and frequency of dX using two-phase polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). With pol alpha, eta and kappa, incorrect dTMP was preferentially incorporated opposite the lesion, along with lesser amounts of dCMP, the correct base. When pol beta was used, direct incorporation of correct dCMP was primarily observed, accompanied by small amounts of misincorporation of dTMP, dAMP and dGMP. Steady-state kinetic analyses supported the results obtained from the two-phase PAGE assay. dX is a miscoding lesion capable of preferentially generating G-->A mutations. The miscoding frequency varied depending on DNA polymerase used.
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PMID:Translesion synthesis past 2'-deoxyxanthosine, a nitric oxide-derived DNA adduct, by mammalian DNA polymerases. 1553 36

It has been suggested that carcinogenesis associated with chronic inflammation involves DNA damage by nitric oxide (NO) and other reactive species secreted from macrophages and neutrophils. The guanine moiety of DNA reacts with NO, yielding two major deamination products: xanthine (Xan) and oxanine (Oxa). Oxa reacts further with polyamines and DNA binding proteins to form cross-link adducts. In the present study, we characterized the structure of the cross-link adducts of Oxa with spermine (Oxa-Sp). Spectrometric analysis of Oxa-Sp adducts showed that they are ring-opened adducts of Oxa covalently bonded to the terminal amino (major product) and internal imino (minor product) groups of spermine. To assess genotoxic potential, Xan, Oxa, Oxa-Sp and an abasic (AP) site were site specifically incorporated into oligonucleotide templates. These lesions differentially blocked in vitro DNA synthesis catalyzed by DNA polymerase I Klenow fragment (Pol I Kf). The relative efficiency of translesion synthesis was G (1) > Oxa (0.19) > Xan (0.12) > AP (0.088) > Oxa-Sp (0.035). Primer extension assays with a single nucleotide and Pol I Kf revealed that non-mutagenic dCMP was inserted most efficiently opposite Xan and Oxa, with the extent of primer elongation being 65% for Xan and 68% for Oxa. However, mutagenic nucleotides were also inserted. The extent of primer elongation for Xan was 16% with dTMP and 14% with dGMP, whereas that for Oxa was 49% with dTMP. For Oxa-Sp, mutagenic dAMP (13%) was preferentially inserted. Accordingly, when generated in vivo, Xan and Oxa would constitute moderate blocks to DNA synthesis and primarily elicit G:C to A:T transitions when bypassed, whereas Oxa-Sp would strongly block DNA synthesis and elicit G:C to T:A transversions.
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PMID:Assessment of the genotoxic potential of nitric oxide-induced guanine lesions by in vitro reactions with Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I. 1584 89

Herpes simplex virus type-1 (HSV-1) and type-2 (HSV-2) are among the most "successful" pathogens and code for a variety of proteins to direct the apoptosis/necrosis responses of the cells they infect. Nitric oxide (NO) is an important intracellular signaling molecule in pathological processes. Acyclovir (ACV) is a chain terminator that targets the viral DNA polymerase as an antiviral agent. In this study, NO signals, and apoptosis/necrosis responses of HEp-2 cells were compared when infected by HSV-1 and -2 for 24 hours against non toxic doses (starting from 48.8, 24.4, 12.2, 6.1, 3 to 1.5 microg/mL) of ACV. In 48.8, 24.4 and 12.2 microg/mL of ACV, HSV-1 had an "upregulating effect" whereas HSV-2 had a "downregulating effect" on NO production, and in 6.1, 3 and 1.5 microg/mL of ACV HSV-1 had a "down-regulating effect" whereas HSV-2 had an "upregulating effect" on NO responses (HSV-1 had a "downregulating effect" on NO production whereas HSV-2 had an "upregulating effect" on NO production without any ACV). In 48.8, 24.4 and 12.2 microg/mL of ACV, HSV-1 had an "anti-apoptotic effect" whereas HSV-2 had a stimulation on "apoptotic effect", and in 6.1, 3 and 1.5 microg/mL of ACV HSV-1 had an "apoptotic effect" and HSV-2 turned to "its natural viral apoptotic effect level" (HSV-1 had an "natural viral apoptotic effect" whereas HSV-2 had a "natural viral apoptotic effect" on apoptosis response without any ACV). In 48.8, and 24.4 microg/mL of ACV, HSV-1 had significant "necrotic effect" on necrotic cellular death, "necrosis" increased in 12.2, 6.1, 3 and 1.5 microg/mL of ACV (HSV-1 had a negligible "necrotic effect" on HEp-2 cells alone), and HSV-2 had a "natural viral necrotic effect" alone; and also in all non toxic ACV concentrations. These results showed that HSV-1 and -2 had different "strategies" on apoptosis/necrosis and NO with and without non toxic ACV. These differences deserve further studies in order to explain the interactions between apoptotic/anti apoptotic, necrotic genes and NO, and ACV in HSV-1 and HSV-2 infections respectively.
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PMID:Effects of non toxic doses of acyclovir on nitric oxide and cellular death responses in herpesvirus types 1 and 2 infected hep-2 cells. 1624 Jun 92

Nitric oxide (NO) produced in inflamed tissues is known to cause DNA damage by nitrosation or oxidation of base moieties. For investigating the biophysical and biochemical properties of DNA lesions induced by nitric oxide, we prepared synthetic DNA oligomers and analyzed melting temperature (T(m)) or enzymatic recognition of DNA strands containing oxanine (Oxa) and hypoxanthine (Hyp), using guanine (Gua) or adenine (Ade) as control bases, respectively. For enzymatic reaction by DNA-relevant enzymes, we employed T4 polynucleotide kinase, T4 DNA ligase and DNA polymerase (Klenow fragment (exo-)). These analyses revealed that enzymatic recognition of Oxa:Cyt or Hyp:Thy were almost same as Gua:Cyt or Ade:Thy in DNA strands, respectively, indicative of similar molecular and biological recognition of DNA-lesions to normal DNA bases in the cell.
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PMID:Comparison of enzymatic recognition of DNA-duplexes containing NO-induced lesions by DNA-relevant enzymes. 1802 81

Nitric oxide (NO) causes DNA damage, generating xanthine (Xan, X) and oxanine (Oxa, O) from guanine (Gua, G) and hypoxanthine (Hyp, H) from adenine (Ade, A) by nitrosative oxidation. Although these NO-induced lesions have been thought to cause mutagenic problems in cellular systems, the influence of these lesions on enzymatic functions has not yet been compared systematically. In this study, we investigated the effect of NO-induced lesions on the activities of DNA-binding/recognizing enzymes such as T4 polynucleotide kinase (T4 PNK), DNA ligases (T4 DNA ligase, Taq DNA ligase) and DNA polymerases (E. coli DNA polymerase I, Klenow fragment, T4 DNA polymerase). The phosphorylation efficiencies of T4 PNK are dependent on the base type at the 5'-end of single-stranded DNA, where Oxa congruent with Hyp congruent with Gua > Xan congruent with Ade. The enzymatic reactions efficiencies of DNA ligases or DNA polymerases were observed to be dependent on the base-pairing type bound by the enzymes, where G:C > H:C > O:C > X:C and A:T congruent with H:T > O:T > X:T. These results suggested that NO-induced lesions and their base-pairs could participate in the interaction mechanisms of the DNA-binding/recognizing enzymes in a similar manner as natural nucleobases.
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PMID:Comparison of the molecular influences of NO-induced lesions in DNA strands on the reactivity of polynucleotide kinases, DNA ligases and DNA polymerases. 2009 3


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