Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.7.7.7 (
DNA polymerase
)
17,007
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pyrimidine (6-4) pyrimidone photodimers are major photoproducts that have mutagenic and carcinogenic consequences. One major reason for these biological effects of (6-4) photoproducts may be base mispairing/DNA replication errors due to
hydrogen
bonding to bases opposite these damaged sites. We synthesized a modified 41-mer DNA containing a (6-4) photoproduct using a preformed building block, then employed it as a template for primer extension reactions catalyzed by
Klenow fragment
and DNA polymerases alpha, beta and delta (pol alpha, pol beta and pol delta). None of these DNA polymerases were able to bypass the (6-4) photoproduct and elongation terminated at or near the 3'-pyrimidone of the photoproduct, depending on the dNTP concentration. When a single-chain Fv (scFv) with high affinity for the (6-4) photoproduct was included in the polymerization reaction, DNA synthesis was inhibited at base positions four, six, eight or eight nucleotides prior to the 3'-pyrimidone by
Klenow fragment
, pol alpha, pol beta or pol delta, respectively. These results suggest that the scFv can bind to the template DNA containing a (6-4) photoproduct and inhibit extension reactions by polymerases.
...
PMID:Effects of a high-affinity antibody fragment on DNA polymerase reactions near a (6-4) photoproduct site. 1004 14
Exposure of human cells to ionizing radiation at the G1/S-phase border of the cell cycle leads to the production of repair patches of 3 nucleotides, representing the constitutive repair response, and very long repair patches (VLRP) of at least 150 nucleotides, representing an induced response. We examined the type of DNA damage that may signal this induced repair response using two chemicals that produce subsets of the damage induced by ionizing radiation. Treatment of cells at the G1/S-phase border with bleomycin, which produces a high proportion of DNA double-strand breaks, also leads to the production of VLRP of at least 130 nucleotides. In contrast, when cells were treated with
hydrogen
peroxide, which produces base modifications and single-strand breaks, no VLRP were observed. Thus it would appear that DNA double-strand breaks are the signal that leads to the induction of the VLRP. We also examined the relationship between the induced repair response and DNA replication. When cells are treated with hydroxyurea, under conditions that inhibit more than 98% of the DNA synthesis, prior to exposure to 5 Gy, repair patches of 3 and 150 nucleotides are found. This indicates that the longer repair patches are not a result of aberrant DNA replication. However, when cells are treated with the
DNA polymerase
inhibitor aphidicolin in combination with hydroxyurea and cytosine arabinoside, no induced long patches are found. These results indicate that
DNA polymerase alpha
, delta or epsilon is required for the synthesis of the VLRP.
...
PMID:Induced repair of DNA double-strand breaks at the G1/S-phase border. 1007 62
Direct PCR sequencing with boronated nucleotides provides an alternative to current PCR sequencing methods. The positions of boranophosphate-modified nucleotides incorporated randomly into DNA during PCR can be revealed directly by exonuclease digestion to give sequencing ladders. Cytosine nucleotides, however, are especially sensitive to exonuclease digestion and provide suboptimal sequencing ladders. Therefore, a series of 5-substituted analogs of 2'-deoxycytidine 5'-(alpha-P-borano)triphosphates (dCTPalphaB) were synthesized with the hope of increasing the nuclease resistance of deoxycytosine residues and thereby enhancing the deoxycytosine band intensities. These dCTP analogs contain a boranophosphate modification at the alpha-phosphate group in 2'-deoxycytidine 5'-triphosphate (dCTP) as well as a 5-methyl, 5-ethyl, 5-bromo or 5-iodo substitution for the 5-
hydrogen
of cytosine. The two diastereomers of each new dCTP derivative were separated by reverse phase HPLC. The first eluted diastereomer (putatively Rp) of each dCTP analog was a substrate for T7
DNA polymerase
(Sequenase) and had an incorporation efficiency similar to normal dCTP and dCTPalphaB, with the 5-iodo-dCTPalphaB analog being the least efficient. Substitution at the C-5 position of cytosine by alkyl groups (ethyl and methyl) markedly enhanced the dCTPalphaB resistance towards exonuclease III (5-Et-dCTPalphaB >5-Me-dCTPalphaB >dCTPalphaB approximately 5-Br-dCTPalphaB >5-I-dCTPalphaB), thereby generating DNA sequences that better define the deoxycytosine positions. The introduction of modified dCTPalphaB should increase the utility of direct DNA sequencing with boronated nucleoside 5'-triphosphates.
...
PMID:Synthesis of 5-substituted 2'-deoxycytidine 5'-(alpha-P-borano)triphosphates, their incorporationinto DNA and effects on exonuclease. 1010 Nov 85
Motifs for sequence specific-protein-DNA interactions, such as helix-turn-helix, zinc finger and leucine zipper, are now better understood as a result of extensive studies of three-dimensional (3D) structures of transcription factors. On the other hand, little attention has been paid to motifs for sequence nonspecific binding, namely DNA-phosphate binding. To address the question whether different transcription factors and DNA manipulation enzymes, that is enzymes that work on DNA, share a similar mode of phosphate binding, we surveyed interactions between DNA and protein module, a structural unit of a globular protein. We analyzed the modular organization of
DNA polymerase beta
and found that residues making contact with DNA phosphates were localized to five modules. Structural comparison of these phosphate-binding modules against others in transcription factors and DNA manipulation enzymes revealed that
DNA polymerase beta
, the Oct-1 POU domain, 434 Cro and the Arc repressor have a phosphate-binding module with 3D structures similar to one another. This newly detected module, the phosphate-binding helix-turn-helix (pbHTH) module, named for its function and 3D structure, interacts with DNA by (i) making
hydrogen
bonds between a DNA phosphodiester oxygen and an amino
hydrogen
of the main chain located at the N-terminus of a C-terminal alpha-helix, and (ii) making electrostatic interactions between DNA phosphates and side chains of lysine or arginine. Finding structurally and functionally similar phosphate-binding units in different transcription factors and DNA manipulation enzymes suggests that shuffling of modules is not limited to the DNA base-recognition motif. Phosphate-binding modules are apparently also shuffled in DNA-binding proteins.
...
PMID:Repetitive use of a phosphate-binding module in DNA polymerase beta, Oct-1 POU domain and phage repressors. 1022 61
Although
DNA polymerase
fidelity has been mainly ascribed to Watson-Crick
hydrogen
bonds, two nonpolar isosteres for thymine (T) and adenine (A)--difluorotoluene (F) and benzimidazole (Z) --effectively mimic their natural counterparts in polymerization experiments with pol I (KF exo-) [JC Morales and ET Kool. Nature Struct Biol, 5, 950-954, 1998]. By ab initio quantum chemical gas phase methods (HF/6-31G* and MP2/6-31G**) and a solvent phase method (CPCM-HF/6-31G**), we find that the A-F interaction energy is 1/3 the A-T interaction energy in the gas phase and unstable in the solvent phase. The F-Z and T-Z interactions are very weak and T-Z is quite unstable in the solvent. Electrostatic solvation energy calculations on F, Z and toluene yield that Z is two times, and F and toluene are five times, less hydrophilic than the natural bases. Of the new "base-pairs" (F-Z, T-Z, and F-A), only F-A formed an A-T-like arrangement in unconstrained optimizations. F-Z and T-Z do not freely form planar arrangements, and constrained optimizations show that large amounts of energy are required to make these pairs fit the exact A-T geometry, suggesting that the polymerase does not require all bases to conform to the exact A-T geometry. We discuss a model for polymerase/nucleotide binding energies and investigate the forces and conformational range involved in the polymerase geometrical selection.
...
PMID:Interaction and solvation energies of nonpolar DNA base analogues and their role in polymerase insertion fidelity. 1044 97
We investigated the behaviour of a 15mer DNA duplex, [5'd(CAGAGTCACTGGCTC)3']. [5'd(GAGCCAG)3' + 5'd(GACTCTG)3'] which contained an adenine opposite the gap. Analysis of the NMR data showed the existence of one major species, which was in equilibrium with two minor species. Their relative concentrations varied as a function of pH with a pKa of approximately 4.5. For the major species, the duplex was globally in B conformation with the central adenine stacked in the helix. The two G.C base pairs adjacent to the central adenine were well formed and a gap was present in front of this adenine. For the minor species, major structural perturbations occurred in the centre of the duplex. At neutral pH, the central adenine was involved in a G.A mismatch with G23 adjacent to the gap. Cytosine C7 was then extrahelical and no gap was observed. Under these conditions, the major neutral species corresponded to 70% of the total and the minor species to 30%. At acidic pH, the central adenine of the minor species was protonated and was involved in a G(syn).A+(anti) mismatch. The difference is that C9 is now extrahelical and G22 is implicated in the mispair. Three-dimensional models were built to initiate molecular dynamic simulations, which were in good agreement with the NMR data. Their structural stability in terms of
hydrogen
bonding and their flexibility are discussed and the biological significance for the interaction with
DNA polymerase
is evoked.
...
PMID:Solution structures of a duplex containing an adenine opposite a gap (absence of one nucleotide). An NMR study and molecular dynamic simulations with explicit water molecules. 1044 80
The
Taq DNA polymerase
is the most commonly used enzyme in DNA sequencing. However, all versions of Taq polymerase are deficient in two respects: (i) these enzymes incorporate each of the four dideoxynucleoside 5' triphosphates (ddNTPs) at widely different rates during sequencing (ddGTP, for example, is incorporated 10 times faster than the other three ddNTPs), and (ii) these enzymes show uneven band-intensity or peak-height patterns in radio-labeled or dye-labeled DNA sequence profiles, respectively. We have determined the crystal structures of all four ddNTP-trapped closed ternary complexes of the large fragment of the
Taq DNA polymerase
(Klentaq1). The ddGTP-trapped complex structure differs from the other three ternary complex structures by a large shift in the position of the side chain of residue 660 in the O helix, resulting in additional
hydrogen
bonds being formed between the guanidinium group of this residue and the base of ddGTP. When Arg-660 is mutated to Asp, Ser, Phe, Tyr, or Leu, the enzyme has a marked and selective reduction in ddGTP incorporation rate. As a result, the G track generated during DNA sequencing by these Taq polymerase variants does not terminate prematurely, and higher molecular-mass G bands are detected. Another property of these Taq polymerase variants is that the sequencing patterns produced by these enzymes are remarkably even in band-intensity and peak-height distribution, thus resulting in a significant improvement in the accuracy of DNA sequencing.
...
PMID:Structure-based design of Taq DNA polymerases with improved properties of dideoxynucleotide incorporation. 1044 20
This article reviews the literature concerning the sequence specificity of DNA-damaging agents. DNA-damaging agents are widely used in cancer chemotherapy. It is important to understand fully the determinants of DNA sequence specificity so that more effective DNA-damaging agents can be developed as antitumor drugs. There are five main methods of DNA sequence specificity analysis: cleavage of end-labeled fragments, linear amplification with
Taq DNA polymerase
, ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction (PCR), single-strand ligation PCR, and footprinting. The DNA sequence specificity in purified DNA and in intact mammalian cells is reviewed for several classes of DNA-damaging agent. These include agents that form covalent adducts with DNA, free radical generators, topoisomerase inhibitors, intercalators and minor groove binders, enzymes, and electromagnetic radiation. The main sites of adduct formation are at the N-7 of guanine in the major groove of DNA and the N-3 of adenine in the minor groove, whereas free radical generators abstract
hydrogen
from the deoxyribose sugar and topoisomerase inhibitors cause enzyme-DNA cross-links to form. Several issues involved in the determination of the DNA sequence specificity are discussed. The future directions of the field, with respect to cancer chemotherapy, are also examined.
...
PMID:A survey of the sequence-specific interaction of damaging agents with DNA: emphasis on antitumor agents. 1050 36
One mechanism for the origin of UV-induced -1 deletion mutations involves the bypass of a nonadjacent cis-syn cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer containing a single intervening nucleotide. To begin to investigate this mechanism, we required a method for obtaining a single, site-specific, nonadjacent dimer. One approach to the preparation of a nonadjacent dimer is to irradiate a DNA duplex containing a centrally located TNT sequence in which the two T's are paired to an AA sequence in an otherwise fully complementary strand. Triplet-sensitized irradiation of the duplex formed between the 13-mer d(GAGTATCTATGAG) and the 12-mer d(CTCATAATACTC) on ice gave a major product that could be reverted to the parent 13-mer by 254 nm irradiation.
Proton
NMR experiments established the major product to be the nonadjacent cis-syn cyclobutane dimer formed between the two T's of the TCT sequence. Melting temperature studies show that the nonadjacent dimer is more destabilizing to DNA duplex structure than a normal cis-syn dimer and is as stable as the parental bulged DNA duplex. The nonadjacent dimer-containing 13-mer was ligated into a 51-mer and used as a template for primer-extension studies by DNA polymerases. The nonadjacent dimer could not be bypassed by Sequenase Version 2.0 and terminated synthesis primarily prior to and opposite the 3'-T of the dimer. In contrast, approximately 30% of the dimer was bypassed by an exonuclease-deficient (exo-)
Klenow fragment
, and termination occurred primarily opposite the 3'- and 5'-T's of the dimer. Bypass of the nonadjacent dimer by exo(-)
Klenow fragment
led primarily to a single-nucleotide deletion mutation as well as small amounts of a full-length product and a four-nucleotide deletion that could be explained by a primer misalignment mechanism.
...
PMID:Preparation and characterization of DNA containing a site-specific nonadjacent cyclobutane thymine dimer of the type implicated in UV-induced -1 frameshift mutagenesis. 1052 Dec 79
Interaction of Cr(VI) and ascorbate in vitro generates Cr(V), Cr(IV), Cr(III), carbon-based alkyl radicals, COO(*)(-), (*)OH, and ascorbate radicals and induces DNA interstrand cross-links at guanines. To determine which specific Cr species and free radicals cause DNA damage, we investigated the effects of mannitol and catalase on the formation of reactive intermediates, Cr-DNA associations,
DNA polymerase
-stop sites, and 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) adducts induced by Cr(VI)/ascorbate in a Hepes buffer. EPR spectra showed that mannitol trapped reactive Cr(V), forming a stable Cr(V)-diol complex, and inhibited the radicals induced by Cr(VI)/ascorbate, whereas catalase or heat-denatured catalase enhanced the levels of Cr(V) without altering the radical signals. Mannitol markedly inhibited the retarded gel electrophoretic mobility of supercoiled plasmids and the formation of
DNA polymerase
-stop sites induced by Cr(VI)/ascorbate, but catalase did not. On the other hand, mannitol reduced only 32% of the Cr-DNA adducts induced by Cr(VI)/ascorbate, suggesting that Cr monoadducts (possibly DNA-Cr-mannitol adducts) are the major lesions generated in the Cr(VI)/ascorbate/mannitol/DNA solution. Native catalase but not heat-denatured catalase protected approximately 25% of the Cr-DNA adducts induced by Cr(VI)/ascorbate, suggesting that
hydrogen
peroxide may be involved. Mannitol could not completely inhibit the formation of 8-OHdG adducts induced by Cr(VI)/ascorbate, indicating that this DNA damage may be generated before the action of mannitol to trap Cr(V) and reactive oxygen species. Alternatively, Cr-peroxide intermediates may also lead to 8-OHdG formation to account for the incomplete prevention by mannitol. Catalase or heat-denatured catalase partially protected the formation of 8-OHdG adducts induced by Cr(VI)/ascorbate, suggesting an effect of proteins. Together, the results from this study suggest that the primary species generated during the reduction of Cr(VI) by ascorbate are hydroxyl radicals and Cr(V) species, responsible for the formation of 8-OHdG and DNA cross-links, respectively.
...
PMID:Effects of mannitol or catalase on the generation of reactive oxygen species leading to DNA damage by Chromium(VI) reduction with ascorbate. 1052 78
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10