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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)
The large fragment of
DNA polymerase I
, isolated from Bacillus stearothermophilus, was used for dideoxy sequencing. This heat-stable enzyme permits performing sequencing reactions at high temperature to melt secondary structure and results in uniform band intensities and low background on the autoradiogram. The enzyme can be used in the standard Sanger one-step protocol or in a two-step protocol which separates the labeling reaction from the elongation-termination reaction. The enzyme can be used in double-stranded sequencing. 35S-labeled nucleotides may be used instead of 32P-labeled nucleotides. Both 7-deaza-dGTP and
dITP
can be used during the reaction in order to minimize band compression on the gel. Results presented here indicate that this enzyme should be a useful tool for sequence determination.
...
PMID:Sequencing with the large fragment of DNA polymerase I from Bacillus stearothermophilus. 177 56
A chemically modified phage T7
DNA polymerase
has three properties that make it ideal for DNA sequencing by the chain-termination method. The enzyme is highly processive, catalyzing the polymerization of thousands of nucleotides without dissociating. By virtue of the modification the 3' to 5' exonuclease activity is eliminated. The modified polymerase efficiently uses nucleotide analogs that increase the electrophoretic resolution of bands in gels. Consequently, dideoxynucleotide-terminated fragments have highly uniform radioactive intensity throughout the range of a few to thousands of nucleotides in length. There is virtually no background due to terminations at pause sites or secondary-structure impediments. Processive synthesis with
dITP
in place of dGTP eliminates band compressions, making possible the unambiguous determination of sequences from a single orientation.
...
PMID:DNA sequence analysis with a modified bacteriophage T7 DNA polymerase. 347 23
The influence of the stability of base pairs formed by nearest-neighbor nucleotides on misincorporation frequency has been studied with the large fragment of
DNA polymerase I
, the alternating DNA copolymers, poly(dI-dC) and poly-(dG-dC), as template-primers, and dGTP,
dITP
, and dCTP as substrates. We have utilized the difference in thermodynamic stability between the doubly H-bonded I X C base pair and triply H-bonded G X C base pair to examine the effects of base-pair stability of both the "preceding" and the "following" nucleotides on the frequency of insertion of a mismatched nucleotide, as well as on its stable incorporation into polynucleotide. The present studies demonstrate that the stability of the base pairs formed by nearest-neighbor nucleotides affects the frequency of incorporation of noncomplementary nucleotides. Misincorporation frequency is increased when the nearest-neighbor nucleotides form more stable base pairs with the corresponding nucleotides in the template and is decreased when they form less stable base pairs. The stability of the base pair formed by a nucleotide either preceding (5' to) or following (3' to) a misincorporated nucleotide influences misincorporation frequency, but by different mechanisms. The stability of base pairs formed by preceding nucleotides affects the rate of insertion of mismatched nucleotide but does not protect the mismatched nucleotide from removal by the 3' to 5' exonuclease activity. In contrast, the stability of a base pair formed by a following nucleotide determines whether a misincorporated nucleotide is extended or excised by affecting the ability of the enzyme to edit errors of incorporation.
...
PMID:Effect of base-pair stability of nearest-neighbor nucleotides on the fidelity of deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis. 672 15
dITP
may be generated from dATP by a slow, nonenzymatic hydrolysis. While [3H]
dITP
was degraded rapidly to [3H]deoxyinosine by HeLa cell nuclear extracts, no net degradation of [3H]
dITP
was observed in the presence of physiological concentrations of ATP, apparently because the extract contained deoxynucleoside diphosphate kinase activity that regenerated [3H]
dITP
from [3H]dIDP. Isolated HeLa cell nuclei, as well as partially purified
DNA polymerase alpha
, incorporated [3H]
dITP
into DNA at 50-60% of the rate of [3H]dGTP incorporation. No rapid release of the incorporated radioactivity was observed. The molecular weight of nascent DNA containing dIMP residues, however, decreased slightly after prolonged incubation in the presence of EDTA, suggesting that a repair process is initiated in dIMP-containing chromatin. Furthermore, release of free [3H]hypoxanthine from [3H]dIMP-containing DNA was detected after incubation with nuclear extracts in the presence of EDTA, suggesting the presence of hypoxanthine-DNA glycosylase activity in HeLa cell nuclei.
...
PMID:Metabolism of dITP in HeLa cell extracts, incorporation into DNA by isolated nuclei and release of hypoxanthine from DNA by a hypoxanthine-DNA glycosylase activity. 705 Sep 10
Automated base calling algorithms are more sensitive to the quality of the DNA sequencing data than are the labor intensive visual methods of base calling. To improve this quality, data from DNA sequencing reactions have been compared in order to determine the effects of the inclusion of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). Inclusion of 10% DMSO into the reaction cocktail resolves at least one type of sequence compression. This compression may be due to the lack of ability in T7
DNA polymerase
to read through certain sequences correctly. The poor quality of these data is seen as radioactive bands or fluorescent signal peaks that have an abnormal alignment, either in the wrong order or as single bands/peaks. The inclusion of DMSO also resolves sequences where the peak signal is absent or severely diminished, leading to a "gap" in the chromatogram profile. DMSO is better than deaza-
dITP
for resolving certain compressions. Addition of DMSO is a cheaper and more efficient method for high-throughput DNA sequencing than repeating reactions with base analogs.
...
PMID:DMSO resolves certain compressions and signal dropouts in fluorescent dye labeled primer-based DNA sequencing reactions. 761 23
In nucleotide sequencing of the cDNA of the influenza virus PB2 polymerase gene by the dideoxy method using a modified T7
DNA polymerase
, Sequenase, the sequence of the promoter region, 5'-AGCGAAAGCAGG, was shown to be misread as 5'-AGCGAAACGAGG, i.e., a GC doublet at positions 8 and 9 was read in reverse. This misreading was also found both when the sequence of BsmI restriction site upstream from the PB2 promoter sequence was exchanged by that of the promoter of T7 RNA polymerase and when the downstream region was substituted with the nonstructural (NS) protein gene. These results indicated that the misreading by Sequenase was attributed specifically to the PB2 promoter region, independent of the upstream and downstream sequences. The misreading, however, did not occur when dGTP in the labeling mixture was substituted with another nucleotide analog,
dITP
. Furthermore, the reversion did not occur in the NS gene promoter region, where the nucleotide sequence was 5'-AGCAAAAGCAGG. Since the nucleotide difference between the PB2 and NS promoter regions was only at the fourth residue, i.e., G for PB2 and A for PB2 and A for NS, the G residue followed by a triplet AAA in the PB2 promoter region was suggested to be a signal responsible for the misreading by Sequenase T7
DNA polymerase
. The findings warns of possible misreading in determining DNA sequences, in addition to compression of the sequencing ladder.
...
PMID:Reverse misreading of a GC doublet by the modified T7 DNA polymerase, Sequenase. 797 72
Analysis of two mutations affecting nucleotide selection by the
DNA polymerase
from bacteriophage T7 is reported here. Two conserved residues (Glu480 and Tyr530) in the polymerase active site of an exonuclease deficient (exo-) T7
DNA polymerase
were mutated using site-directed mutagenesis (Glu480-Asp and Tyr530-Phe). The kinetic and equilibrium constants governing DNA binding, nucleotide incorporation, and pyrophosphorolysis were measured with the mutants E480D(exo-) and Y530F(exo-) in single-turnover experiments using rapid chemical quench-flow methods. Both mutants have slightly lower Kd values for DNA binding compared to that of wild-type(exo-). With Y530F(exo-) the ground state nucleotide binding affinity was unchanged from wild-type for dGTP and dCTP, was 2-fold lower for dATP and 8-10-fold lower for dTTP binding. With E480D(exo-), the binding constants were 5-6-fold lower for dATP, dGTP, and dCTP and 40-fold lower for dTTP binding compared to those constants for wild-type(exo-). The significance of a specific destabilization of dTTP binding by these amino acids was examined using a dGTP analog, deoxyinosine triphosphate, which mimics the placement and number of hydrogen bonds of an A:T base pair. The Kd for dCTP opposite inosine was unchanged with wild-type(exo-) (197 microM) but higher with Y530F(exo-) (454 microM) and with E480D(exo-) (1 mM). The Kd for
dITP
was the same with wild-type(exo-) (180 microM) and Y530F(exo-) (229 microM), but significantly higher with E480D(exo-) (3.2 mM). These data support the suggestion that E480 selectively stabilizes dTTP in the wild-type enzyme, perhaps by hydrogen bonding to the unbonded carbonyl. Data on the incorporation of dideoxynucleotide analogs were consistent with the observation of a selective stabilization of dTTP by both residues. Pyrophosphorolysis experiments revealed that neither mutation had a significant effect on the chemistry of polymerization. The fidelity of the mutants were examined in misincorporation assays. Both E480D(exo-) and Y530F(exo-) showed saturation kinetics with the wrong nucleotide, with binding constants of 1-3 mM compared to the estimated binding affinity of 6-8 mM with wild-type(exo-). Accordingly, both mutants showed slightly lower selectivity against misincorporation. Taken together, these results indicate that E480 and Y530 each contribute to ground state nucleotide binding and suggest that the E480 may serve to specifically stabilize the incoming dTTP of A:T base pairs to compensate for the fewer hydrogen bonds compared to G:C base pairs.
...
PMID:Mutants affecting nucleotide recognition by T7 DNA polymerase. 799 17
The ability to selectively amplify RNA in the presence of genomic DNA of analogous sequence is cumbersome and requires implementation of critical controls for genes lacking introns. The convenient approaches of either designing oligonucleotide primers at the splice junction or differentiating the target sequence based on the size difference obtained by the presence of the intron are not possible. Our strategy for the selective amplification of RNA targets is based on the enzymology of a single thermostable
DNA polymerase
and the ability to modulate the strand separation temperature requirements for PCR amplification. Following reverse transcription of the RNA by recombinant Thermus thermophilus
DNA polymerase
(rTth pol), the resulting RNAxDNA hybrid is digested by the RNase H activity of rTth pol, allowing the PCR primer to hybridize and initiate second-strand cDNA synthesis. Substitution of one or more conventional nucleotides with nucleotide analogs that decrease base stacking interactions and/or hydrogen bonding (e.g. hydroxymethyldUTP or
dITP
) during the first- and second-strand cDNA synthesis step reduces the strand separation temperature of the resultant DNAxDNA duplex. Alteration of the thermal cycling parameters of the subsequent PCR amplification, such that the strand separation temperature is below that required for denaturation of genomic duplex DNA composed of standard nucleotides, prevents the genomic DNA from being denatured and therefore amplified.
...
PMID:Selective amplification of RNA utilizing the nucleotide analog dITP and Thermus thermophilus DNA polymerase. 901 75
The role of individual intracellular (IC) loops linking transmembrane (TM) domains in P-glycoprotein (P-gp) function remains largely unknown. The high degree of sequence conservation of these regions in the P-gp family and other ABC transporters suggests an important role in a common mechanism of action of these proteins. To gain insight into this problem, we have randomly mutagenized a portion of TM2, the entire IC1 loop, TM3, the entire extracellular loop (EC2), and part of TM4, and analyzed the effect of such mutations on P-gp function. Random mutagenesis was carried out using
Taq DNA polymerase
and
dITP
under conditions of low polymerase fidelity, and the mutagenized segments were reintroduced in the full length mdr3 cDNA by homologous recombination in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain JPY201. The biological activity of mutant P-gp variants was analyzed in yeast by their ability to confer cellular resistance to the antifungal drug FK506 and the peptide ionophore valinomycin, and by their ability to complement the yeast Ste6 gene and restore mating in a yeast strain bearing a null mutation [Raymond, M., et al. (1992) Science 256, 232-4] at this locus. The analysis of 782 independent yeast transformants allowed the identification of 49 independent mutants bearing single amino acid substitutions in the mutagenized segment resulting in an altered P-gp function. The mutants could be phenotypically classified into two major groups, those that resulted in partial or complete overall loss of function and those that seemed to affect substrate specificity. Several of the mutants affecting overall activity mapped in IC1; in particular we identified a segment of four consecutive mutation sensitive residues (TRLT, positions 169-172) with such a phenotype. On the other hand, we identified a cluster of mutants affecting substrate specificity within the short EC2 segment and in the adjacent portion of the neighboring TM4 domain. Expression and partial purification of a representative subset of these mutants showed that in all but two cases, loss of function was associated with loss of drug-induced ATPase activity of P-gp. Therefore, it appears that TM domains, IC and EC loops, are structurally and functionally tightly coupled in the process of drug stimulatable ATPase characteristic of P-gp.
...
PMID:Mutational analysis of the P-glycoprotein first intracellular loop and flanking transmembrane domains. 952 54
A common problem in automated DNA sequencing when applying the Sanger chain termination method is ambiguous base calling caused by band compressions. Band compressions are caused by anomalies in the migration behavior of certain DNA fragments in the polyacrylamide gel because of intramolecular base pairing between guanine and cytosine residues. To reduce such undesired secondary structures, several modifications of the sequencing reaction parameters have been performed previously. Here, we have applied mixtures of the nucleotide analogs 7-deaza-dGTP and
dITP
instead of dGTP in the cycle sequencing reaction and in combination with varying buffer conditions. Band compressions were particularly well resolved, and reading length was optimal when a ratio of 7-deaza-dGTP:
dITP
of 4:1 was used in the in vitro DNA synthesis with AmpliTaq FS
DNA polymerase
. We conclude that the incorporation of both nucleotide analogs at these particular ratios leads to heterogeneous DNA chains that result in a reduction or elimination of intramolecular base pairing and thus a higher accuracy in the base assignment.
...
PMID:Improved cycle sequencing of GC-rich templates by a combination of nucleotide analogs. 1094 27
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