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)

We have examined the biophysical properties of DNA polymerase beta (beta-pol) in solution. Time-resolved and steady-state fluorescence were used to investigate the microenvironment of the lone tryptophanyl residue (Trp324), and a combination of sedimentation equilibrium, sedimentation velocity and fluorescence anisotropy decay measurements were used to study the hydrodynamic properties of the enzyme. Trp324 appears to be exposed to water as judged by the tryptophan emission and steady-state and lifetime quenching experiments. The fluorescence is easily quenched by a neutral quencher acrylamide (kq = 1.59 x 10(9)M-1S-1), and by a negatively charged ionic quencher, I- (kq = 1.60 x 10(9) M-1S-1), but not by a positively charged ionic quencher, Cs+ (kq = 0.2 x 10(9) M-1S-1). The fluorescence lifetime of beta-pol is best described by the sum of two exponentials with a longer lifetime component of 8.4 ns and a shorter lifetime component of 1.3 ns. Decay associated spectra (DAS) show emission maxima at 340 nm and at 345 nm for the shorter lifetime and longer lifetime components, respectively, with corresponding centers of gravity at 347 nm and 348 nm. Sedimentation equilibrium experiments show that the enzyme exists as a monomer at the KCl concentrations (> 0.05 M) studied in the absence of divalent metals. Zn2+ causes higher order aggregation, but no such aggregates are seen with Mg2+ and Mn2+. In the presence of 1 mM manganese, the average lifetime decreased approximately 10%, from 8.14 ns to 7.38 ns, with a concomitant increase of average rotational correlational time (phi) from 24 ns to 28 ns. The accessibility of the positively charged quencher (Cs+) to tryptophan also decreases approximately 50%, indicating alteration of the tryptophan microenvironment. By contrast, Mg2+ causes minor changes in fluorescence properties. The hydrodynamic shape of the intact enzyme and its single-stranded (8 kDa) and double-stranded (31 kDa) DNA binding domains were further investigated by sedimentation velocity measurements. The value of S0(20),W for the intact enzyme is 2.97 S, and the calculated axial ratio is 5.0. In contrast to the 8 kDa domain, which has a less asymmetric shape with an axial ratio of 2.3, the 31 kDa domain shows an elongated structure with an axial ratio of 5.5. These data suggest that the axial ratio of the intact enzyme may be the result of marked bending of the molecule at the flexible hinge region between the two domains.
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PMID:Characterization of the tryptophan fluorescence and hydrodynamic properties of rat DNA polymerase beta. 796 32

The vaccinia virus genome encodes a DNA polymerase that is similar to other DNA polymerases. A mutation in the polymerase gene at a site that is adjacent to conserved residues allows viral replication in the presence of aphidicolin. Since wild-type virus is converted to aphidicolin-resistance by site-directed mutagenesis, it was feasible that active virus with substituted conserved residues could be detected by linking alterations to the aphidicolin-resistance mutation. Altered DNA, from a PCR, was introduced into virus by a marker transfer procedure. DNA from plaques of drug-resistant virus was amplified, and the product was sequenced to check for the conserved residue alteration. An alteration that introduced a Bg1I site was designed to facilitate the selection of drug-resistant virus containing substituted residues. One positive result was the replacement of two amino acids, tyrosine and alanine, by tryptophan and threonine. The failure to substitute aspartic acid for tyrosine indicates that drastic changes of the conserved sequence are not tolerated. Although the limitations associated with negative results apply, the method provides an in vivo assay for selecting a polymerase with conserved residue changes.
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PMID:A biological method for examining the effect of codon changes in a conserved region of DNA polymerase. 813 25

Escherichia coli thioredoxin contains two tryptophan residues (Trp28 and Trp31) situated close to the active site disulfide/dithiol. In order to probe the structural and functional roles of tryptophan in the mechanism of E. coli thioredoxin (Trx), we have replaced Trp28 with alanine using site-directed mutagenesis and expressed the mutant protein W28A in E. coli. Changes in the behavior of the mutant protein compared with the wild-type protein have been monitored by a number of physical and spectroscopic techniques and enzyme assays. As expected, removal of a tryptophan residue causes profound changes in the fluorescence spectrum of thioredoxin, particularly for the reduced protein (Trx-(SH)2), and to a lesser extent for the oxidized protein (Trx-S2). These results show that the major contribution to the strongly quenched fluorescence of Trx-S2 in both wild-type and mutant proteins is from Trp31, whereas the higher fluorescence quantum yield of Trx-(SH)2 in the wild-type protein is dominated by the emission from Trp28. The fluorescence, CD, and 1H NMR spectra are all indicative that the mutant protein is fully folded at pH 7 and room temperature, and, despite the significance of the change, from a tryptophan in close proximity to the active site to an alanine, the functions of the protein appear to be largely intact. W28A Trx-S2 is a good substrate for thioredoxin reductase, and W28A Trx-(SH)2 is as efficient as wild-type protein in reduction of insulin disulfides. DNA polymerase activity exhibited by the complex of phage T7 gene 5 protein and Trx-(SH)2 is affected only marginally by the W28A substitution, consistent with the buried position of Trp28 in the protein. However, the thermodynamic stability of the molecule appears to have been greatly reduced by the mutation: guanidine hydrochloride unfolds the protein at a significantly lower concentration for the mutant than for wild type, and the thermal stability is reduced by about 10 degrees C in each case. The stability of each form of the protein appears to be reduced by the same amount, an indication that the effect of the mutation is identical in both forms of the protein. Thus, despite its close proximity to the active site, the Trp28 residue of thioredoxin is not apparently essential to the electron transfer mechanism, but rather contributes to the stability of the protein fold in the active site region.
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PMID:Replacement of Trp28 in Escherichia coli thioredoxin by site-directed mutagenesis affects thermodynamic stability but not function. 862 6

N-[(Trimethylamine-boryl-carbonyl]-L-tryptophan methyl ester and N[(trimethylamine-boryl)-carbonyl]-L-histidine methyl ester were obtained by synthesis using triphenyl-phosphine/carbon tetrachloride or dicyclohexyl-carbodiimide as coupling agents, respectively. Both agents reduced L1210 lymphoid leukemia DNA, RNA, and protein syntheses with the largest reductions occurring in DNA synthesis. Reductions in DNA synthesis appear to be mediated by inhibition of key enzyme activities (i.e., DNA polymerase a, IMP dehydrogenase, and PRPP amido transferase). These agents had little effect on in vitro L1210 DNA topoisomerase II activity at 100 microM but were able to cause synergistic increases in protein-linked DNA breaks when combined with etoposide (VP16). It was shown that these agents significantly reduced protein kinase C mediated phosphorylation of human topoisomerase II in vitro. Thus, inhibition of topoisomerase II phosphorylation may be a mechanism by which these agents and VP-16 are synergistic in causing protein-linked DNA breaks.
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PMID:Synthesis and antitumor activity of boronated dipeptides containing aromatic amino acids. 941 63

Clamp proteins confer processivity to the DNA polymerase during DNA replication. These oligomeric proteins are loaded onto DNA by clamp loader protein complexes in an ATP-dependent manner. The mechanism by which the trimeric bacteriophage T4 clamp protein (the 45 protein) loads and dissociates from DNA was investigated as a function of its intersubunit protein-protein interactions. These interactions were continuously monitored using a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) based assay. A cysteine mutant of the 45 protein was constructed to facilitate site-specific incorporation of a fluorescent probe at the subunit interface. This site was chosen such that FRET was observed between the introduced fluorescent probe and a tryptophan residue located on the opposing subunit. By use of this fluorescently labeled 45 protein, it was possible to obtain an estimate of an apparent trimer dissociation constant from either a cooperative (0.08 +/- 0.04 microM2 at 25 degrees C) or a noncooperative (0.51 microM and 0.17 microM at 25 degrees C) model. Upon mixing the fluorescently labeled 45 protein with a 45 protein containing 4-fluorotryptophan, a nonfluorescent tryptophan analogue, subunit exchange between the two variants of the 45 protein was observed according to a reduction in intersubunit FRET. Subunit exchange rate constants measured in the presence or absence of the clamp loader (44/62 complex), the polymerase (43 protein), and/or a primer template DNA substrate demonstrate (a) that the 45 protein is not loaded onto DNA by subunit exchange and (b) that the disassembly dissociation of a stalled holoenzyme from DNA is dictated by 45 protein subunit dissociation.
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PMID:Clamp subunit dissociation dictates bacteriophage T4 DNA polymerase holoenzyme disassembly. 948 7

We previously described a general mutator form of mammalian DNA polymerase beta containing a cysteine substitution for tyrosine 265. Residue 265 localizes to a hydrophobic hinge region predicted to mediate a polymerase conformational change that may aid in nucleotide selectivity. In this study we tested the hypothesis that van der Waals and hydrophobic contacts between Y265 and neighboring residues are important for DNA synthesis fidelity and catalysis, by altering interactions in the hinge domain via substitution at position 265. Consistent with the importance of hydrophobic interactions, we found that phenylalanine, leucine, and tryptophan substitutions did not alter significantly the steady-state catalytic efficiency of DNA synthesis, relative to wild type, while the polar serine substitution decreased catalytic efficiency 6-fold. However, we found that all substitutions other than phenylalanine increased the error frequency, relative to wild type, in the order serine > tryptophan = leucine. Therefore, maintenance of the hydrophobicity of residue 265 was not sufficient for maintaining fidelity of DNA synthesis. We conclude that while hydrophobic interactions in the hinge domain are important for fidelity, additional factors such as electrostatic and van der Waals interactions contributed by the tyrosine 265 aromatic ring are required to retain wild-type fidelity.
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PMID:Hydrophobic interactions in the hinge domain of DNA polymerase beta are important but not sufficient for maintaining fidelity of DNA synthesis. 1098 85

The effect of mutations in the highly conserved Y-GG/A motif of B-type DNA polymerases was studied in the DNA polymerase from the hyperthermophilic euryarchaeon Thermococcus aggregans. This motif plays a critical role in the balance between the synthesis and degradation of the DNA chain. Five different mutations of the tyrosine at position 387 (Tyr387-->Phe, Tyr387-->Trp, Tyr387-->His, Tyr387-->Asn and Tyr387-->Ser) revealed that an aromatic ring system is crucial for the synthetic activity of the enzyme. Amino acids at this position lacking the ring system (Ser and Asn) led to a significant decrease in polymerase activity and to enhanced exonuclease activity, which resulted in improved enzyme fidelity. Exchange of tyrosine to phenylalanine, tryptophan or histidine led to phenotypes with wild-type-like fidelity but enhanced PCR performance that could be related to a higher velocity of polymerisation. With the help of a modelled structure of T.aggregans DNA polymerase, the biochemical data were interpreted proposing that the conformation of the flexible loop containing the Y-GG/A motif is an important factor for the equilibrium between DNA polymerisation and exonucleolysis.
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PMID:PCR performance of the B-type DNA polymerase from the thermophilic euryarchaeon Thermococcus aggregans improved by mutations in the Y-GG/A motif. 1102 70

Postreplication DNA repair (PRR) in UV-irradiated Escherichia coli WP2 uvrA (tryptophan-dependent strain) and K12 AB1886 uvrA6 pre-irradiated by gamma-rays in low doses (radioadaptation, the first stress effect) has been investigated. PRR was found to be more effective after incubation in the growth medium (for 45-60 min) than in non-radioadapted cells: the repair of postreplication gaps increased by 6-15%. If cells of WP2 uvrA strain were incubated after UV-irradiation in media lacking tryptophan or casamin acids (the second stress effect), PRR was seen to increase as early as within 15 min of incubation and it is more effective than at the first stress. After a 30-60 min incubation the double stress effect leads to an increase in postreplication gap repair by 23-45%. In this case almost all the gaps prove to be repaired. The second stress alone exerts no influence on PPR efficiency. It is supposed that a preliminary radioadaptation may stimulate synthesis of a protein (proteins) of the SOS-response (presumably DNA polymerase V). The second stress effect apparently induces synthesis of an unknown factor (or depreesses synthesis of a MmrA-like protein), and this in cooperation with a protein newly synthesized during radioadaptation significantly increases the efficiency of PPR.
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PMID:[Radioadaptive enhancement of the repair of UV-induced postreplication gaps in Escherichia coli DNA]. 1188 Nov 56

Although the use of 2-aminopurine (2-AP) as a probe in stopped-flow analyses of DNA polymerase beta (Pol beta) had provided important mechanistic insight, the conditions used were limited by the location of 2-AP and the use of a combination of tryptophan (Trp) and 2-AP fluorescence. This study examined different DNA substrates to identify several factors that can affect the observed signal in stopped-flow experiments. Both Trp and 2-AP emissions were separately excited and monitored. It was found that both probes show a fast phase and a slow phase of fluorescence changes, but the direction and the amplitude vary greatly between the two probes and between different DNA substrates. Detailed analyses suggested that the location of 2-AP in the template has a significant impact on the fluorescence properties of 2-AP and that a location opposite the incoming dNTP, which has been used in all such studies in the past, is not optimal. In particular, the results show that placing 2-AP one base after the templating base greatly enhances the signal intensity, which suggests a significant change in base stacking interactions at this position during nucleotide incorporation. These results allowed us to derive an improved set of conditions which were then used to reevaluate results from previous reports. It also allows greater freedom in the type of base pairs studied, since 2-AP is not the templating base in the nascent base pair. Kinetic constants were determined for dNTP and catalytic Mg(2+). The results obtained from stopped-flow experiments were compared to results from chemical quench. Stopped flow of incorrect dNTP incorporation and the reverse reaction are also reported, which provide useful information to the mechanism of Pol beta.
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PMID:Use of 2-aminopurine and tryptophan fluorescence as probes in kinetic analyses of DNA polymerase beta. 1222 Jan 88

DNA polymerase (pol) beta is a two-domain DNA repair enzyme that undergoes structural transitions upon binding substrates. Crystallographic structures indicate that these transitions include movement of the amino-terminal 8-kDa lyase domain relative to the 31-kDa polymerase domain. Additionally, a polymerase subdomain moves toward the nucleotide-binding pocket after nucleotide binding, resulting in critical contacts between alpha-helix N and the nascent base pair. Kinetic and structural characterization of pol beta has suggested that these conformational changes participate in stabilizing the ternary enzyme-substrate complex facilitating chemistry. To probe the microenvironment and dynamics of both the lyase domain and alpha-helix N in the polymerase domain, the single native tryptophan (Trp-325) of wild-type enzyme was replaced with alanine, and tryptophan was strategically substituted for residues in the lyase domain (F25W/W325A) or near the end of alpha-helix N (L287W/W325A). Influences of substrate on the fluorescence anisotropy decay of these single tryptophan forms of pol beta were determined. The results revealed that the segmental motion of alpha-helix N was rapid ( approximately 1 ns) and far more rapid than the step that limits chemistry. Binding of Mg(2+) and/or gapped DNA did not cause a noticeable change in the rotational correlation time or angular amplitude of tryptophan in alpha-helix N. More important, binding of a correct nucleotide significantly limited the angular range of the nanosecond motion within alpha-helix N. In contrast, the segmental motion of the 8-kDa domain was "frozen" upon DNA binding alone, and this restriction did not increase further upon nucleotide binding. The dynamics of alpha-helix N are discussed from the perspective of the "open" to "closed" conformational change of pol beta deduced from crystallography, and the results are more generally discussed in the context of reaction cycle-regulated flexibility for proteins acting as molecular motors.
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PMID:Rapid segmental and subdomain motions of DNA polymerase beta. 1245 21


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