Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.7.7 (DNA polymerase)
17,007 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The sequence specificity and intensity of DNA damage induced by six peptide-tethered platinum complexes was compared to cisplatin and Pt(en)Cl(2). DNA damage was investigated in pUC19 plasmid and in intact HeLa cells, and quantitatively analyzed using a Taq DNA polymerase/linear amplification assay. The DNA sequence specificity of the peptide-platinum compounds was found to be very similar to cisplatin and Pt(en)Cl(2), with runs of consecutive guanines being the most intensely damaged sites. The observed reactivity of the peptide-platinum complexes towards plasmid DNA was lower compared to cisplatin and Pt(en)Cl(2), with the glycine-tethered complex 3 and the phenylalanine-tethered complex 4 producing the highest relative damage intensity, followed by (in decreasing order) lysine-tethered (5), arginine-tethered (6), serine-tethered (7) and glutamate-tethered (8). The reactivity of the peptide-platinum complexes towards cellular DNA was also lower compared to cisplatin and Pt(en)Cl(2). For most investigated complexes, the relative damage intensities were found to be similar in cells compared to plasmid DNA, but were greatly reduced for 3 and 4. The lysine-tethered 5 complex produced the highest DNA damage intensity in cells followed by (in decreasing order) 6, 7, 3, 4 and 8.
...
PMID:The interaction of peptide-tethered platinum(II) complexes with DNA. 1288 68

Two bacteriophages of an environmental isolate of Vibrio parahaemolyticus were isolated and sequenced. The VP16T and VP16C phages were separated from a mixed lysate based on plaque morphology and exhibit 73 to 88% sequence identity over about 80% of their genomes. Only about 25% of their predicted open reading frames are similar to genes with known functions in the GenBank database. Both phages have cos sites and open reading frames encoding proteins closely related to coliphage lambda's terminase protein (the large subunit). Like in coliphage lambda and other siphophages, a large operon in each phage appears to encode proteins involved in DNA packaging and capsid assembly and presumably in host lysis; we refer to this as the structural operon. In addition, both phages have open reading frames closely related to genes encoding DNA polymerase and helicase proteins. Both phages also encode several putative transcription regulators, an apparent polypeptide deformylase, and a protein related to a virulence-associated protein, VapE, of Dichelobacter nodosus. Despite the similarity of the proteins and genome organization, each of the phages also encodes a few proteins not encoded by the other. We did not identify genes closely related to genes encoding integrase proteins belonging to either the tyrosine or serine recombinase family, and we have no evidence so far that these phages can lysogenize the V. parahaemolyticus strain 16 host. Surprisingly for active lytic viruses, the two phages have a codon usage that is very different than that of the host, suggesting the possibility that they may be relative newcomers to growth in V. parahaemolyticus. The DNA sequences should allow us to characterize the lifestyles of VP16T and VP16C and the interactions between these phages and their host at the molecular level, as well as their relationships to other marine and nonmarine phages.
...
PMID:Genome sequences of two closely related Vibrio parahaemolyticus phages, VP16T and VP16C. 1456 79

Initiation of DNA replication requires the generation of a primer at the origin of replication that can be utilized by a DNA polymerase for DNA synthesis. This can be accomplished by several means, including the synthesis of an RNA primer by a DNA primase or RNA polymerase, by nicking of one strand of the DNA to generate a free 3'-OH end that can be used as a primer, and by the utilization of the OH group present in an amino acid such as serine within an initiation protein as a primer. Furthermore, some single-stranded DNA genomes can utilize a snap-back 3'-OH end generated due to self-complementarity as a primer for DNA replication. The different modes of initiation require the generation of highly organized DNA-protein complexes at the origin that trigger the initiation of replication. A large majority of small, multicopy plasmids of Gram-positive bacteria and some of Gram-negative bacteria replicate by a rolling-circle (RC) mechanism (for previous reviews, see Refs.). More than 200 rolling-circle replicating (RCR) plasmids have so far been identified and, based on sequence homologies in their replication regions, can be grouped into approximately seven families (Refs., and http://www.essex.ac.uk/bs/staff/osborn/DPR-home.htm). This review will focus on plasmids of the pT181 family that replicate by an RC mechanism. So far, approximately 25 plasmids have been identified as belonging to this family based on the sequence homology in their double-strand origins (dsos) and the genes encoding the initiator (Rep) proteins. This review will highlight our current understanding of the structural features of the origins of replication, and the DNA-protein and protein-protein interactions that result in the generation of a replication-initiation complex that triggers replication. It will discuss the molecular events that result in the precise termination of replication once the leading-strand DNA synthesis has been completed. This review will also discuss the various biochemical activities of the initiator proteins encoded by the plasmids of the pT181 family and the mechanism of inactivation of the Rep activity after supporting one round of leading-strand replication. Finally, the review will outline the mechanism of replication of the lagging strand of the pT181 plasmid as well as the limited information that is available on the role of host proteins in pT181 leading- and lagging-strand replication.
...
PMID:DNA-protein interactions during the initiation and termination of plasmid pT181 rolling-circle replication. 1460 11

We previously reported that cdk2 phosphorylates two serine residues near the DNA-binding domain of the YA subunit of NF-Y transcription factor and this phosphorylation is essential for DNA binding of NF-Y. In this study, we examined the effects of a phosphorylation-deficient mutant form of YA, YA-aa, in which the two serine residues are replaced with alanine, on the cell cycle and expression of the NF-Y target genes. Transient transfection assays show that YA-aa inhibits transcription from the NF-Y target promoters, such as cdc2, cyclin A, and cdc25C. Moreover, this inhibitory function of YA-aa can be suppressed by the expression of wild-type YA, implying that YA-aa inhibits transcription of those NF-Y target genes by inactivating wild-type YA. Since NF-Y target genes include the cell cycle-regulatory genes that ensure orderly progression of the cell cycle, we examined the effects of YA-aa in cell cycle progression. We constructed a recombinant adenovirus encoding YA-aa and found that YA-aa expression leads to repression of cell cycle-regulatory genes, such as cyclin A, RNR R2, DNA polymerase alpha, cdc2, cyclin B, and cdc25C. Consistently, YA-aa expression results in the inactivation of both cdc2 and cdk2. Furthermore, cell cycle analysis reveals that YA-aa induces cell cycle arrest at both G1 and G2/M. These results suggest that cdk2-dependent phosphorylation of NF-Y is essential for the expression of the cell cycle-regulatory genes and therefore for cell cycle progression at both G1/S and G2/M.
...
PMID:Cdk2-dependent phosphorylation of the NF-Y transcription factor is essential for the expression of the cell cycle-regulatory genes and cell cycle G1/S and G2/M transitions. 1506 32

The DNA polymerase from phage phi29 is a B family polymerase that initiates replication using a protein as a primer, attaching the first nucleotide of the phage genome to the hydroxyl of a specific serine of the priming protein. The crystal structure of phi29 DNA polymerase determined at 2.2 A resolution provides explanations for its extraordinary processivity and strand displacement activities. Homology modeling suggests that downstream template DNA passes through a tunnel prior to entering the polymerase active site. This tunnel is too small to accommodate double-stranded DNA and requires the separation of template and nontemplate strands. Members of the B family of DNA polymerases that use protein primers contain two sequence insertions: one forms a domain not previously observed in polymerases, while the second resembles the specificity loop of T7 RNA polymerase. The high processivity of phi29 DNA polymerase may be explained by its topological encirclement of both the downstream template and the upstream duplex DNA.
...
PMID:Insights into strand displacement and processivity from the crystal structure of the protein-primed DNA polymerase of bacteriophage phi29. 1554 20

Ala-114, together with Asp-113, Tyr-115 and Gln-151, form the pocket that accommodates the 3'-OH of the incoming dNTP in the HIV-1 RT (reverse transcriptase). Four mutant RTs having serine, glycine, threonine or valine instead of Ala-114 were obtained by site-directed mutagenesis. While mutants A114S and A114G retained significant DNA polymerase activity, A114T and A114V showed very low catalytic efficiency in nucleotide incorporation assays, due to their high apparent K(m) values for dNTP. Discrimination between AZTTP (3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine triphosphate) and dTTP was not significantly affected by mutations A114S and A114G in assays carried out with heteropolymeric template/primers. However, both mutants showed decreased susceptibility to AZTTP when poly(rA)/(dT)16 was used as substrate. Steady-state kinetic analysis of the incorporation of ddNTPs compared with dNTPs showed that substituting glycine for Ala-114 produced a 5-6-fold increase in the RT's ability to discriminate against ddNTPs (including the physiologically relevant metabolites of zalcitabine and didanosine), a result that was confirmed in primer-extension assays. In contrast, A114S and A114V showed wild-type ddNTP/dNTP discrimination efficiencies. Discrimination against ribonucleotides was not affected by mutations at position 114. Misinsertion and mispair extension fidelity assays as well as determinations of G-->A mutation frequencies using a lacZ complementation assay showed that, unlike Tyr-115 or Gln-151 mutants, the fidelity of HIV-1 RT was not largely affected by substitutions of Ala-114. The role of the side-chain of Ala-114 in ddNTP/dNTP discrimination appears to be determined by its participation in van der Waals interactions with the ribose moiety of the incoming nucleotide.
...
PMID:Nucleotide specificity of HIV-1 reverse transcriptases with amino acid substitutions affecting Ala-114. 1554 34

Foscarnet is widely used for the treatment of acyclovir-resistant herpesvirus infections, and foscarnet-resistant herpesvirus infections are a serious concern in immunocompromised patients. Twenty-seven single-plaque isolates of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) resistant to foscarnet were selected from foscarnet- and acyclovir-sensitive HSV-1 strain TAS by exposure to foscarnet, and the DNA polymerase genes were analyzed. The sensitivities of these mutants to foscarnet, cidofovir, S2242, acyclovir, ganciclovir, and penciclovir were determined. A single amino acid substitution, double amino acid substitutions, and a combination of a single amino acid substitution with a deletion or insertion of amino acid residues in the viral DNA polymerase were demonstrated in 21, 4, and 2 isolates, respectively. Of the 27 isolates, an amino acid substitution of serine for asparagine at amino acid position 724 in the DNA polymerase (724 S-N) was detected in 8 isolates. An amino acid substitution in conserved region II was demonstrated in these eight isolates as well as four other isolates. The mutation in the DNA polymerase responsible for resistance to foscarnet was located between the pre-IV region and conserved region V, especially within conserved region II. All the isolates were sensitive or hypersensitive to cidofovir and ganciclovir. Seven, 5, and 15 of the 27 isolates were also sensitive to S2242, acyclovir, and penciclovir, respectively. Thus, most of the foscarnet-resistant HSV-1 isolates were sensitive or hypersensitive to cidofovir and ganciclovir.
...
PMID:Genotypic characterization of the DNA polymerase and sensitivity to antiviral compounds of foscarnet-resistant herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) derived from a foscarnet-sensitive HSV-1 strain. 1567 40

DNA polymerase (Pol) lambda is a member of the Pol X family and possesses four different enzymatic activities, being DNA polymerase, terminal transferase, deoxyribose phosphate lyase and polynucleotide synthetase, all localized in its C-terminal region. On the basis of its biochemical properties, Pol lambda has been implicated in various DNA repair pathways, such as abasic site translesion DNA synthesis, base excision repair and non-homologous end joining of double strand breaks. However, its role in vivo has not yet been elucidated. In addition, Pol lambda has been shown to interact with the replication clamp proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) in vitro and in vivo. In this work, we searched by affinity chromatography for novel partners and we identified the cyclin-dependent kinase Cdk2 as novel partner of Pol lambda. Pol lambda is phosphorylated in vitro by several Cdk/cyclin complexes, including Cdk2/cyclin A, in its proline-serine-rich domain. While the polymerase activity of Pol lambda was not affected by Cdk2/cyclin A phosphorylation, phosphorylation of Pol lambda was decreased by its interaction with PCNA. Finally, Pol lambda is also phosphorylated in vivo in human cells and this phosphorylation is modulated during the cell cycle.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of human DNA polymerase lambda by the cyclin-dependent kinase Cdk2/cyclin A complex is modulated by its association with proliferating cell nuclear antigen. 1617 46

Methylobacterium dichloromethanicum DM4, a degrader of dichloromethane (DCM), was more tolerant to the effect of H2O2 and UV irradiation than Methylobacterium extorquens AM1, which does not consume DCM. Addition of CH2Cl2 to methylobacteria with active serine, ribulose monophosphate, and ribulose bisphosphate pathways of C1 metabolism, grown on methanol, resulted in a 1.1- to 2.5-fold increase in the incorporation of [alpha-32P]dATP into DNA Klenow fragment (exo-). As DCM dehalogenase was not induced in this process, the increase in total lengths of DNA gaps resulted from the action of DCM rather than S-chloromethylglutathione (intermediate of primary dehalogenation). The degree of DNA damage in the presence of CH2Cl2 was lower in DCM degraders than methylobacteria incapable of degrading this pollutant. This suggests that DCM degraders possess a more efficient mechanism of DNA repair.
...
PMID:[Effect of DNA-damaging agents on the aerobic methylobacteria capable and incapable of utilizing dichloromethane]. 1624 Jun 54

The absolute requirement for primers in the initiation of DNA synthesis poses a problem for replicating the ends of linear chromosomes. The DNA polymerase of bacteriophage phi29 solves this problem by using a serine hydroxyl of terminal protein to prime replication. The 3.0 A resolution structure shows one domain of terminal protein making no interactions, a second binding the polymerase and a third domain containing the priming serine occupying the same binding cleft in the polymerase as duplex DNA does during elongation. Thus, the progressively elongating DNA duplex product must displace this priming domain. Further, this heterodimer of polymerase and terminal protein cannot accommodate upstream template DNA, thereby explaining its specificity for initiating DNA synthesis only at the ends of the bacteriophage genome. We propose a model for the transition from the initiation to the elongation phases in which the priming domain of terminal protein moves out of the active site as polymerase elongates the primer strand. The model indicates that terminal protein should dissociate from polymerase after the incorporation of approximately six nucleotides.
...
PMID:The phi29 DNA polymerase:protein-primer structure suggests a model for the initiation to elongation transition. 1651 64


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Next >>