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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 developed an in vivo selection to identify 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine (AZT)-resistant mutants of rat
DNA polymerase beta
(pol beta). The selection utilizes pol beta's ability to substitute for Escherichia coli
DNA polymerase I
(pol I) in the SC18-12 strain, which lacks active pol I. pol beta allows SC18-12 cells to grow, but they depend on pol beta activity, so inhibition of pol beta by AZT kills them. We screened a library of randomly mutated pol beta cDNA for complementation of the pol I defect in the presence of AZT, and identified AZT-resistant mutants. We purified two enzymes with nonconservative mutations in the palm domain of the polymerase. The substitutions D246V and R253M result in reductions in the steady-state catalytic efficiency (Kcat/Km) of AZT-TP incorporation. The efficiency of dTTP incorporation was unchanged for the D246V enzyme, indicating that the substantial decrease in AZT-TP incorporation is responsible for its drug resistance. The R253M enzyme exhibits significantly higher Km(dTTP) and Kcat(dTTP) values, implying that the incorporation reaction is altered. These are the first pol beta mutants demonstrated to exhibit AZT resistance in vitro. The locations of the
Asp
-246 and Arg-253 side chains indicate that substrate specificity is influenced by residues distant from the nucleotide-binding pocket.
...
PMID:3'-Azido-3'-deoxythymidine-resistant mutants of DNA polymerase beta identified by in vivo selection. 992 Sep 40
The cold-sensitive fcsA29 mutation of Escherichia coli was found to be a new type of cold-sensitive allele of the polA gene encoding
DNA polymerase I
, caused by an
Asp
(116)-->Asn change in the 5'-->3' exonuclease domain. The fcsA29 mutant showed typical polA mutant phenotypes such as UV sensitivity and unacceptability of recA mutation. Cold-sensitive growth of the mutant was suppressed by introduction of a sulA mutation, indicating that cell filamentation was due to the SOS response.
...
PMID:fcsA29 mutation is an allele of polA gene of Escherichia coli. 1019 22
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
The 3' --> 5' exonuclease activity of proofreading DNA polymerases requires two divalent metal ions, metal ions A and B. Mutational studies of the 3' --> 5' exonuclease active center of the bacteriophage T4
DNA polymerase
indicate that residue
Asp
-324, which binds metal ion A, is the single most important residue for the hydrolysis reaction. In the absence of a nonenzymatic source of hydroxide ions, an alanine substitution for residue
Asp
-324 reduced exonuclease activity 10-100-fold more than alanine substitutions for the other metal-binding residues,
Asp
-112 and
Asp
-219. Thus, exonuclease activity is reduced 10(5)-fold for the D324A-
DNA polymerase
compared with the wild-type enzyme, while decreases of 10(3)- to 10(4)-fold are detected for the D219A- and D112A/E114A-DNA polymerases, respectively. Our results are consistent with the proposal that a water molecule, coordinated by metal ion A, forms a metal-hydroxide ion that is oriented to attack the phosphodiester bond at the site of cleavage. Residues Glu-114 and Lys-299 may assist the reaction by lowering the pK(a) of the metal ion-A coordinated water molecule, whereas residue Tyr-320 may help to reorient the DNA from the binding conformation to the catalytically active conformation.
...
PMID:Mutational and pH studies of the 3' --> 5' exonuclease activity of bacteriophage T4 DNA polymerase. 1045 97
2'-5'-Oligoadenylate (2-5(A)) synthetases are a family of interferon-induced enzymes that are activated by double-stranded RNA. To understand why, unlike other DNA and RNA polymerases, they catalyze 2'-5' instead of 3'-5' phosphodiester bond formation, we used molecular modeling to compare the structure of the catalytic domain of
DNA polymerase beta
(pol beta) to that of a region of the P69 isozyme of 2-5(A) synthetase. Although the primary sequence identity is low, like pol beta, P69 can assume an alphabetabetaalphabetabetabeta structure in this region. Moreover, mutation of the three
Asp
residues of P69, which correspond to the three catalytic site
Asp
residues of pol beta, inactivated the enzyme without affecting its substrate and activator binding capacity, providing further credence to the concept that this region is the catalytic domain of P69. This domain is highly conserved among all 2-5(A) synthetase isozymes. Biochemical and mutational studies demonstrated that dimerization of the P69 protein is required for its enzyme activity. However, a dimer containing a wild type subunit and an inactive catalytic domain mutant subunit was also active. The rate of catalysis of the heterodimer was half of that of the wild type homodimer, although the two proteins bound double-stranded RNA and ATP equally well.
...
PMID:The nature of the catalytic domain of 2'-5'-oligoadenylate synthetases. 1046 85
Drug-resistant strains of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) were selected under the pressure of (S)-3-hydroxy-2-phosphonylmethoxypropyl (HPMP) derivatives of cytosine (HPMPC, cidofovir) and adenine (HPMPA) and 2-phosphonylmethoxyethyl (PME) derivatives of adenine (PMEA, adefovir) and 2,6-diaminopurine (PMEDAP). HPMPC-resistant (HPMPC(r)) and HPMPA(r) strains were cross-resistant to one another, but they remained sensitive to foscarnet (PFA), acyclovir (ACV) and the PME derivatives, while the PMEA(r) and PMEDAP(r) strains showed cross-resistance to PFA and ACV. The PMEA(r), PMEDAP(r) and PFA(r) mutants all revealed a single nucleotide change resulting in a Ser-724 to Asn mutation within the conserved region II of the
DNA polymerase
. Two HPMPA(r) clones and one HPMPC(r) clone possessed single amino acid changes in the
DNA polymerase
(HPMPA(r) clone D1, Leu-1007 to Met; HPMPA(r) clone B5, Ile-1028 to Thr; HPMPC(r) clone C3, Val-573 to Met). The HPMPC(r) clone A4 contained two mutations, Ala-136 to Thr and Arg-700 to Met. The mutation at position 136, located outside the catalytic domain of the enzyme, was not detected in other HPMPC(r) clones, suggesting that this mutation may not be responsible for the resistant phenotype. Residue 573 is located within the 3'-->5' exonuclease editing domain close to the catalytically important residues Tyr-577 and
Asp
-581. Similarly, residue 700 is located in the palm subdomain of the catalytic domain, adjacent to the
Asp
residues 717, 886 and 888 that are vital for polymerase activity. The HPMPA(r) mutations at residues 1007 and 1028, beyond the last conserved region, still fall within the thumb subdomain of the catalytic domain. The different drug-resistant mutants varied in neurovirulent behaviour, the HPMPC(r) strains showing reduced neurovirulence compared with the wild-type.
...
PMID:Resistance of herpes simplex virus type 1 against different phosphonylmethoxyalkyl derivatives of purines and pyrimidines due to specific mutations in the viral DNA polymerase gene. 1067 1
DNA polymerases contain active sites that are structurally superimposable and highly conserved in sequence. To assess the significance of this preservation and to determine the mutational burden that active sites can tolerate, we randomly mutated a stretch of 13 amino acids within the polymerase catalytic site (motif A) of Thermus aquaticus
DNA polymerase I
. After selection, by using genetic complementation, we obtained a library of approximately 8, 000 active mutant DNA polymerases, of which 350 were sequenced and analyzed. This is the largest collection of physiologically active polymerase mutants. We find that all residues of motif A, except one (
Asp
-610), are mutable while preserving wild-type activity. A wide variety of amino acid substitutions were obtained at sites that are evolutionarily maintained, and conservative substitutions predominate at regions that stabilize tertiary structures. Several mutants exhibit unique properties, including
DNA polymerase
activity higher than the wild-type enzyme or the ability to incorporate ribonucleotide analogs. Bacteria dependent on these mutated polymerases for survival are fit to replicate repetitively. The high mutability of the polymerase active site in vivo and the ability to evolve altered enzymes may be required for survival in environments that demand increased mutagenesis. The inherent substitutability of the polymerase active site must be addressed relative to the constancy of nucleotide sequence found in nature.
...
PMID:DNA polymerase active site is highly mutable: evolutionary consequences. 1080 72
Base excision repair (BER) is carried out by two distinct pathways in mammalian cells, one dependent on
DNA polymerase beta
(Polb) and the other on proliferating cell nuclear antigen (Pcna). We studied whether the Polb-dependent pathway plays an important role in BER in vivo after exposure to ionizing radiation. For this purpose, we used mouse embryo fibroblasts derived from wild-type and Polb gene knockout littermates. Both cell lines had essentially the same clonogenic cell survival and low levels of apoptosis as determined by a colony formation assay and by a change in mitochondrial membrane potential, respectively. No significant cleavage of protein kinase C delta (Pkcd) in vivo, which is a substrate for caspase 3, was detected, and intact Pkcd was retained in both cell lines for at least 72 h after irradiation. Similar significant increases in caspase 3-like activities as measured by
Asp
-Glu-Val-
Asp
(DEVD) cleaving activity in vitro were observed in both cell lines after irradiation. Radiation induced cell cycle arrest in the form of a G(2)-phase block, and G(2)/M-phase fractions reached a peak approximately 10 h after irradiation and decreased thereafter with a similar time course in both cell lines. Similar levels of chromatin-bound Pcna were observed immediately after irradiation in non-S-phase cells of both cell lines and disappeared by 4 h after irradiation. We conclude that the deficiency in Polb does not have a significant influence on the radiation responses of these cells. Together with evidence accumulated in vitro, these results strongly support the idea that the Pcna-dependent pathway predominantly acts in BER of radiation-induced DNA damage in vivo.
...
PMID:Biological response to ionizing radiation in mouse embryo fibroblasts with a targeted disruption of the DNA polymerase beta gene. 1082 52
Structures of
DNA polymerase
(pol) beta bound to single-nucleotide gapped DNA had revealed that the lyase and pol domains form a "doughnut-shaped" structure altering the dNTP binding pocket in a fashion that is not observed when bound to non-gapped DNA. We have investigated dNTP binding to pol beta-DNA complexes employing steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetics. Although pol beta has a kinetic scheme similar to other DNA polymerases, polymerization by pol beta is limited by at least two partially rate-limiting steps: a conformational change after dNTP ground-state binding and product release. The equilibrium binding constant, K(d)((dNTP)), decreased and the insertion efficiency increased with a one-nucleotide gapped DNA substrate, as compared with non-gapped DNA. Valine substitution for
Asp
(276), which interacts with the base of the incoming nucleotide, increased the binding affinity for the incoming nucleotide indicating that the negative charge contributed by
Asp
(276) weakens binding and that an interaction between residue 276 with the incoming nucleotide occurs during ground-state binding. Since the interaction between
Asp
(276) and the nascent base pair is observed only in the "closed" conformation of pol beta, the increased free energy in ground-state binding for the mutant suggests that the subsequent rate-limiting conformational change is not the "open" to "closed" structural transition, but instead is triggered in the closed pol conformation.
...
PMID:DNA structure and aspartate 276 influence nucleotide binding to human DNA polymerase beta. Implication for the identity of the rate-limiting conformational change. 1102 43
To define the active site of the 5'-3' exonucleolytic domain of the Streptococcus pneumoniae
DNA polymerase I
(Spn pol I), we have constructed His-tagged Spn pol I fusion protein and introduced mutations at residues
Asp
(10), Glu(88), and Glu(114), which are conserved among all prokaryotic and eukaryotic 5' nucleases. The mutations, but not the fusion to the C-terminal end of the wild-type, reduced the exonuclease activity. The residual exonuclease activity of the mutant proteins has been kinetically studied, together with potential alterations in metal binding at the active site. Comparison of the catalytic rate and dissociation constant of the D10G, E114G, and E88K mutants and the control fusion protein support: (i) a critical function of
Asp
(10) in the catalytic event, (ii) a role of Glu(114) in the exonucleolytic reaction, being secondarily involved in both catalysis and DNA binding, and (iii) a nonessential function of Glu(88) for the exonuclease activity of Spn pol I. Moreover, the pattern of metal activation of the mutant proteins indicates that none of the three residues is a metal-ligand at the active site. These findings and those previously obtained with D190A mutant of Spn pol I are discussed in relation to structural and mutational data for related 5' nucleases.
...
PMID:Biochemical analysis of point mutations in the 5'-3' exonuclease of DNA polymerase I of Streptococcus pneumoniae. Functional and structural implications. 1127 28
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