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)
Methylating carcinogens and cytostatic drugs induce different methylation products in DNA. In cells not expressing the repair protein MGMT or expressing it at a low level, O6-methylguanine is the major genotoxic, recombinogenic, and apoptotic lesion. Genotoxicity and apoptosis triggered by O6-methylguanine require mismatch repair (MMR). In cells expressing O6-methylguanine-DNA methyl transferase (MGMT) at a high level or for agents producing low amounts of O6-methylguanine, N-alkylations become the major genotoxic lesions. N-Alkylations are repaired by base excision repair (BER). In mammalian cells, naturally occurring mutants of BER have not been detected, which points to the importance of BER for viability. In order to ascertain the role of BER in cellular defense, BER was modulated either by transfection or mutational inactivation. It has been shown that overexpression of N-methylpurine-DNA glycosylase (MPG) does not protect, but rather sensitizes cells to SN2 agents. This has been interpreted in terms of an imbalance in BER. Regarding abasic site endonuclease (APE), transient but not stable overexpression of the enzyme was achieved upon transfection in CHO cells, which indicates that unphysiologic APE levels are not tolerated by the cell. Besides the repair function, APE (alias
Ref-1
) exerts redox capability by which the activity of various transcription factors is modulated. Therefore, it is possible that stable overexpression of mammalian APE impairs transcriptional regulation of genes, whereas transient overexpression may exert some protective effect.
DNA polymerase beta
(Pol beta) transfection was ineffective in conferring resistance to methylmethane sulfonate (MMS). On the other hand, Pol beta-deficient cells proved to be highly sensitive to methylation-induced chromosomal aberrations and reproductive cell death. The dramatic hypersensitivity in the killing response is largely due to induction of apoptosis. Obviously, nonrepaired BER intermediates are clastogenic and act as a strong trigger of the apoptotic pathway. The elements of this pathway are currently under investigation.
...
PMID:BER, MGMT, and MMR in defense against alkylation-induced genotoxicity and apoptosis. 1155 12
The glycolipid galactosyldiacylglycerol (GDG), containing C16:0 and C18:1 fatty acids, was isolated from the sea alga Petalonia bingbamiae as a potent inhibitor of the activities of mammalian
DNA polymerase alpha
(pol. alpha). GDG, however, had no effect on pol. alpha from a fish or a higher plant. The inhibition of pol. alpha by GDG was dose-dependent with an IC50 value of 54 microM. The compound did not influence the activities of other replicative DNA polymerases such as mammalian pol. delta, or repair-related enzymes such as mammalian pol. beta. GDG also did not influence the activities of prokaryotic DNA polymerases such as the
Klenow fragment
of
DNA polymerase I
, T4
DNA polymerase
,
Taq DNA polymerase
, DNA polymerases from the higher plant, cauliflower, or DNA metabolic enzymes such as calf thymus terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase, human immunodeficiency virus type 1 reverse transcriptase and
deoxyribonuclease
1. Kinetic analysis of the compound showed that pol. alpha was non-competitively inhibited with respect to both the DNA template and the nucleotide substrate. In this study, we demonstrated the structure-function relationship in the selective inhibition of pol. alpha by the glycolipid group.
...
PMID:Galactosyldiacylglycerol, a mammalian DNA polymerase alpha-specific inhibitor from a sea alga, Petalonia bingbamiae. 1155 81
To understand the mechanism involved in the coordination of the sequential repair reactions that lead to long-patch BER, we have investigated interactions between proteins involved in this pathway. We find that human
AP endonuclease 1
(
APE1
) physically interacts with flap endonuclease 1 (FEN1) and with proliferating cell nuclear antigen. An oligonucleotide substrate containing a reduced abasic site, which was pre-incised with
APE1
, was employed to reconstitute the excision step of long-patch BER with purified human
DNA polymerase beta
and FEN1. We demonstrate that addition of
APE1
to the excision reaction mixture slightly (1.5-2-fold) stimulates the removal of the displaced flap by FEN1. These results suggest the possibility that long-patch BER is coordinated and directed by protein-protein interactions.
...
PMID:Interaction of human AP endonuclease 1 with flap endonuclease 1 and proliferating cell nuclear antigen involved in long-patch base excision repair. 1160 88
Many types of DNA damage induce a cellular response that inhibits replication but allows repair by up-regulating the p53 pathway and inducing p21(Cip1, Waf1, Sdi1). The p21 regulatory protein can bind proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and prohibit DNA replication. We show here that p21 also inhibits PCNA stimulation of long patch base excision repair (BER) in vitro. p21 disrupts PCNA-directed stimulation of flap endonuclease 1 (FEN1), DNA ligase I, and DNA polymerase delta. The dilemma is to understand how p21 prevents DNA replication but allows BER in vivo. Differential regulation by p21 is likely to relate to the utilization of
DNA polymerase beta
, which is not sensitive to p21, in the repair pathway. We have also found that
apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease
1 (APE1) stimulates long patch BER. Furthermore, neither APE1 activity nor its ability to stimulate long patch BER is significantly affected by p21 in vitro. We propose that APE1 serves as an assembly and coordination factor for long patch BER proteins. APE1 initially cleaves the DNA and then facilitates the sequential binding and catalysis by
DNA polymerase beta
, DNA polymerase delta, FEN1, and DNA ligase I. This model implies that BER can be regulated differentially, based upon the assembly of relevant proteins around APE1 in the presence or absence of PCNA.
...
PMID:Regulatory roles of p21 and apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 in base excision repair. 1164 13
X-ray repair cross-complementing gene I protein (XRCC1) in complex with
DNA polymerase beta
, DNA ligase III, and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase is important in the base excision repair process. Previously, we isolated camptothecin (CPT)-resistant cell lines (KB100 and KB300) from the human epidermoid carcinoma cell line KB by exposure to CPT. From these CPT-resistant cell lines, their revertants (KB100(rev) and KB300(rev)), which lost most of their CPT-resistant phenotype during passage in the absence of CPT, were established. In this study, we found the expression levels of XRCC1 protein in KB100 and KB300 were > or =5-fold more than in their respective revertant cell lines, whereas there was no difference in the expression of XRCC1-associated proteins such as
DNA polymerase beta
, DNA ligase III, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, and
apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease
. The degree of CPT resistance was relatively correlated with the XRCC1 protein amount. We also found XRCC1 gene amplification in CPT-resistant KB100 and KB300 cell lines. To confirm a correlation between overexpression of XRCC1 and CPT resistance, we transfected the XRCC1 gene into KB100(rev) and obtained two different transfected cell lines (clones 14 and 16). The expression levels of XRCC1 in the transfected cell lines were higher than in KB100(rev) but lower than in KB100 with no difference in XRCC1-associated protein expression levels. Resistance to CPT in transfected cell lines was 2-2.5-fold higher than in KB100(rev) in regard to growth inhibition and 4-fold higher with respect to clonogenicity. Transfected cell lines also showed increased resistance to other topoisomerase I poisons. However, the cytotoxicity of VP-16 and cisplatin was similar in both the transfected cells and KB100(rev). Similar to our CPT-resistant cell lines, the resistance of transfected cell lines was reversed by treatment with 3-aminobenzamide. These results indicate that CPT resistance in our cells could be partly attributable to the overexpression of XRCC1.
...
PMID:X-ray repair cross-complementing gene I protein plays an important role in camptothecin resistance. 1180 96
Human
apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease
(APE1) is an essential enzyme in DNA base excision repair that cuts the DNA backbone immediately adjacent to the 5' side of abasic sites to facilitate repair synthesis by
DNA polymerase beta
(ref. 1). Mice lacking the murine homologue of APE1 die at an early embryonic stage. Here we report that APE1 has a DNA exonuclease activity on mismatched deoxyribonucleotides at the 3' termini of nicked or gapped DNA molecules. The efficiency of this activity is inversely proportional to the gap size in DNA. In a base excision repair system reconstituted in vitro, the rejoining of nicked mismatched DNA depended on the presence of APE1, indicating that APE1 may increase the fidelity of base excision repair and may represent a new 3' mispaired DNA repair mechanism. The exonuclease activity of APE1 can remove the anti-HIV nucleoside analogues 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine and 2',3'-didehydro-2', 3'-dideoxythymidine from DNA, suggesting that APE1 might have an impact on the therapeutic index of antiviral compounds in this category.
...
PMID:An exonucleolytic activity of human apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease on 3' mispaired DNA. 1183 24
A binary system of photoaffinity reagents for selective affinity labeling of DNA polymerases has been developed. The photoreactive probe was formed in nuclear extract, using an end-labeled oligonucleotide containing a synthetic abasic site. This site was incised by
apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease
and then dNMPs carrying a photoreactive adduct were added to the 3(') hydroxyl using base-substituted arylazido derivatives of dUTP or dCTP. This results in the synthesis of photoreactive base excision repair (BER) intermediates. The photoreactive group was then activated, either directly (UV light exposure 320nm) or in the presence of the sensitizer of dTTP analog containing a pyrene group (Pyr-dUTP) under UV light 365nm.
DNA polymerase beta
was the main target crosslinked by photoreactive BER intermediates in this nuclear extract. In contrast, several proteins were labeled under the conditions of direct activation of arylazido group.
...
PMID:Photoaffinity labeling of proteins in bovine testis nuclear extract. 1235 11
In according with the mechanism for an adaptive response (AR) offered in [Bodnarchuk I.A.//Radiat. biologiya. Radioecologiya. 2002. V. 42. No. 1. P. 36-43], the low-dose irradiation of mammalian cells leads to the activation of such enzymes as Ras, ceramid-activated protein kinase, phospholipase C (PL C) and phosphatidilinostol 3-kinase (PI 3-K). All of them initiate apoptosis and eliminate the most radiosensitive cells form the population before the damaging irradiation. The function of PL C and PI 3-K accompanied by protein kinase C (PK C) activation. PK C activates transcription of the poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase (PARP) gene and
DNA polymerase beta
gene, and makes posttranslation activation of
apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease
APE, which are participating in the base excision repair (BER). PK C, APE and PARP activate the transcription factor p53, PK C and APE also activate the transcription factor AP-1, AP-1 and p53 take part in the initiation of nucleotide excision reapir (NER). The function of BER, NER and p53 after the damaging irradiation is accompanied by the G1-arrest of cell cycle progression. During G1-arrest there is p53-dependent activation of nonhomologous ends joining (NHEJ) and the inhibition of homologous recombination repair (HRR) of the DNA double-strand breaks takes place. Passing through the NHEJ the cells will outgo from G1-arrest and follow by HRR. AP-1 takes part in outgoing of cells from G1-arrest. So, the preliminary low-dose irradiation causes the decrease of quantity of cells died apoptotically after damaging irradiation as a result of inability to overcome G1-arrest. Thus, AR is the combination of processes: the removal of radiosensitive subpopulation of cells, and/or the activation of DNA repair, and/or the increase of cells ability to overcome the cell cycle delay.
...
PMID:[Analysis of the role of DNA repair, regulation of cell cycle and apoptosis in the radiation-induced adaptive response of mammalian cells]. 1267 54
The majority of DNA in eukaryotic cells exists in the highly condensed structural hierarchy of chromatin, which presents a challenge to DNA repair enzymes in that recognition, incision, and restoration of the original sequence at most sites must take place within these structural constraints. To test base excision repair (BER) activities on chromatin substrates, an in vitro system was developed that uses human uracil DNA glycosylase (UDG), apyrimidinic/
apurinic endonuclease
(
APE
), and
DNA polymerase beta
(pol beta) on homogeneously damaged, rotationally positioned DNA in nucleosomes. We find that UDG and
APE
carry out their combined catalytic activities with reduced efficiency on nucleosome substrates ( approximately 10% of that on naked DNA). Furthermore, these enzymes distinguish between two different rotational settings of the lesion on the histone surface, showing a 2- to 3-fold difference in activity between uracil facing "toward" and "away from" the histones. However, UDG and
APE
will digest such substrates to completion in a concentration-dependent manner. Conversely, the synthesis activity of pol beta is inhibited completely by nucleosome substrates and is independent of enzyme concentration. These results suggest that the first two steps of BER, UDG and
APE
, may occur "unassisted" in chromatin, whereas downstream factors in this pathway (i.e., pol beta) may require nucleosome remodeling for efficient DNA BER in at least some regions of chromatin in eukaryotic cells.
...
PMID:Suppressed catalytic activity of base excision repair enzymes on rotationally positioned uracil in nucleosomes. 1279 67
The major abasic endonuclease of human cells, Ape1 protein, is a multifunctional enzyme with critical roles in base excision repair (BER) of DNA. In addition to its primary activity as an
apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease
in BER, Ape1 also possesses 3'-phosphodiesterase, 3'-phosphatase, and 3'-->5'-exonuclease functions specific for the 3' termini of internal nicks and gaps in DNA. The exonuclease activity is enhanced at 3' mismatches, which suggests a possible role in BER for Ape1 as a proofreading activity for the relatively inaccurate
DNA polymerase beta
. To elucidate this role more precisely, we investigated the ability of Ape1 to degrade DNA substrates that mimic BER intermediates. We found that the Ape1 exonuclease is active at both mismatched and correctly matched 3' termini, with preference for mismatches. In our hands, the exonuclease activity of Ape1 was more active at one-nucleotide gaps than at nicks in DNA, even though the latter should represent the product of repair synthesis by polymerase beta. However, the exonuclease activity was inhibited by the presence of nearby 5'-incised abasic residues, which result from the
apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease
activity of Ape1. The same was true for the recently described exonuclease activity of Escherichia coli endonuclease IV. Exonuclease III, the E. coli homolog of Ape1, did not discriminate among the different substrates. Removal of the 5' abasic residue by polymerase beta alleviated the inhibition of the Ape1 exonuclease activity. These results suggest roles for the Ape1 exonuclease during BER after both DNA repair synthesis and excision of the abasic deoxyribose-5-phosphate by polymerase beta.
...
PMID:Modulation of the 3'-->5'-exonuclease activity of human apurinic endonuclease (Ape1) by its 5'-incised Abasic DNA product. 1285 37
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>