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 oligonucleotide [5'-32P]pdT8d(-)dTn, containing an apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site [d(-)], yields three radioactive products when incubated at alkaline pH: two of them, forming a doublet approximately at the level of pdT8dA when analysed by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, are the result of the beta-elimination reaction, whereas the third is pdT8p resulting from beta delta-elimination. The incubation of [5'-32P]pdT8d(-)dTn, hybridized with poly(dA), with E. coli endonuclease III yields two radioactive products which have the same electrophoretic behaviour as the doublet obtained by alkaline beta-elimination. The oligonucleotide pdT8d(-) is degraded by the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of T4 DNA polymerase as well as pdT8dA, showing that a base-free deoxyribose at the 3' end is not an obstacle for this activity. The radioactive products from [5'-32P]pdT8d(-)dTn cleaved by alkaline beta-elimination or by E. coli endonuclease III are not degraded by the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of T4 DNA polymerase. When DNA containing AP sites labelled with 32P 5' to the base-free deoxyribose labelled with 3H in the 1' and 2' positions is degraded by E. coli endonuclease VI (exonuclease III) and snake venom phosphodiesterase, the two radionuclides are found exclusively in deoxyribose 5-phosphate and the 3H/32P ratio in this sugar phosphate is the same as in the substrate DNA. When DNA containing these doubly-labelled AP sites is degraded by alkaline treatment or with Lys-Trp-Lys, followed by E. coli endonuclease VI (exonuclease III), some 3H is found in a volatile compound (probably 3H2O) whereas the 3H/32P ratio is decreased in the resulting sugar phosphate which has a chromatographic behaviour different from that of deoxyribose 5-phosphate. Treatment of the DNA containing doubly-labelled AP sites with E. coli endonuclease III, then with E. coli endonuclease VI (exonuclease III), also results in the loss of 3H and the formation of a sugar phosphate with a lower 3H/32P ratio that behaves chromatographically as the beta-elimination product digested with E. coli endonuclease VI (exonuclease III). From these data, we conclude that E. coli endonuclease III cleaves the phosphodiester bond 3' to the AP site, but that the cleavage is not a hydrolysis leaving a base-free deoxyribose at the 3' end as it has been so far assumed. The cleavage might be the result of a beta-elimination analogous to the one produced by an alkaline pH or Lys-Trp-Lys. Thus it would seem that E. coli 'endonuclease III' is, after all, not an endonuclease.
...
PMID:Escherichia coli endonuclease III is not an endonuclease but a beta-elimination catalyst. 243 70

The characteristics of the nicks (single-strand breaks) introduced into damaged DNA by Escherichia coli endonucleases III, IV, and VI and by phage T4 UV endonuclease have been investigated with E. coli DNA polymerase I (DNA nucleotidyltransferase). Nicks introduced into depurinated DNA by endonuclease IV or VI provide good primer termini for the polymerase, whereas nicks introduced into depurinated DNA by endonuclease III or into irradiated DNA by T4 UV endonuclease do not. This result suggests that endonuclease IV nicks depurinated DNA on the 5' side of the apurinic site, as does endonuclease VI, whereas endonuclease III has a different incision mechanism. T4 UV endonuclease also possesses apurinic endonuclease activity that generates nicks in depurinated DNA with low priming activity for the polymerase. The priming activity of DNA nicked with endonuclease III or T4 UV endonuclease can be enhanced by an additional incubation with endonuclease VI and, to a lesser extent, by incubation with endonuclease IV. These results indicate that endonuclease III and T4 UV endonuclease (acting upon depurinated and irradiated DNA, respectively) generate nicks containing apurinic/apyrimidinic sites at their 3' termini and that such sites are not rapidly excised by the 3' leads to 5' activity of DNA polymerase I. However, endonuclease IV or VI apparently can remove such terminal apurinic/apyrimidinic sites as well as cleave on the 5' side of the unnicked sites. These results suggest roles for endonucleases III, IV, and VI in the repair of apurinic/apyrimidinic sites as well as pyrimidine dimer sites in DNA. Our results with T4 UV endonuclease suggest that the incision of irradiated DNA by T4 UV endonuclease involves both cleavage of the glycosylic bond at the 5' half of the pyrimidine dimer and cleavage of the phosphodiester bond originally linking the two nucleotides of the dimer. They also imply that the glycosylic bond is cleaved before the phosphodiester bond.
...
PMID:Apurinic/apyrimidinic endonucleases in repair of pyrimidine dimers and other lesions in DNA. 625 32

The ability of HeLa DNA polymerases to carry out DNA synthesis from incisions made by various endodeoxyribonucleases which recognize or form baseless sites in DNA was examined. DNA polymerase beta carried out limited strand displacement synthesis from 3'-hydroxyl nucleotide termini made by HeLa apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease II at the 5'-side of apurinic sites. Escherichia coli endonuclease III incises at the 3'-side of apurinic sites to produce nicks with 3'-deoxyribose termini which did not efficiently support DNA synthesis with beta-polymerase. However, these nicks could be activated to support limited DNA synthesis by HeLa AP endonuclease II, an enzyme which removes the baseless sugar phosphate from the 3'-termini, thus creating a one-nucleotide gap. With dGTP as the only nucleoside triphosphate present, the beta-polymerase catalyzed one-nucleotide DNA repair synthesis from those gaps which lacked dGMP. In contrast, HeLa DNA polymerase alpha was unreactive with all of the above incised DNA substrates. Larger patches of DNA synthesis were produced by nick translation from one-nucleotide gaps with HeLa DNA polymerase beta and HeLa DNase V. Moreover, incisions made by E. coli endonuclease III were activated to support DNA synthesis by the DNase V which removed the 3'-deoxyribose termini. HeLa DNase V also stimulated both the rate and extent of DNA synthesis by DNA polymerase beta from AP endonuclease II incisions. In this case the baseless sugar phosphate was removed from the 5'-termini, and nick translational synthesis occurred. Complete DNA excision repair of pyrimidine dimers was achieved with the beta-polymerase, DNase V, and DNA ligase from incisions made in UV-irradiated DNA by T4 UV endonuclease and HeLa AP endonuclease II. Such incisions produce a one-nucleotide gap containing 3'-hydroxyl nucleotide and 5'-thymine: thymidylate cyclobutane dimer termini. DNase V removes pyrimidine dimers primarily as a dinucleotide and then promotes nick translational DNA synthesis.
...
PMID:Excision repair and DNA synthesis with a combination of HeLa DNA polymerase beta and DNase V. 684 90

Endonuclease VIII, a novel presumptive DNA repair enzyme, was isolated from Escherichia coli by FPLC1 purification. The enzyme was found in strains that contained or lacked endonuclease III and was purified by radial flow S-Sepharose, Mono S, phenyl-Superose, and Superose 12 FPLC. Examination of the properties of endonuclease VIII showed it to have many similarities to endonuclease III. DNA containing thymine glycol, dihydrothymine, beta-ureidoisobutyric acid, urea residues, or AP sites was incised by the enzyme; however, DNA containing reduced AP sites was not. HPLC analysis of the products formed by exhaustive enzymatic digestion of damage-containing DNA showed that endonuclease VIII released thymine glycol and dihydrothymine as free bases. Taken together, these data suggest that endonuclease VIII contains both N-glycosylase and AP lyase activities. Consistent with this idea, DNA containing AP sites or thymine glycols, that was enzymatically nicked by endonuclease VIII was not a good substrate for E. coli DNA polymerase I, suggesting that endonuclease VIII nicks damage-containing DNA on the 3' side of the lesion. Also, since monophosphates were not released after treating thymine glycol-containing DNA with endonuclease VIII, the enzyme does not appear to have exonuclease activity. The enzyme activity was maximal in 75 mM NaCl or 5 mM MgCl2. Analysis of endonuclease VIII by both Superose FPLC and Sephadex yielded native molecular masses of 28,000 and 30,000 Da, respectively. SDS-PAGE, in conjunction with activity gel analysis, gave a molecular mass of about 29,000 Da. Furthermore, renaturation of the putative active band from SDS-PAGE gave rise to an active enzyme.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of endonuclease VIII from Escherichia coli. 811 Jul 59

Oxidative stress occurs in cells when the equilibrium between prooxidant and antioxidant species is broken in favor of the prooxidant state. It is due to reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated either by the cellular metabolism such as phagocytosis, mitochondrial respiration, xenobiotic detoxification, or by exogenous factors such as ionizing radiation or chemical compounds performing red-ox reactions. Some ROS are extremely reactive and interact with all the macromolecules including lipids, nucleic acids and proteins. Cells have numerous defence systems to counteract the deleterious effects of ROS. Proteins and small molecules specifically eliminate ROS when they are formed. There are three species of superoxyde dismutases which transform the superoxyde anion O2- in hydrogen peroxyde H2O2 which in turn will be destroyed by peroxysomal catalase or by various peroxydases. There are numerous small molecules in the cell such as glutathion, alpha-tocopherol, vitamines A and C, melanine, etc. which are antioxydant molecules. ROS escaping destruction generate various lesions in DNA such as base modifications, degradation products of deoxyribose, chain breaks. These various lesions have been characterized and it is possible to quantitate them in the DNA of cells which have been irradiated or treated by free radical generating systems. The biological properties of the bases modified by ROS have been established. For example C8-hydroxyguanine (8-oxoG) is promutagenic since, if present in DNA during replication, it leads to incorporation of dAMP residues, leading to transversion mutation (GC-->TA). Purines whose imidazole ring is opened (Fapy residues) are stops for the DNA polymerase during DNA replication and are therefore potentially lethal lesions for the cell. Oxidized pyrimidines have comparable coding properties. Efficient DNA repair mechanisms remove these oxidized bases. In Escherichia coli cells, endonuclease III (NTH protein) and endonuclease VIII (NEI protein) excise many oxidized pyrimidines, whereas the FPG protein (formamidopyrimidine-DNA-glycosylase) eliminates 8-oxoG and Fapy lesions. Besides its DNA glycosylase activity, the protein FPG has a beta-lyase activity incising DNA at abasic site by a beta-delta elimination mechanism, and a dRPase activity. The FPG protein has a zinc finger motive which is mandatory for the recognition of its substrate. Mammalian cells have similar DNA repair proteins and it should be emphazized that there is conservation of the different functions and in most cases a remarquable homology of the amino acids sequences from E. coli to man.
...
PMID:Role of DNA repair enzymes in the cellular resistance to oxidative stress. 873 95

Ionizing radiation and other free radical-generating systems induce a great variety of oxidative damage to DNA bases. The major known lesions are repaired by two well-characterized DNA glycosylases of Escherichia coli, endonuclease III (Nth) and formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase (Fpg), which have associated AP lyase activities. To detect and characterize potentially harmful oxidative base DNA lesions that may be repaired by alternative means, we exposed plasmid DNA to low doses of gamma-rays and removed the major base lesions by treatment with Nth and Fpg proteins. The closed circular DNA remaining after these treatments was used as a substrate of the UvrABC endonuclease complex from E. coli and as a template in a DNA polymerase arrest assay in vitro. The circular DNA contained lesions that were recognized and incised by the UvrABC nuclease and also lesions that blocked DNA polymerization in vitro. The blocking lesions were more abundant in DNA irradiated under nitrogen than under air and occurred mainly at tandem guanines; however, they were also frequent at tandem adenines and tandem cytosines.
...
PMID:DNA base damage induced by ionizing radiation recognized by Escherichia coli UvrABC nuclease but not Nth or Fpg proteins. 878 61

Mammalian DNA polymerase beta (pol beta) is a small (39 kDa) DNA gap-filling enzyme that comprises an amino-terminal 8-kDa domain and a carboxy-terminal 31-kDa domain. In the work reported here, crystal structures of human pol beta complexed with blunt-ended segments of DNA show that, although the crystals belong to a different space group, the DNA is nevertheless bound in the pol beta binding channel in the same way as the DNA in previously reported structures of rat pol beta complexed with a template-primer and ddCTP [Pelletier, H., Sawaya, M. R., Kumar, A., Wilson, S. H., & Kraut, J. (1994) Science 264, 1891-1903]. The 8-kDa domain is in one of three previously observed positions relative to the 31-kDa domain, suggesting that the 8-kDa domain may assume only a small number of stable conformations. The thumb subdomain is in a more open position in the human pol beta-DNA binary complex than it is in the rat pol beta-DNA-ddCTP ternary complex, and a closing thumb upon nucleotide binding could represent the rate-limiting conformational change that has been observed in pre-steady-state kinetic studies. Intermolecular contacts between the DNA and the 8-kDa domain of a symmetry-related pol beta molecule reveal a plausible binding site on the 8-kDa domain for the downstream oligonucleotide of a gapped-DNA substrate; in addition to a lysine-rich binding pocket that accommodates a 5'-PO4 end group, the 8-kDa domain also contains a newly discovered helix-hairpin-helix (HhH) motif that binds to DNA in the same way as does a structurally and sequentially homologous HhH motif in the 31-kDa domain. DNA binding by both HhH motifs is facilitated by a metal ion. In that HhH motifs have been identified in other DNA repair enzymes and DNA polymerases, the HhH-DNA interactions observed in pol beta may be applicable to a broad range of DNA binding proteins. The sequence similarity between the HhH motif of endonuclease III from Escherichia coli and the HhH motif of the 8-kDa domain of pol beta is particularly striking in that all of the conserved residues are clustered in one short sequence segment, LPGVGXK, where LPGV corresponds to a type II beta-turn (the hairpin turn), and GXK corresponds to a part of the HhH motif that is proposed to be critical for DNA binding and catalysis for both enzymes. These results suggest that endonuclease III and the 8-kDa domain of pol beta may employ a similar mode of DNA binding and may have similar catalytic mechanisms for their respective DNA lyase activities. A model for productive binding of pol beta to a gapped-DNA substrate requires a 90 degrees bend in the single-stranded template, which could enhance nucleotide selectivity during DNA repair or replication.
...
PMID:Crystal structures of human DNA polymerase beta complexed with DNA: implications for catalytic mechanism, processivity, and fidelity. 884 Nov 18

Dihydrouracil (DHU) is a DNA base damage product produced in significant amounts by ionizing radiation damage to cytosine under anoxic conditions. DHU represents a model for pyrimidine base damage (ring saturation products) of the type recognized and repaired by Escherichia coli endonuclease III and its homologs in other species. We have built this lesion into synthetic oligonucleotides, with DHU placed at a single location downstream from an E.coli RNA polymerase promoter. This construct was used to determine the effect of DHU when encountered on a DNA template strand by either E.coli RNA or DNA polymerase (Klenow fragment). Single round transcription experiments or primer extension-type replication experiments were conducted in order to make a direct comparison between RNA and DNA polymerases with DHU placed within the same sequence context. Both DNA and RNA polymerase efficiently bypass DHU and insert adenine opposite this lesion. These results suggest that DHU is mutagenic with respect to both replication and transcription and have implications for DNA repair as well the routes leading to generation of mutant proteins in dividing and non-dividing cells.
...
PMID:Escherichia coli RNA and DNA polymerase bypass of dihydrouracil: mutagenic potential via transcription and replication. 951 42

A major stable oxidation product of DNA cytosine is uracil glycol (Ug). Because of the potential of Ug to be a strong premutagenic lesion, it is important to assess whether it is a blocking lesion to DNA polymerase as is its structural counterpart, thymine glycol (Tg), and to evaluate its pairing properties. Here, a series of oligonucleotides containing Ug or Tg were prepared and used as templates for a model enzyme, Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I Klenow fragment (exo-). During translesion DNA synthesis, Ug was bypassed more efficiently than Tg in all sequence contexts examined. Furthermore, only dAMP was incorporated opposite template Ug and Tg and the kinetic parameters of incorporation showed that dAMP was inserted opposite Ug more efficiently than opposite Tg. Ug opposite G and A was also recognized and removed in vitro by the E. coli DNA repair glycosylases, endonuclease III (endo III), endonuclease VIII (endo VIII), and formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase. The steady state kinetic parameters indicated that Ug was a better substrate for endo III and formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase than Tg; for endonuclease VIII, however, Tg was a better substrate.
...
PMID:Enzymatic processing of uracil glycol, a major oxidative product of DNA cytosine. 954 49

1-(2-Deoxy-beta-D-erythro-pentofuranosyl)cyanuric acid (cyanuric acid nucleoside, dY) (1) has been shown to be formed upon exposure of DNA components to ionizing radiation and excited photosensitizers. To investigate the biological and structural significance of dY residue in DNA, the latter modified 2'-deoxynucleoside was chemically prepared and then site-specifically incorporated into oligodeoxyribonucleotides (ODNs). This was achieved in good yields using the phosphoramidite approach. For this purpose, a convenient glycosylation method involving 3,5-protected 2-deoxyribofuranoside chloride and cyanuric acid (2,4,6-trihydroxy-1,3,5-triazine) was devised. The anomeric mixture of modified 2'-deoxyribonucleosides (1/2 alpha/beta) was resolved by silica gel purification of the 5'-O-dimethoxytritylated derivatives, and then, phosphitylation afforded the desired beta-phosphoramidite monomer (5). After solid-phase condensation and final deprotection, the purity and the integrity of the modified synthetic DNA fragments were checked using different complementary techniques such as HPLC and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, together with electrospray ionization and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. The presence of cyanuric acid nucleoside in a 14-mer was found to have destabilizing effects on the double-stranded DNA fragment as inferred from melting temperature measurements. The piperidine test applied to dY-containing ODNs supported the high stability of cyanuric acid nucleoside inserted into the oligonucleotide chain. Several enzymatic experiments aimed at determining the biological features of such a DNA lesion were carried out. Thus, processing of dY by nuclease P(1), snake venom phosphodiesterase (SVPDE), calf spleen phosphodiesterase (CSPDE), and repair enzymes, including Escherichia coli endonuclease III (endo III) and Fapy glycosylase (Fpg), was investigated. Finally, a 22-mer ODN bearing a cyanuric acid residue was used as a template to study the in vitro nucleotide incorporation opposite the damage by the Klenow fragment of E. coli polymerase I.
...
PMID:Synthesis and biochemical properties of cyanuric acid nucleoside-containing DNA oligomers. 1040 3


1 2 3 Next >>