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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)
Human
DNA polymerase
and DNA ligase utilization for the repair of a major class of ionizing radiation-induced DNA lesion [DNA single-strand breaks containing 3'-phosphoglycolate (3'-PG)] was examined using a novel, chemically defined vector substrate containing a single, site-specific 3'-PG single-strand break lesion. In addition, the major human AP endonuclease, HAP1 (also known as APE1, APEX, Ref-1), was tested to determine if it was involved in initiating repair of 3'-PG-containing single-strand break lesions.
DNA polymerase beta
was found to be the primary polymerase responsible for nucleotide incorporation at the lesion site following excision of the 3'-PG blocking group. However, DNA polymerase delta/straightepsilon was also capable of nucleotide incorporation at the lesion site following 3'-PG excision. In addition, repair reactions catalyzed by
DNA polymerase beta
were found to be most effective in the presence of DNA ligase III, while those catalyzed by DNA polymerase delta/straightepsilon appeared to be more effective in the presence of
DNA ligase I
. Also, it was demonstrated that the repair initiating 3'-PG excision reaction was not dependent upon HAP1 activity, as judged by inhibition of HAP1 with neutralizing HAP1-specific polyclonal antibody.
...
PMID:Determination of human DNA polymerase utilization for the repair of a model ionizing radiation-induced DNA strand break lesion in a defined vector substrate. 1032 34
Repair synthesis catalysed by
DNA polymerase beta
at 1 nt gaps occurs in the main pathway of mammalian base excision repair.
DNA polymerase beta
has no exonucleolytic proof-reading ability, and exhibits high error frequency during DNA synthesis. Consequently, continuous correction of endogenous DNA damage by short-patch repair synthesis might lead to a high spontaneous mutation rate, unless subsequent steps in the repair pathway allow for selective removal of incorporation errors. We show here that both human
DNA ligase I
and III discriminate strongly between a correctly paired versus a mispaired residue at the 3' position of a nick in DNA, when assayed in the presence of physiological concentrations of KCl. The resulting delay in joining after misincorporation by
DNA polymerase beta
during gap filling could allow for removal of the mismatched terminal residue by a distinct 3' exonuclease.
...
PMID:Delayed DNA joining at 3' mismatches by human DNA ligases. 1049 67
An apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site is one of the most abundant lesions spontaneously generated in living cells and is also a reaction intermediate in base excision repair. In higher eukaryotes, there are two alternative pathways for base excision repair: a
DNA polymerase beta
-dependent pathway and a proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)-dependent pathway. Here we have reconstituted PCNA-dependent repair of AP sites with six purified human proteins: AP endonuclease, replication factor C, PCNA, flap endonuclease 1 (FEN1), DNA polymerase delta, and
DNA ligase I
. The length of nucleotides replaced during the repair reaction (patch size) was predominantly two nucleotides, although longer patches of up to seven nucleotides could be detected. Neither replication protein A nor Ku70/80 enhanced the repair activity in this system. Disruption of the PCNA-binding site of either FEN1 or
DNA ligase I
significantly reduced efficiency of AP site repair but did not affect repair patch size.
...
PMID:Reconstitution of proliferating cell nuclear antigen-dependent repair of apurinic/apyrimidinic sites with purified human proteins. 1055 61
Proliferating cell nuclear antigen is best known as a
DNA polymerase
accessory protein but has more recently also been shown to have different functions in important cellular processes such as DNA replication, DNA repair, and cell cycle control. PCNA has been found in quaternary complexes with the cyclin kinase inhibitor p21 and several pairs of cyclin-dependent protein kinases and their regulatory partner, the cyclins. Here we show a direct interaction between PCNA and Cdk2. This interaction involves the regions of the PCNA trimer close to the C termini. We found that PCNA and Cdk2 form a complex together with cyclin A. This ternary PCNA-Cdk2-cyclin A complex was able to phosphorylate the PCNA binding region of the large subunit of replication factor C as well as
DNA ligase I
. Furthermore, PCNA appears to be a connector between Cdk2 and
DNA ligase I
and to stimulate phosphorylation of
DNA ligase I
. Based on our results, we propose the model that PCNA brings Cdk2 to proteins involved in DNA replication and possibly might act as an "adaptor" for Cdk2-cyclin A to PCNA-binding DNA replication proteins.
...
PMID:A direct interaction between proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and Cdk2 targets PCNA-interacting proteins for phosphorylation. 1093 Apr 25
DNA ligase I
belongs to a family of proteins that bind to proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) via a conserved 8-amino-acid motif [1]. Here we examine the biological significance of this interaction. Inactivation of the PCNA-binding site of
DNA ligase I
had no effect on its catalytic activity or its interaction with
DNA polymerase beta
. In contrast, the loss of PCNA binding severely compromised the ability of
DNA ligase I
to join Okazaki fragments. Thus, the interaction between PCNA and
DNA ligase I
is not only critical for the subnuclear targeting of the ligase, but also for coordination of the molecular transactions that occur during lagging-strand synthesis. A functional PCNA-binding site was also required for the ligase to complement hypersensitivity of the
DNA ligase I
mutant cell line 46BR.1G1 to monofunctional alkylating agents, indicating that a cytotoxic lesion is repaired by a PCNA-dependent DNA repair pathway. Extracts from 46BR.1G1 cells were defective in long-patch, but not short-patch, base-excision repair (BER). Our results show that the interaction between PCNA and
DNA ligase I
has a key role in long-patch BER and provide the first evidence for the biological significance of this repair mechanism.
...
PMID:Interaction between PCNA and DNA ligase I is critical for joining of Okazaki fragments and long-patch base-excision repair. 1095 39
In higher eukaryotes, base excision repair can proceed by two alternative pathways: a
DNA polymerase beta
-dependent pathway and a proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)-dependent pathway. Recently, we have reconstituted the PCNA-dependent AP site repair reaction with six purified human proteins: AP endonuclease, replication factor C (RFC), PCNA, flap endonuclease 1 (FEN1), DNA polymerase delta (pol delta), and
DNA ligase I
. In this reconstituted system, the number of nucleotides replaced during the repair reaction (patch size) was predominantly two nucleotides. PCNA can directly interact with RFC, pol delta, FEN1 and
DNA ligase I
. These interactions are partly through a consensus motif, QXX(I/L/M)XX(F/H)(F/Y), found in each of the four proteins. PCNA functions as a molecular adaptor for recruiting these factors to the site of DNA repair. Two DNA-N-glycosylases among those so far cloned from human, UNG2 and MYH, are found to have the same PCNA-binding motif. Major substrates of these enzymes, a uracil opposite an adenine for UNG2 and an adenine opposite an 8-oxoguanine for MYH, are formed during DNA replication. Therefore, UNG2 and MYH may serve for replication-coupled base excision repair through the direct interaction with PCNA in the replication machinery.
...
PMID:Molecular mechanism of PCNA-dependent base excision repair. 1155 92
Three mammalian genes encoding DNA ligases--LIG1, LIG3, and LIG4--have been identified. Genetic, biochemical, and cell biology studies indicate that the products of each of these genes play a unique role in mammalian DNA metabolism. Interestingly, cell lines deficient in either
DNA ligase I
(46BR.1G1) or DNA ligase III (EM9) are sensitive to simple alkylating agents. One interpretation of these observations is that DNA ligases I and III participate in functionally distinct base excision repair (BER) subpathways. In support of this idea, extracts from both DNA ligase-deficient cell lines are defective in catalyzing BER in vitro and both DNA ligases interact with other BER proteins.
DNA ligase I
interacts directly with proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and
DNA polymerase beta
(Pol beta), linking this enzyme with both short-patch and long-patch BER. In somatic cells, DNA ligase III alpha forms a stable complex with the DNA repair protein Xrcc1. Although Xrcc1 has no catalytic activity, it also interacts with Pol beta and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), linking DNA ligase III alpha with BER and single-strand break repair, respectively. Biochemical studies suggest that the majority of short-patch base excision repair events are completed by the DNA ligase III alpha/Xrcc1 complex. Although there is compelling evidence for the participation of PARP in the repair of DNA single-strand breaks, the role of PARP in BER has not been established.
...
PMID:Completion of base excision repair by mammalian DNA ligases. 1155 94
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
In mammalian cells, repair of the most abundant endogenous premutagenic lesion in DNA, 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG), is initiated by the bifunctional DNA glycosylase OGG1. By using purified human proteins, we have reconstituted repair of 8-oxoG lesions in DNA in vitro on a plasmid DNA substrate containing a single 8-oxoG residue. It is shown that efficient and complete repair requires only hOGG1, the AP endonuclease HAP1,
DNA polymerase
(Pol) beta and
DNA ligase I
. After glycosylase base removal, repair occurred through the AP lyase step of hOGG1 followed by removal of the 3'-terminal sugar phosphate by the 3'-diesterase activity of HAP1. Addition of PCNA had a slight stimulatory effect on repair. Fen1 or high concentrations of Pol beta were required to induce strand displacement DNA synthesis at incised 8-oxoG in the absence of DNA ligase. Fen1 induced Pol beta strand displacement DNA synthesis at HAP1-cleaved AP sites differently from that at gaps introduced by hOGG1/HAP1 at 8-oxoG sites. In the presence of
DNA ligase I
, the repair reaction at 8-oxoG was confined to 1 nt replacement, even in the presence of high levels of Pol beta and Fen1. Thus, the assembly of all the core proteins for 8-oxoG repair catalyses one major pathway that involves single nucleotide repair patches.
...
PMID:Reconstitution of the base excision repair pathway for 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine with purified human proteins. 1200 Aug 32
Exposure of MiaPaCa cells to 1-beta-D-arabinosylcytosine (ara-C) resulted in an increase in DNA ligase levels up to threefold compared to that in the untreated control cells, despite significant growth inhibition. Increased levels of
DNA ligase I
protein appear to correlate with the appearance of increased mRNA levels. The [(3)H]thymidine incorporation experiment and the biochemical assay of total polymerase activity revealed that an increase in
DNA ligase I
levels after treatment with ara-C was not accompanied by an increase of DNA synthesis or an increased presence of
DNA polymerase
activity inside cells. When cells resumed DNA synthesis after drug treatment,
DNA ligase I
levels began to drop, indicating that increased
DNA ligase I
is not required for DNA synthesis. An increase in
DNA ligase I
was also observed in cells treated with aphidicolin, another inhibitor of DNA synthesis that inhibits DNA polymerases without incorporating itself into DNA, indicating that an increase in
DNA ligase I
levels could be caused by the arrest of DNA replication by these agents. Interestingly, caffeine, which is a well-known inhibitor of DNA damage checkpoint kinases, abrogated the increase in
DNA ligase I
in MiaPaCa cells treated with ara-C and aphidicolin, suggesting that caffeine-sensitive kinases might be important mediators in the pathway leading to the increase in
DNA ligase I
levels in response to anticancer drugs, including ara-C and aphidicolin. We propose that ara-C and aphidicolin induce damage to the DNA strand by arresting DNA replication forks and subsequently increase
DNA ligase I
levels to facilitate repair of DNA damage.
...
PMID:Induction of DNA ligase I by 1-beta-D-arabinosylcytosine and aphidicolin in MiaPaCa human pancreatic cancer cells. 1237 42
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