Gene/Protein
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:3.1.25.1 (
deoxyribonuclease
)
1,471
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The molecular mechanisms of in vivo inhibition of mammalian DNA replication by exposure to UV light (at 254 nm) was studied in monkey and human cells infected with simian virus 40. Analysis of viral DNA by electron microscopy and sucrose gradients confirmed that the presence of UV-induced lesions severely blocks DNA synthesis, and thus the conversion of replicative intermediates (RIs) into fully replicated form I DNA is inhibited by UV irradiation. These blocked RI molecules present several special features when visualized by electron microscopy. (i) In excision repair-proficient monkey and human cells they are composed of a double-stranded circular DNA with a double-stranded tail whose size corresponds to the average interpyrimidine dimer distance, as determined by the dimer-specific
T4 endonuclease V
. (ii) In excision repair-deficient human cells from patients with xeroderma pigmentosum, UV-irradiated RIs present a Cairns-like structure similar to that observed for replicating molecules obtained from unirradiated infected cells. (iii) Single-stranded gaps are visualized in the replicated portions of UV-irradiated RI molecules; such regions are detected and clearly distinguishable from double-stranded DNA when probed by a specific
single-stranded DNA-binding protein
such as the bacteriophage T4 gene 32 product. Consistent with the presence of gaps in UV-irradiated RI molecules, single-strand-specific S1 nuclease digestion causes a shift in their sedimentation properties when analyzed in neutral sucrose gradients compared with undamaged molecules. These results are in agreement with and reinforce the model in which UV lesions are a barrier to the replication fork movement when present in the template for the leading strand; when lesions are in the template for the lagging strand they inhibit synthesis or completion of Okazaki fragments, leaving gaps opposite the lesion. Moreover, cellular DNA repair-linked endonucleolytic activity may induce double-stranded breaks in the blocked region of the replication forks, resulting in the tailed structures observed in viral DNA molecules obtained from excision repair-proficient cell lines.
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PMID:Replication of simian virus 40 DNA after UV irradiation: evidence of growing fork blockage and single-stranded gaps in daughter strands. 284 36
In analogy to the Escherichia coli replicative DNA polymerase III we define two forms of DNA polymerase alpha: the core enzyme and the holoenzyme. The core enzyme is not able to elongate efficiently primed single-stranded DNA templates, in contrast to the holoenzyme which functions well on in vivo-like template. Using these criteria, we have identified and partially purified DNA polymerase alpha holoenzyme from calf thymus and have compared it to the corresponding homogeneous DNA polymerase alpha (defined as the core enzyme) from the same tissue. The holoenzyme is able to use single-stranded parvoviral DNA and M13 DNA with a single RNA primer as template. The core enzyme, on the other hand, although active on DNAs treated with
deoxyribonuclease
to create random gaps, is unable to act on these two long, single-stranded DNAs. E. coli DNA polymerase III holoenzyme also copies the two in vivo-like templates, while the core enzyme is virtually inactive. The homologous single-stranded DNA-binding proteins from calf thymus and from E. coli stimulate the respective holoenzymes and inhibit the core enzymes. These results suggest a cooperation between a DNA polymerase holoenzyme and its homologous
single-stranded DNA-binding protein
. The prokaryotic and the mammalian holoenzyme behave similarly in several chromatographic systems.
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PMID:A mammalian DNA polymerase alpha holoenzyme functioning on defined in vivo-like templates. 676 99