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Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (
alkaline phosphatase
)
47,916
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Alkaline phosphatase was the first zinc enzyme to be discovered in which three closely spaced metal ions (two Zn ions and one Mg ion) are present at the active center. Zn ions at all three sites also produce a maximally active enzyme. These metal ions have center-to-center distances of 3.9 A (Zn1-Zn2), 4.9 A (Zn2-Mg3), and 7.1 A (Zn1-Mg3). Despite the close packing of these metal centers, only one bridging ligand, the carboxyl of Asp51, bridges Zn2 and Mg3. A crystal structure at 2.0-A resolution of the noncovalent phosphate complex, E.P, formed with the active center shows that two phosphate oxygens form a phosphate bridge between Zn1 and Zn2, while the two other phosphate oxygens form hydrogen bonds with the guanidium group of Arg166. This places Ser102, the residue known to be phosphorylated during phosphate hydrolysis, in the required apical position to initiate a nucleophilic attack on the phosphorous. Extrapolation of the E.P structure to the enzyme-substrate complex, E.ROPO4(2-), leads to the conclusion that Zn1 must coordinate the ester oxygen, thus activating the leaving group in the phosphorylation of Ser102. Likewise, Zn2 appears to coordinate the ester oxygen of the seryl phosphate and activate the leaving group during the hydrolysis of the phosphoseryl intermediate. Both of these findings suggest that there may be a significant dissociative character to each of the two displacements at phosphorous catalyzed by
alkaline phosphatase
. A water molecule (or hydroxide) coordinated to Zn1 following formation of the phosphoseryl intermediate appears to be the nucleophile in the second step of the mechanism. Dissociation of the product phosphate from the E.P intermediate is the slowest, 35 s-1, and therefore the rate-limiting, step of the mechanism at alkaline pH. Since the determination of the initial crystal structure of
alkaline phosphatase
, two other crystal structures of enzymes involved in phosphate ester hydrolysis have been completed that show a triad of closely spaced zinc ions present at their active centers. These enzymes are phospholipase C from Bacillus cereus (structure at 1.5-A resolution) (43) and P1 nuclease from Penicillium citrinum (structure at 2.8-A resolution) (74). Both enzymes hydrolyze phosphodiesters. Substrates for phospholipase C are phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylcholine, while P1 nuclease is an
endonuclease
hydrolyzing single stranded ribo- and deoxyribonucleotides. P1 nuclease also has activity as a
phosphomonoesterase
against 3'-terminal phosphates of nucleotides. The Zn ions in both enzymes form almost identical trinuclear sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Structure and mechanism of alkaline phosphatase. 152 73
A paralyzed Rhodobacter sphaeroides mutant strain (PARA1) was isolated by a motility screening procedure following mutagenesis of wild-type R. sphaeroides WS8-N with the transposable element TnphoA (Tn5 IS50L::phoA). PARA1 synthesized a wild-type level of flagellin, as detected by Western immunoblotting with antiflagellar antiserum. Flagellar staining showed that flagellin was assembled into apparently normal external flagellar filaments. Electron micrographs of basal body structures from PARA1 showed that some ring structures that were present were similar to those in wild-type R. sphaeroides WS8-N. PARA1 cells were nonmotile under all growth conditions. No pseudorevertants to motility were seen when PARA1 was grown in the presence of kanamycin to select for the presence of the transposon. The presence of the single copy of TnphoA in the PARA1 chromosome was demonstrated by Southern blotting. Western blotting of cytoplasmic, periplasmic, and membrane fractions of PARA1 with anti-
alkaline phosphatase
antiserum showed that the transposon had been inserted in-frame into a gene encoding a membrane protein. A SalI restriction
endonuclease
fragment was cloned from the chromosome of PARA1; this fragment contained a portion of the transposon and R. sphaeroides DNA sequence 5' of the site of insertion. This flanking R. sphaeroides DNA sequence was used to probe an R. sphaeroides WS8 cosmid library. A cosmid designated c19 hybridized to the probe, and a SalI restriction
endonuclease
fragment derived from this cosmid restored wild-type motility to PARA1 when introduced into this mutant strain by conjugation. The significance of this finding in a bacterium with unidirectionally rotating flagella is discussed.
...
PMID:Isolation, characterization, and complementation of a paralyzed flagellar mutant of Rhodobacter sphaeroides WS8. 185 Apr 1
A restriction enzyme-nick translation procedure has been developed for localizing sites of restriction
endonuclease
action on chromosomes. This method involves digestion of fixed chromosome preparations with a restriction enzyme, nick translation with DNA polymerase I in the presence of biotinylated-dUTP, detection of the incorporated biotin label with streptavidinalkaline phosphatase, and finally staining for
alkaline phosphatase
. Results obtained obtained on human chromosomes using a wide variety of restriction enzymes are described, and compared with results of Giemsa and Feulgen staining after restriction enzyme digestion. Results of nick translation are not in general the opposite of those obtained with Giemsa staining, as might have been expected. Although the nick translation procedure is believed to give a more accurate picture of the distribution of restriction enzyme recognition sites on chromosomes than Giemsa staining, it is clear that the results of the nick translation experiments are affected by accessibility to the enzymes of the chromosomal DNA, as well as by the extractability of the DNA.
...
PMID:Patterns of digestion of human chromosomes by restriction endonucleases demonstrated by in situ nick translation. 196 55
We have detected the in situ activities of DNA glycosylase,
endonuclease
, exonuclease, DNA polymerase, and DNA ligase using a novel polyacrylamide activity gel electrophoresis procedure. DNA metabolizing enzymes were resolved through either native or SDS-polyacrylamide gels containing defined 32P-labeled oligonucleotides annealed to M13 DNA. After electrophoresis, these enzymes catalyzed in situ reactions and their [32P]DNA products were resolved from the gel by a second dimension of electrophoresis through a denaturing DNA sequencing gel. Detection of modified (degraded or elongated) oligonucleotide chains was used to locate various enzyme activities. The catalytic and physical properties of Novikoff hepatoma DNA polymerase beta were found to be similar under both in vitro and in situ conditions. With 3'-terminally matched and mismatched [32P]DNA substrates in the same activity gel, DNA polymerase and/or 3' to 5' exonuclease activities of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I (large fragment), DNA polymerase III (holoenzyme), and exonuclease III were detected and characterized. In addition, use of matched and mismatched DNA primers permitted the uncoupling of mismatch excision and chain extension steps. Activities first detected in nondenaturing activity gels as either multifunctional or multimeric enzymes were also identified in denaturing activity gels, and assignment of activities to specific polypeptides suggested subunit composition. Furthermore, DNA substrates cast within polyacrylamide gels were successfully modified by the exogenous enzymes polynucleotide kinase and
alkaline phosphatase
before and after in situ detection of E. coli DNA ligase activity, respectively. Several restriction endonucleases and the tripeptide (Lys-Trp-Lys), which acts as an apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease, were able to diffuse into gels and modify DNA. This ability to create intermediate substrates within activity gels could prove extremely useful in delineating the steps of DNA replication and repair pathways.
...
PMID:Characterization of DNA metabolizing enzymes in situ following polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. 200 53
One of a number of large nocardioform plasmids previously obtained by a primarily genetic approach was reduced in size to about approximately 11 kb. This smaller plasmid possessed determinants for resistance to sodium arsenate and sodium arsenite, as well as immunity to nocardiophage Q4. It was joined to an Escherichia coli-positive selection vector constructed by M. Zabeau and colleagues, which had the EcoR1
endonuclease
gene placed under the control of the PR promoter of lambda as well as a bla determinant. The resulting shuttle vector of about 14.6 kb was maintained in E. coli and in several strains of Rhodococcus. The vector was efficient in cloning DNA without prior
alkaline phosphatase
treatment, as a result of the presence of the positive selection function. This function was not significantly expressed in Rhodococcus, and the presence of the nocardioform resistance determinants led to no increase in arsenate or arsenite resistance in E. coli. The presence of the bla gene resulted in an increase of about threefold in ampicillin resistance in Rhodococcus strains.
...
PMID:Nocardioform arsenic resistance plasmids and construction of Rhodococcus cloning vectors. 221 74
We have conducted studies to obtain practical knowledge regarding the stability, digestion, and analytical determination of the content of 8-hydroxy-2-deoxy-guanosine (8-OHdG) in oxidatively damaged DNA. Utilizing H2O2 plus uv light to form oxidatively damaged DNA, we found that storage of the DNA at -20 degrees C at alkaline pH caused a significant loss of 8-OHdG, whereas storage at -20 degrees C at neutral or acidic pH prevented loss of 8-OHdG. The 8-OHdG within DNA is stable at 100 degrees C for at least 15 min. Formation of 8-OHdG within DNA using uv light and H2O2 as a hydroxyl free radical-generating system yields the highest amounts when low levels of phosphate buffer are used; but the use of Tris or citrate buffers causes a lower yield of 8-OHdG because these buffers act as scavengers for the hydroxyl free radicals. Independent assessment of hydroxyl free radical flux by the use of salicylate trapping allows assessment of competitive radical reactions. Ethanol washing of plastic microfuge tubes prior to DNA enzymatic digestion improved the yield of 8-OHdG and reduced the variability between samples. Digestion of the oxidatively damaged DNA by the use of a method involving DNase I,
endonuclease
, phosphodiesterase, and
alkaline phosphatase
produced the highest yield of 8-OHdG.
...
PMID:Conditions influencing yield and analysis of 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine in oxidatively damaged DNA. 222 56
Two species of apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP)
endonuclease
have been purified approximately 400-fold from extracts of Drosophila embryos. AP
endonuclease
I, which flows through phosphocellulose columns, has an apparent subunit molecular weight of 66,000 as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, whereas AP endonuclease II, which is retained by phosphocellulose, has a subunit molecular weight of 63,000. The molecular weight determinations were made possible in part by the finding that both Drosophila enzymes, along with Escherichia coli
endonuclease
IV, cross-react with an antibody prepared toward a human AP
endonuclease
(Kane, C. M., and Linn, S. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 3405-3414). The nature of phosphodiester bond breaks produced by the two partially purified AP endonucleases from Drosophila have been investigated. Nicks introduced into partially depurinated PM2 DNA by Drosophila AP
endonuclease
I did not support DNA synthesis by E. coli DNA polymerase I, whereas nicks created by AP endonuclease II were able to support DNA synthesis, but at a rate far less than that observed for nicks introduced by E. coli endonuclease IV. The priming activity of DNA incised by either of the Drosophila enzymes can be enhanced, however, by an additional incubation with E. coli endonuclease IV, which is known to cleave depurinated DNA on the 5'-side of an apurinic site. These results suggest that the Drosophila enzymes cleave depurinated DNA on the 3'-side of the apurinic site. This suggestion was strengthened by the observation that the combined action of AP endonuclease II and E. coli endonuclease IV resulted in the removal of [32P]dAMP from partially depyrimidinated [dAMP-5'-32P,uracil-3H]poly(dA-dT). Taken together, these results propose that Drosophila AP endonuclease II produces 3'-deoxyribose and 5'-phosphomonoester nucleotide termini. Conversely, the absolute inability to detect priming activity for DNA cleaved by AP
endonuclease
I alone suggested a different mechanism, possibly the formation of a deoxyribose-3'-phosphate terminus. When apurinic DNA cleaved by AP
endonuclease
I was subsequently treated with bacterial
alkaline phosphatase
, DNA synthesis was now detected at levels similar to that observed for AP endonuclease II alone. Additionally, DNA nicked by AP
endonuclease
I was susceptible to 5'-end labeling by polynucleotide T4 kinase without prior
phosphomonoesterase
treatment. These results suggest that AP
endonuclease
I forms deoxyribose 3'-phosphate and 5'-OH termini upon cleaving depurinated DNA.
...
PMID:Drosophila apurinic/apyrimidinic DNA endonucleases. Characterization of mechanism of action and demonstration of a novel type of enzyme activity. 241 27
A 55-amino acid segment, normally present between residues 241 and 295 of the 348-residue gene I protein of the filamentous bacteriophage f1, acts as an internal signal sequence for gene I protein or, when present in fusion proteins, for EcoRI
endonuclease
or
alkaline phosphatase
. The resulting proteins are inserted so that they span the membrane with sequences on the amino side of the 55-residue segment in the cytoplasm and those near the carboxy side outside the cytoplasmic membrane. The presence of these proteins in the membrane results in the rapid inhibition of cell growth, probably from a loss of the membrane potential. We describe some of the elements in this 55-residue segment that appear to be crucial for its interaction with the membrane.
...
PMID:An amino acid sequence which directs membrane insertion causes loss of membrane potential. 245 24
1. A charon 4A human fetal liver genomic library was screened for human
alkaline phosphatase
sequences using the cloned human bone cDNA as a hybridization probe. 2. A positive clone was obtained and then characterized by restriction
endonuclease
cleavage analysis, hybridization experiments and partial DNA sequencing.
...
PMID:The isolation and partial sequencing of human bone alkaline phosphatase gene. 255 31
Effect of pressure on plant endonucleases, nuclease P1 from penicillium and an
endonuclease
from potato, was investigated especially on the influence on
phosphomonoesterase
and phosphodiesterase activities shown on substrates of XpYp type, as well as their intrinsic pressure-stability. The potato enzyme was found to be far less pressure-sensitive in both senses.
...
PMID:Effect of pressure on plant endonuclease reactions. 255 49
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