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Query: EC:3.1.30.2 (
endonuclease
)
18,621
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This review describes the evolution of research into the genetic basis of how different organisms use the process of excision repair to recognize and remove lesions from their cellular DNA. One particular aspect of excision repair, DNA incision, and how it is controlled at the genetic level in bacteriophage, bacteria, S. cerevisae, D. melanogaster, rodent cells and humans is examined. In phage T4, DNA is incised by a DNA glycosylase-AP
endonuclease
that is coded for by the denV gene. In E. coli, the products of three genes, uvrA, uvrB and uvrC, are required to form the UVRABC excinuclease that cleaves DNA and releases a fragment 12-13 nucleotides long containing the site of damage. In S. cerevisiae, genes complementing five mutants of the RAD3 epistasis group, rad1, rad2, rad3, rad4 and rad10 have been cloned and analyzed. Rodent cells sensitive to a variety of mutagenic agents and deficient in excision repair are being used in molecular studies to identify and clone human repair genes (e.g. ERCC1) capable of complementing mammalian repair defects. Most studies of the human system, however, have been done with cells isolated from patients suffering from the repair defective, cancer-prone disorder,
xeroderma pigmentosum
, and these cells are now beginning to be characterized at the molecular level. Studies such as these that provide a greater understanding of the genetic basis of DNA repair should also offer new insights into other cellular processes, including genetic recombination, differentiation, mutagenesis, carcinogenesis and aging.
...
PMID:The molecular genetics of the incision step in the DNA excision repair process. 290 Aug 58
Introduction of the denV gene of phage T4, encoding the pyrimidine dimer-specific endonuclease V, into
xeroderma pigmentosum
cells XP12RO(M1) was reported to result in partial restoration of colony-forming ability and excision repair synthesis. We have further characterized 3 denV-transformed XP clones in terms of rates of excision of pyrimidine dimers and size of the resulting resynthesized regions following exposure to 100 J/m2 from an FS-40 sunlamp. In the denV-transformed XP cells we observed 50% dimer removal within 3-6 h after UV exposure as compared to no measurable removal in the XP12RO(M1) line and 50% dimer excision after 18 h in the GM637A human, control cells. Dimer removal was assayed with Micrococcus luteus UV-
endonuclease
in conjunction with sedimentation of treated DNA in alkaline sucrose gradients. The size of the resulting repaired regions was determined by the bromouracil photolysis technique. Based on the photolytic sensitivity of DNA repaired in the presence of bromodeoxyuridine, we calculated that the excision of a dimer in the GM637A cells appears to be accompanied by the resynthesis of a region approximately 95 nucleotides in length. Conversely, the resynthesized regions in the denV-transformed clones were considerably smaller and were estimated to be between 13 and 18 nucleotides in length. These results may indicate that either the
endonuclease
that initiated dimer repair dictated the size of the resynthesized region or that the long-patch repair observed in the normal cells resulted from the repair of non-dimer DNA lesions.
...
PMID:Excision repair characteristics of denV-transformed xeroderma pigmentosum cells. 291 65
A structural gene for T4 endonuclease V was constructed by ligating synthetic oligonucleotides. The endonuclease V was overproduced in E. coli under control of the E. coli tryptophan promoter and purified to apparent homogeneity. The product had comparable DNA glycosylase and apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP)
endonuclease
activities to the natural enzyme in vitro. When this endonuclease V was microinjected into the cytoplasm of
xeroderma pigmentosum
(XP) cells of complementation group A, B, C, D, F, G or H, unscheduled DNA synthesis (UDS) above the residual level was detected in all the cells at a dose of about 10(3) molecules following UV irradiation. The gain numbers of UDS in these XP cells increased with increase in the dose of enzyme and reached a plateau at the normal cell level on introduction of about 10(4) molecules. Introduction of more enzyme into either XP cells or normal human cells did not increase the grain number under regular labelling conditions (2.5 h, 37 degrees C). In normal mouse cells, introduction of the enzyme increased the grain number more than 4-fold under the same conditions during at least 8.5 h following UV irradiation. Furthermore, with a labelling time of 30 min, the enzyme more than doubled the grain number even in normal human cells.
...
PMID:Microinjection of T4 endonuclease V produced by a synthetic denV gene stimulates unscheduled DNA synthesis in both xeroderma pigmentosum and normal cells. 291 66
We demonstrate the feasibility of using passive host-cell reactivation of a shuttle-vector pRSVcat to detect cloned DNA-repair genes. As models, a transient expression vector, pRSVdenV, and a positive-selection vector, pRSVdenV/SVgpt, were constructed containing the T4 coliphage denV gene, coding for an ultraviolet-specific
endonuclease
, under promotion of the Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) long-terminal repeat. Cotransfection of one or three copies of pRSVdenV per UV-irradiated pRSVcat molecule into
xeroderma pigmentosum
(XP) cells (XP12Ro[M1]) resulted in a dramatic increase in transient expression of chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (CAT) activity. XP clones stable transformed by pRSVdenV/SVgpt but not the parent cell line rescued CAT activity from this UV-irradiated reporter gene. The ability to express CAT activity from a UV-irradiated pRSVcat correlated with the presence of the structural denV gene as detected by Southern blot analysis. Post-UV irradiation colony-forming ability and DNA nucleotide excision-repair synthesis were partially restored in XP clones which rescued CAT activity. These results demonstrate the feasibility of using the cloned denV gene with its well characterized pyrimidine cyclobutane dimer-specific
endonuclease
activity to reconstitute UV-induced DNA repair in human cells deficient in DNA repair. Measuring CAT expression from pRSVcat affords a rapid, sensitive procedure to screen for functional cloned DNA-repair genes and to test mutant cells for defects in DNA repair.
...
PMID:Host cell reactivation of CAT-expression vectors as a method to assay for cloned DNA-repair genes. 292 23
We have compared the sites of nucleotide incision on DNA damaged by oxidizing agents when cleavage is mediated by either Escherichia coli endonuclease III or an
endonuclease
present in bovine and human cells. E. coli endonuclease III, the bovine
endonuclease
isolated from calf thymus, and the human
endonuclease
partially purified from HeLa and CEM-C1 lymphoblastoid cells incised DNA damaged with osmium tetroxide, ionizing radiation, or high doses of UV light at sites of pyrimidines. For each damaging agent studied, regardless of whether the E. coli, bovine, or human
endonuclease
was used, the same sequence specificity of cleavage was observed. We detected this
endonuclease
activity in a variety of human fibroblasts derived from normal individuals as well as individuals with the DNA repair deficiency diseases ataxia telangiectasia and
xeroderma pigmentosum
. The highly conserved nature of such a DNA damage-specific
endonuclease
suggests that a common pathway exists in bacteria, humans, and other mammals for the reversal of certain types of oxidative DNA damage.
...
PMID:A highly conserved endonuclease activity present in Escherichia coli, bovine, and human cells recognizes oxidative DNA damage at sites of pyrimidines. 303 65
Recent studies by others have shown that the
endonuclease
complex coded for by the uvrA, uvrB and uvrC genes of Escherichia coli (UVR ABC excision nuclease) can incise DNA containing a variety of 'bulk-type' lesions, such as those resulting from u.v. light, (+/-)-7 alpha,8 beta-dihydroxy-9 alpha,10 alpha-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene (anti-BPDE), and N-acetoxy-2-acetylaminofluorene. Using partially purified UVR ABC excision nuclease, we have quantitated the number of
endonuclease
sensitive sites (ESS) in purified DNA isolated from human fibroblasts treated with u.v. light or BPDE. The number of ESS/10(8) daltons of DNA were calculated from the number average mol. wt. of the DNA as determined by sedimentation in alkaline sucrose gradients. The number of
endonuclease
sites increased linearly with increasing doses of either u.v. light or BPDE. The UVR ABC excision nuclease was able to incise a majority of the BPDE-DNA adducts.
Xeroderma pigmentosum
fibroblasts, complementation group A (XP12BE) had 20-25% more ESS at each dose than the BPDE-treated normal (HSBP) cells. Cells treated with 4 microM BPDE and allowed 12 h of incubation to perform excision repair showed removal of 60% of the initial number of ESS from HSBP DNA and 40% of the ESS from XP-A DNA. Beyond 12 h XP12BE cells lost no additional ESS while HSBP cells continued to lose ESS, although at a slower rate, until at 48 h only 22% of the initial ESS remained. In cells treated with 10 J/m2 of u.v. light, the UVR ABC excision nuclease detected 60% of the sites recognized by the pyridimine dimer specific Micrococcus luteus glycosylase/apyrimidinic
endonuclease
. These results demonstrate the potential use of the UVR ABC excision nuclease in a quantitative assay for determining the number of carcinogen-induced lesions in human DNA.
...
PMID:Quantitation of carcinogen-induced DNA damage and repair in human cells with the UVR ABC excision nuclease from Escherichia coli. 308 Feb 55
The proximity of repair patches to persistent pyrimidine dimers in normal human cells and
xeroderma pigmentosum
group C and D cells was analyzed by sequential digestion of repaired DNA with Micrococcus luteus UV-
endonuclease
and Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I. Although this enzymatic digestion removed one-third of the pyrimidine dimers, less than 3% of the label associated with repair patches and a similar amount of uniformly labeled DNA were removed. The repair patches therefore appear to be similarly distant from persistent dimers in all cell types, and, in particular, are not adjacent to unexcised dimers in
xeroderma pigmentosum
group D cells. A previous model that suggested that patches are inserted adjacent to dimers in
xeroderma pigmentosum
group D cells receives no support from these results.
...
PMID:Proximity of repair patches to persistent pyrimidine dimers in DNA of normal human and xeroderma pigmentosum cells. 318 35
The patterns (domain oriented versus a random location) and amounts of DNA excision repair, determined by standard density gradient techniques and sedimentation properties of partially repaired and UV-
endonuclease
-digested DNA in alkaline sucrose gradients, are reported for UV (254 nm)-irradiated nondividing
xeroderma pigmentosum
complementation group C or A (XP-C, XP-A) and normal cells. Repair synthesis in relatively UV-resistant XP-C (XP4RO) cells is domain oriented and limited (10% of normal values) while it is randomly located and not as limited in more sensitive XP-A (XP8LO) cells. Thus, greater UV resistance is associated with a very limited but domain-oriented pattern of repair. In XP-C cells, both total and domain-oriented repair syntheses, while limited, increase with UV dose and plateau at about 15-20 J/m2, as observed for normal cells. We suggest that repair in XP-C is limited at the lower UV doses (less than 15-20 J/m2) by substrate levels in specific chromatin domains and not by availability of essential enzymes for domain-oriented repair. In contrast, the XP-A strain XP8LO exhibits normal repair activities for doses up to 5 J/m2 and limited repair at higher doses, indicating that repair occurs through normal pathways that are limited by reduced availability of an essential enzyme.
...
PMID:Biological significance of domain-oriented DNA repair in xeroderma pigmentosum cells. 333 81
The repair of u.v.-induced damage in human and rodent cells was investigated at the level of DNA loops attached to the nuclear matrix. After 2 h post-u.v. incubation, DNase I digestion studies revealed a 3- to 4-fold enrichment of repair-labeled DNA at the nuclear matrix in four
xeroderma pigmentosum
cell strains belonging to complementation group C. This non-random distribution was not affected by treatment with sodium butyrate. In other cells with limited excision repair, i.e. two
xeroderma pigmentosum
cell strains of complementation group D and Syrian hamster embryonic cells, as well as in HeLa cells and normal human fibroblasts, no enrichment of repair-labeled DNA at the nuclear matrix was observed. Visualization of repair events in DNA loops by autoradiography of DNA halo-matrix structures confirmed the biochemical observations. The presence or absence of preferential repair of nuclear matrix-associated DNA paralleled the presence or absence of inhomogeneity in the distribution of T4
endonuclease
-V-sensitive sites. A detailed analysis of repair events in
xeroderma pigmentosum
cells of complementation group C showed that after 2 h post-u.v. incubation, repair events were found at both attachment sites in a limited number of loops and that large domains of loops were not subjected to repair.
...
PMID:Distribution of u.v.-induced repair events in higher-order chromatin loops in human and hamster fibroblasts. 370 60
Xeroderma pigmentosum
is a human disease consisting of several complementation groups that are deficient in excision repair. Group C is one in which excision repair occurs at about 20-30% of normal levels. The distribution of mended sites in relation to unrepaired sites has been determined by cutting remaining unrepaired pyrimidine dimers with Microccocus luteus UV
endonuclease
. The mended sites have been found clustered together in a fashion that depended on cell proliferation. In confluent group C cells, the mended sites were clustered in regions where dimer excision was as efficient as excision in the DNA of normal cells. In proliferating group C cells, however, mended sites were randomly dispersed. The total amount of repair replication was the same in confluent and proliferating cells. Since previous work has shown that confluent group C cells show more extensive recovery from the lethal effects of UV irradiation than some other groups, clustered repair may correlate with a more efficient mechanism of restoring cell viability. The different distribution of repaired sites during DNA replication may be the result of changes in the state of the substrate for repair or changes in the metabolic priorities of DNA polymerases.
...
PMID:DNA repair in human xeroderma pigmentosum group C cells involves a different distribution of damaged sites in confluent and growing cells. 377 54
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