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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)
DNA continuously suffers the loss of its constituent bases, and thereby, a loss of potentially vital genetic information. Sites of missing bases--termed abasic or apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites--form spontaneously, through damage-induced hydrolytic base release, or by enzyme-catalyzed removal of modified or mismatched bases during base excision repair (BER). In this review, we discuss the structural and biological consequences of abasic lesions in DNA, as well as the multiple repair pathways for such damage, while emphasizing the mechanistic operation of the multi-functional human abasic
endonuclease
APE1
(or
REF-1
) and its potential relationship to disease.
...
PMID:The major human abasic endonuclease: formation, consequences and repair of abasic lesions in DNA. 1158 62
The major human AP
endonuclease
APE1
(HAP1,
APEX
, Ref1) initiates the repair of abasic sites generated either spontaneously, from attack of bases by free radicals, or during the course of the repair of damaged bases.
APE1
therefore plays a central role in the base excision repair (BER) pathway. We report here that XRCC1, another essential protein involved in the maintenance of genome stability, physically interacts with
APE1
and stimulates its enzymatic activities. A truncated form of
APE1
, lacking the first 35 amino acids, although catalytically proficient, loses the affinity for XRCC1 and is not stimulated by XRCC1. Chinese ovary cell lines mutated in XRCC1 have a diminished capacity to initiate the repair of AP sites. This defect is compensated by the expression of XRCC1. XRCC1, acting as both a scaffold and a modulator of the different activities involved in BER, would provide a physical link between the incision and sealing steps of the AP site repair process. The interaction described extends the coordinating role of XRCC1 to the initial step of the repair of DNA abasic sites.
...
PMID:XRCC1 coordinates the initial and late stages of DNA abasic site repair through protein-protein interactions. 1170 23
Base loss is common in cellular DNA, resulting from spontaneous degradation and enzymatic removal of damaged bases. Apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonucleases recognize and cleave abasic (AP) sites during base excision repair (BER).
APE1
(REF1, HAP1) is the predominant AP
endonuclease
in mammalian cells. Here we analyzed the influences of
APE1
on the human BER pathway. Specifically,
APE1
enhanced the enzymatic activity of both flap endonuclease1 (FEN1) and DNA ligase I. FEN1 was stimulated on all tested substrates, regardless of flap length. Interestingly, we have found that
APE1
can also inhibit the activities of both enzymes on substrates with a tetrahydrofuran (THF) residue on the 5'-downstream primer of a nick, simulating a reduced abasic site. However once the THF residue was displaced at least a single nucleotide, stimulation of FEN1 activity by
APE1
resumes. Stimulation of DNA ligase I required the traditional nicked substrate. Furthermore,
APE1
was able to enhance overall product formation in reconstitution of BER steps involving FEN1 cleavage followed by ligation. Overall,
APE1
both stimulated downstream components of BER and prevented a futile cleavage and ligation cycle, indicating a far-reaching role in BER.
...
PMID:AP endonuclease 1 coordinates flap endonuclease 1 and DNA ligase I activity in long patch base excision repair. 1220 Apr 45
Base excision repair of oxidized pyrimidines in human DNA is initiated by the DNA N-glycosylase/apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) lyase, human NTH1 (hNTH1), the homolog of Escherichia coli endonuclease III (Nth). In contrast to Nth, the DNA N-glycosylase activity of hNTH1 is 7-fold greater than its AP lyase activity when the DNA substrate contains a thymine glycol (Tg) opposite adenine (Tg:A) (Marenstein, D. R., Ocampo, M. T. A., Chan, M. K., Altamirano, A., Basu, A. K., Boorstein, R. J., Cunningham, R. P., and Teebor, G. W. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 21242-21249). When Tg is opposite guanine (Tg:G), the two activities are of the same specific activity as the AP lyase activity of hNTH1 against Tg:A (Ocampo, M. T. A., Chaung, W., Marenstein, D. R., Chan, M. K., Altamirano, A., Basu, A. K., Boorstein, R. J., Cunningham, R. P., and Teebor, G. W. (2002) Mol. Cell. Biol. 22, 6111-6121). We demonstrate here that hNTH1 was inhibited by the product of its DNA N-glycosylase activity directed against Tg:G, the AP:G site. In contrast, hNTH1 was not as inhibited by the AP:A site arising from release of Tg from Tg:A. Addition of human
APE1
(AP
endonuclease
-1) increased dissociation of hNTH1 from the DNA N-glycosylase-generated AP:A site, resulting in abrogation of AP lyase activity and an increase in turnover of the DNA N-glycosylase activity of hNTH1. Addition of
APE1
did not abrogate hNTH1 AP lyase activity against Tg:G. The stimulatory protein YB-1 (Marenstein et al.), added to
APE1
, resulted in an additive increase in both activities of hNTH1 regardless of base pairing. Tg:A is formed by oxidative attack on thymine opposite adenine. Tg:G is formed by oxidative attack on 5-methylcytosine opposite guanine (Zuo, S., Boorstein, R. J., and Teebor, G. W. (1995) Nucleic Acids Res. 23, 3239-3243). It is possible that the in vitro substrate selectivity of mammalian NTH1 and the concomitant selective stimulation of activity by
APE1
are indicative of selective repair of oxidative damage in different regions of the genome.
...
PMID:Substrate specificity of human endonuclease III (hNTH1). Effect of human APE1 on hNTH1 activity. 1251 58
Human DNA apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease (
APE1
) plays a key role in the DNA base excision repair process. In this study, we further characterized the exonuclease activity of
APE1
. The magnesium requirement and pH dependence of the exonuclease and
endonuclease
activities of
APE1
are significantly different.
APE1
showed a similar K(m) value for matched, 3' mispaired, or nucleoside analog beta-l-dioxolane-cytidine terminated nicked DNA as well as for DNA containing a tetrahydrofuran, an abasic site analog. The k(cat) for exonuclease activity on matched, 3' mispaired, and beta-l-dioxolane-cytidine nicked DNA are 2.3, 61.2, and 98.8 min(-1), respectively, and 787.5 min(-1) for
APE1
endonuclease
. Site-directed
APE1
mutant proteins (E96A, E96Q, D210E, D210N, and H309N), which target amino acid residues in the
endonuclease
active site, also showed significant decrease in exonuclease activity. Gp(4)G was the only potent inhibitor to compete against the substrates of
endonuclease
and exonuclease activities among all tested naturally occurring ribo-, deoxyribo-nucleoside/nucleotides, NAD(+), NADP(+), and Ap(4)A. The K(i) values of Gp(4)G for the
endonuclease
and exonuclease activities of
APE1
are 10 +/- 0.6 and 1 +/- 0.2 microm, respectively. Given the relative concentrations of Gp(4)G, 3' mispaired, and abasic DNA, Gp(4)G may play an important role in regulating
APE1
activity in cells. The data presented here suggest that the
APE1
exonuclease and AP
endonuclease
are two distinct activities.
APE1
may exist in two different conformations, and each conformation has a preference for a substrate. The different conformations can be affected by MgCl(2) or salt concentrations.
...
PMID:The exonuclease activity of human apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease (APE1). Biochemical properties and inhibition by the natural dinucleotide Gp4G. 1262 4
XRCC1 participates in DNA single strand break and base excision repair (BER) to preserve genetic stability in mammalian cells. XRCC1 participation in these pathways is mediated by its interactions with several of the acting enzymes. Here, we report that XRCC1 interacts physically and functionally with hOGG1, the human DNA glycosylase that initiates the repair by BER of the mutagenic oxidized base 8-oxoguanine. This interaction leads to a 2- to 3-fold stimulation of the DNA glycosylase activity of hOGG1. XRCC1 stimulates the formation of the hOGG1 Schiff-base DNA intermediate without interfering with the
endonuclease
activity of
APE1
, the second enzyme in the pathway. On the contrary, the stimulation in the appearance of the incision product seems to reflect the addition of the effects of XRCC1 on the two first enzymes of the pathway. The data presented support a model by which XRCC1 will pass on the DNA intermediate from hOGG1 to the
endonuclease
APE1
. This results in an acceleration of the overall repair process of oxidized purines to yield an
APE1
-cleaved abasic site, which can be used as a substrate by DNA polymerase beta. More importantly, the results unveil a highly coordinated mechanism by which XRCC1, through its multiple protein-protein interactions, extends its orchestrating role from the base excision step to the resealing of the repaired DNA strand.
...
PMID:Role of XRCC1 in the coordination and stimulation of oxidative DNA damage repair initiated by the DNA glycosylase hOGG1. 1293 15
The human AP-
endonuclease
(
APE1
/Ref-1), a multifunctional protein central to repairing abasic sites and single-strand breaks in DNA, also plays a role in transcriptional regulation. Besides activating some transcription factors,
APE1
is directly involved in Ca2+-dependent downregulation of parathyroid hormone (PTH) expression by binding to negative calcium response elements (nCaREs) present in the PTH promoter. Here we show that
APE1
is acetylated both in vivo and in vitro by the transcriptional co-activator p300 which is activated by Ca2+. Acetylation at Lys6 or Lys7 enhances binding of
APE1
to nCaRE.
APE1
stably interacts with class I histone deacetylases (HDACs) in vivo. An increase in extracellular calcium enhances the level of acetylated
APE1
which acts as a repressor for the PTH promoter. Moreover, chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay revealed that acetylation of
APE1
enhanced binding of the
APE1
-HDACs complex to the PTH promoter. These results indicate that acetylation of
APE1
plays an important role in this key repair protein's action in transcriptional regulation.
...
PMID:Role of acetylated human AP-endonuclease (APE1/Ref-1) in regulation of the parathyroid hormone gene. 1463 89
Chronic infection and associated inflammation are key contributors to human carcinogenesis. Ulcerative colitis (UC) is an oxyradical overload disease and is characterized by free radical stress and colon cancer proneness. Here we examined tissues from noncancerous colons of ulcerative colitis patients to determine (a) the activity of two base excision-repair enzymes, AAG, the major 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase, and
APE1
, the major apurinic site
endonuclease
; and (b) the prevalence of microsatellite instability (MSI). AAG and
APE1
were significantly increased in UC colon epithelium undergoing elevated inflammation and MSI was positively correlated with their imbalanced enzymatic activities. These latter results were supported by mechanistic studies using yeast and human cell models in which overexpression of AAG and/or
APE1
was associated with frameshift mutations and MSI. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that the adaptive and imbalanced increase in AAG and
APE1
is a novel mechanism contributing to MSI in patients with UC and may extend to chronic inflammatory or other diseases with MSI of unknown etiology.
...
PMID:The adaptive imbalance in base excision-repair enzymes generates microsatellite instability in chronic inflammation. 1467 75
The mammalian apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP)
endonuclease
(
APE1
) is a multifunctional protein that plays essential roles in DNA repair and gene regulation. We decomposed the APEs into 12 blocks of highly conserved sequence and structure (molegos). This analysis suggested that residues in molegos common to all APEs, but not to the less specific nuclease, DNase I, would dictate enhanced binding to damaged DNA. To test this hypothesis, alanine was substituted for N226 and N229, which form hydrogen bonds to the DNA backbone 3' of the AP sites in crystal structures of the
APE1
/DNA complex. While the cleavage rate at AP sites of both N226A and N229A mutants increased, their ability to bind to damaged DNA decreased. The ability of a double mutant (N226A/N229A) to bind damaged DNA was further decreased, while the V(max) was almost identical to that of the wild-type
APE1
. A double mutant at N226 and R177, a residue that binds to the same phosphate as N229, had a significantly decreased activity and substrate binding. As the affinity for product DNA was decreased in all the mutants, the enhanced reaction rate of the single mutants could be due to alleviation of product inhibition of the enzyme. We conclude that hydrogen bonds to phosphate groups 3' to the cleavage site is essential for
APE1
's binding to the product DNA, which may be necessary for efficient functioning of the base excision repair pathway. The results indicate that the molego analysis can aid in the redesign of proteins with altered binding affinity and activity.
...
PMID:Effects of backbone contacts 3' to the abasic site on the cleavage and the product binding by human apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease (APE1). 1473 Sep 72
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) contains higher steady-state levels of oxidative damage and mutates at rates significantly greater than nuclear DNA. Oxidative lesions in mtDNA are removed by a base excision repair (BER) pathway. All mtDNA repair proteins are nuclear encoded and imported. Most mtDNA repair proteins so far discovered are either identical to nuclear DNA repair proteins or isoforms of nuclear proteins arising from differential splicing. Regulation of mitochondrial BER is therefore not expected to be independent of nuclear BER, though the extent to which mitochondrial BER is regulated with respect to mtDNA amount or damage is largely unknown. Here we have measured DNA BER activities in lysates of mitochondria isolated from human 143B TK(-) osteosarcoma cells that had been depleted of mtDNA (rho(0)) or not (wt). Despite the total absence of mtDNA in the rho(0) cells, a complete mitochondrial BER pathway was present, as demonstrated using an in vitro assay with synthetic oligonucleotides. Measurement of individual BER protein activities in mitochondrial lysates indicated that some BER activities are insensitive to the lack of mtDNA. Uracil and 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase activities were relatively insensitive to the absence of mtDNA, only about 25% reduced in rho(0) relative to wt cells. Apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP)
endonuclease
and polymerase gamma activities were more affected, 65 and 45% lower, respectively, in rho(0) mitochondria. Overall BER activity in lysates was also about 65% reduced in rho(0) mitochondria. To identify the limiting deficiencies in BER of rho(0) mitochondria we supplemented the BER assay of mitochondrial lysates with pure uracil DNA glycosylase, AP
endonuclease
and/or the catalytic subunit of polymerase gamma. BER activity was stimulated by addition of uracil DNA glycosylase and polymerase gamma. However, no addition or combination of additions stimulated BER activity to wt levels. This suggests that an unknown activity, factor or interaction important in BER is deficient in rho(0) mitochondria. While nuclear BER protein levels and activities were generally not altered in rho(0) cells, AP
endonuclease
activity was substantially reduced in nuclear and in whole cell extracts. This appeared to be due to reduced endogenous reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in rho(0) cells, and not a general dysfunction of rho(0) cells, as exposure of cells to ROS rapidly stimulated increases in AP
endonuclease
activities and
APE1
protein levels.
...
PMID:DNA base excision repair activities and pathway function in mitochondrial and cellular lysates from cells lacking mitochondrial DNA. 1510 86
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