Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

It is demonstrated that the amino acid sequences of the products of E. coli genes sbcC and prrC, and bacteriophage P2 gene old encompass the four conserved motifs typical of the superfamily of UvrA-related ATPases. A more pronounced statistically significant similarity was revealed between SbcC protein, bacteriophage T4 endonuclease component gp46 and bacteriophage T5 protein D13. It is suggested that the newly identified members of the superfamily might all be ATPase components of the respective nucleases, and that the reactions catalyzed by these enzymes are probably ATP dependent.
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PMID:The superfamily of UvrA-related ATPases includes three more subunits of putative ATP-dependent nucleases. 149 96

The size of the repair patch produced by E. coli DNA polymerase (Pol I) following the removal of a pyrimidine dimer from DNA in response to the nicking activity of T4 endonuclease (T4 endo V) was determined. A 48-bp DNA containing a pyrimidine dimer at a defined location was labelled in the damaged strand and incubated with T4 endo V and E. coli endonuclease IV. Subsequently, DNA synthesis by DNA Pol I was carried out in the presence of four dNTPs, ATP and DNA ligase. Analysis of the reaction products on a sequencing gel revealed a ladder of only 4-oligonucleotides, 1-4 nucleotides greater in length than the fragment generated by the combined nicking activities of T4 endo V and E. coli endonuclease IV. Thus we conclude that the in vitro repair patch size of T4 endo V is 4 nucleotides and that in some cases the repaired DNA is not ligated.
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PMID:In vitro characterization of repair synthesis initiated by T4 endonuclease V on a synthetic DNA substrate. 151 8

Escherichia coli MutH possesses an extremely weak d(GATC) endonuclease that responds to the state of methylation of the sequence (Welsh, K. M., Lu, A.-L., Clark, S., and Modrich, P. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 15624-15629). MutH endonuclease is activated in a reaction that requires MutS, MutL, ATP, and Mg2+ and depends upon the presence of a mismatch within the DNA. The degree of activation correlates with the efficiency with which a particular mismatch is subject to methyl-directed repair (G-T greater than G-G greater than A-C greater than C-C), and activated MutH responds to the state of DNA adenine methylation. Incision of an unmethylated strand occurs immediately 5' to a d(GATC) sequence, leaving 5' phosphate and 3' hydroxy termini (pN decreases pGpAp-TpC). Unmethylated d(GATC) sites are subject to double strand cleavage by activated MutH, an effect that may account for the killing of dam- mutants by 2-aminopurine. The mechanism of activation apparently requires ATP hydrolysis since adenosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) not only fails to support the reaction but also inhibits activation promoted by ATP. The process has no obligate polarity as d(GATC) site incision by the activated nuclease can occur either 3' or 5' to the mismatch on an unmethylated strand. However, activation is sensitive to DNA topology. Circular heteroduplexes are better substrates than linear molecules, and activity of DNAs of the latter class depends on placement of the mismatch and d(GATC) site within the molecule. MutH activation is supported by a 6-kilobase linear heteroduplex in which the mismatch and d(GATC) site are centrally located and separated by 1 kilobase, but a related molecule, in which the two sites are located near opposite ends of the DNA, is essentially inactive as substrate. We conclude that MutH activation represents the initiation stage of methyl-directed repair and suggest that interaction of a mismatch and a d(GATC) site is provoked by MutS binding to a mispair, with subsequent ATP-dependent translocation of one or more Mut proteins along the helix leading to cleavage at a d(GATC) sequence on either side of the mismatch.
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PMID:Initiation of methyl-directed mismatch repair. 160 80

The lambda Gam protein was isolated from cells containing a Gam-producing plasmid. The purified Gam protein was found to bind to RecBCD without displacing any of its subunits. Gam was shown to inhibit all known enzymatic activities of RecBCD: ATP-dependent single- and double-stranded DNA exonucleases, ATP-independent single-stranded endonuclease, and the ATP-dependent helicase. When produced in vivo, Gam inhibited chi-activated recombination in lambda red gam crosses but had little effect on the host's ability to act as a recipient in conjugational recombination. These experiments suggest that RecBCD possesses an additional "unknown" activity that is resistant to or induced by Gam. Additionally, the expression of Gam in recD mutants sensitizes the host to UV irradiation, indicating that Gam alters one or more of the in vivo activities of RecBC(D-).
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PMID:Lambda Gam protein inhibits the helicase and chi-stimulated recombination activities of Escherichia coli RecBCD enzyme. 165 21

The bacterial enzyme PvuII, which generates blunt-ended DNA double-strand breaks, and T4 DNA ligase, which seals adjacent DNA fragments in coupling to ATP cleavage, were introduced in mouse C3H10T1/2 fibroblasts using osmolytic shock of pinocytic vesicles. Cells were then assayed for their clonogenic ability. In agreement with previous studies by others, we find that the PvuII restriction endonuclease simulates ionizing radiation effects by causing a dose-dependent loss of reproductive capacity. Here we show that the concomitant treatment with DNA ligase considerably increases cell survival. Survival curves were shown to be dependent on the ligase enzyme dose and on ATP concentration in the hypertonic medium. We conclude that T4 DNA ligase is able to repair some of the potentially lethal damage produced by restriction endonucleases in eucaryotic cells.
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PMID:Repair of potentially lethal damage by introduction of T4 DNA ligase in eucaryotic cells. 167 80

The UvrA protein is the DNA binding and damage recognition subunit of the damage-specific UvrABC endonuclease. In addition, it is an ATPase/GTPase, and the binding energy of ATP is linked to dimerization of the UvrA protein. Furthermore, the UvrA protein interacts with the UvrB protein to modulate its activities, both in solution and in association with DNA, where the UvrAB complex possesses a helicase activity. The domains of the UvrA protein that sponsor each of these activities were localized within the protein by studying the in vitro properties of a set of purified deletion mutants of the UvrA protein. A region located within the first 230 amino acids was found to contain the minimal region necessary for interactions with UvrB, the UvrA dimerization interface was localized to within the first 680 amino acids, and the DNA binding domain lies within the first 900 amino acids of the 940-amino acid UvrA protein. Two damage recognition domains were detected. The first domain, which coincides with the DNA binding region, is required to detect the damage. The second domain, located on or near the C-terminal 40 amino acids, stabilizes the protein-DNA complex when damage is encountered.
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PMID:Deletion mutagenesis of the Escherichia coli UvrA protein localizes domains for DNA binding, damage recognition, and protein-protein interactions. 182 48

The roles of the two tandemly arranged putative ATP binding sites of Escherichia coli UvrA in UvrABC endonuclease-mediated excision repair were analyzed by site-directed mutagenesis and biochemical characterization of the representative mutant proteins. Evidence is presented that UvrA has two functional ATPase sites which coincide with the putative ATP binding motifs predicted from its amino acid sequence. The individual ATPase sites can independently hydrolyze ATP. The C-terminal ATPase site has a higher affinity for ATP than the N-terminal site. The invariable lysine residues at the ends of the glycine-rich loops of the consensus Walker type "A" motifs are indispensable for ATP hydrolysis. However, the mutations at these lysine residues do not significantly affect ATP binding. UvrA, with bound ATP, forms the most favored conformation for DNA binding. The initial binding of UvrA to DNA is chiefly at the undamaged sites. In contrast to the wild type UvrA, the ATPase site mutants bind equally to damaged and undamaged sites. Dissociation of tightly bound nucleoprotein complexes from the undamaged sites requires hydrolysis of ATP by the C-terminal ATPase site of UvrA. Thus, both ATP binding and hydrolysis are required for the damage recognition step enabling UvrA to discriminate between damaged and undamaged sites on DNA.
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PMID:Both ATPase sites of Escherichia coli UvrA have functional roles in nucleotide excision repair. 182 49

A synthetic analog of an abasic site in DNA is efficiently repaired by a short-patch repair mechanism in soluble extracts of Xenopus laevis oocytes (Y. Matsumoto and D. F. Bogenhagen, Mol. Cell. Biol. 9:3750-3757, 1989). We present a detailed analysis of the repair mechanism, using extracts depleted of endogenous nucleotide pools. ATP was required for repair with a sharp optimal concentration of 5 mM. The initial rate of repair was increased by preincubation of the DNA in the extract in the presence of ATP. During this preincubation, the DNA was cleaved on the 5' side of the lesion by a class II apurinic-apyrimidinic endonuclease, but removal of the abasic sugar residue was not observed prior to addition of deoxynucleotides to the reaction. Immediately following DNA synthesis, excision and ligation proceeded in a coordinated manner to complete repair. DNA preincubated in the extract in the absence of deoxynucleotides remained associated with repair enzymes during gel filtration. These observations suggest that the enzymes involved in concerted repair of the abasic site form a complex on DNA.
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PMID:Repair of a synthetic abasic site involves concerted reactions of DNA synthesis followed by excision and ligation. 187 31

An ATP-dependent DNA aggregating activity was purified from rat liver by DEAE-cellulose, phosphocellulose, and novobiocin-Sepharose column chromatography. The protein aggregated superhelical, relaxed, single-, or double-stranded DNA in a divalent cation- and ATP-dependent reaction. The DNA aggregating activity was detected by retardation of a DNA-protein complex at the origin on a 1% agarose gel. The protein appeared to exist in solution as a monomer of molecular weight 66,000, and had no DNA polymerase, topoisomerase, recombinase, or ligase activity. The DNA aggregating activity was inhibited by 10 mM nalidixic acid or 1 mM novobiocin but not by 20 mM N-ethylmaleimide or camptothecin. Adenylyl(beta,gamma-methylene)-diphosphonate, adenylyl-imidodiphosphate, or adenosine-5'-O(3-thiotriphosphate) did not substitute for ATP whereas CTP, dTTP, or the ATP analog adenylyl(alpha,beta-methylene)-diphosphonate could replace ATP. The aggregated DNA was only partially dissociated by restriction endonuclease digestion but was completely dissociated by deproteinization with SDS, proteinase K, or chloroform/octanol extraction. On the basis of the molecular weight, thermostability, antigenic property, and amino acid sequence homology in the first 12 positions, we conclude that the rat liver protein is serum albumin and that the ATP-dependent DNA aggregation is a novel function of rat serum albumin.
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PMID:ATP-dependent DNA aggregation is a novel function of rat serum albumin. 189 9

Extracellular ATP is shown here to induce programmed cell death (or apoptosis) in thymocytes and certain tumor cell lines. EM studies indicate that the ATP-induced death of thymocytes and susceptible tumor cells follows morphological changes usually associated with glucocorticoid-induced apoptosis of thymocytes. These changes include condensation of chromatin, blebbing of the cell surface, and breakdown of the nucleus. Cytotoxicity assays using double-labeled cells show that ATP-mediated cell lysis is accompanied by fragmentation of the target cell DNA. DNA fragmentation can be set off by ATP but not the nonhydrolysable analogue ATP gamma S nor other nucleoside-5'-triphosphates. ATP-induced DNA fragmentation but not ATP-induced 51Cr release can be blocked in cells pretreated with inhibitors of protein or RNA synthesis or the endonuclease inhibitor, zinc; whereas pretreatment with calmidazolium, a potent calmodulin antagonist, blocks both DNA fragmentation and 51Cr release. The biochemical and morphological changes caused by ATP are preceded by a rapid increase in the cytoplasmic calcium of the susceptible cell. Calcium fluxes by themselves, however, are not sufficient to cause apoptosis, as the pore-forming protein, perforin, causes cell lysis without DNA fragmentation or the morphological changes associated with apoptosis. Taken together, these results indicate that ATP can cause cell death through two independent mechanisms, one of which, requiring an active participation on the part of the cell, takes place through apoptosis.
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PMID:Extracellular ATP as a trigger for apoptosis or programmed cell death. 198 62


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