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)

Subunit a of the vacuolar membrane H(+)-translocating adenosine triphosphatase of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains a catalytic site for ATP hydrolysis. N-terminal sequences of six tryptic peptides of the subunit were determined. Based on the peptide sequence information, a 39-base oligonucleotide probe was synthesized, and the gene encoding the subunit (VMA1) was isolated from a genomic DNA library by hybridization. The nucleotide sequence of the gene predicts a polypeptide of 1,071 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 118,635 daltons, which is much larger than the value 67 kDa estimated on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. N- and C-terminal regions of the deduced sequence (residues 1-284 and 739-1,071) are very similar to those of the catalytic subunits of carrot (69 kDa) and Neurospora crassa (67 kDa) vacuolar membrane H(+)-ATPases (62 and 73% identity over 600 residues, respectively). The homologous regions also show about 25% sequence identity over 400 residues with beta-subunits of F0F1-ATPases. In contrast, the internal region containing 454 amino acid residues (residues 285-738) shows no detectable sequence similarities to any known ATPase subunits and instead is similar to a yeast endonuclease encoded by the HO gene. None of the six tryptic peptides is located in this internal region. Northern blotting analysis detected a single mRNA of 3.5 kilobases, indicating that the gene has no introns. Although the reason for the discrepancy in molecular mass is unclear at present, these results suggest that a novel processing mechanism, which might involve a post-translational excision of the internal region followed by peptide ligation, operates on the yeast VMA1 product. The VMA1 gene has proven to be the same gene as the TFP1 gene (Shih, C.-K., Wagner, R., Feinstein, S., Kanik-Ennulat, C., and Neff, N. (1988) Mol. Cell. Biol. 8, 3094-3103) whose dominant mutant allele (TFP1-408) confers a dominant trifluoperazine resistance and Ca2(+)-sensitive growth. This and our findings suggest that the vacuolar membrane H(+)-ATPase participates in maintenance of cytoplasmic Ca2+ homeostasis.
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PMID:Molecular structure of a gene, VMA1, encoding the catalytic subunit of H(+)-translocating adenosine triphosphatase from vacuolar membranes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 213 27

Nucleotide excision is initiated by the UvrABC endonuclease system in which the initial DNA interaction is with UvrA which was dimerized in the presence of ATP. Nucleoprotein formation most likely takes place on undamaged regions of DNA by (UvrA)2 which has been dimerized in the presence of ATP. Topological unwinding of DNA, driven by ATP binding, is increased by the presence of UvrB to approximately a single helical turn. The Uvr(A)2B complex translocates to a damaged site by the combined Uvr(A)2B helicase in which the driving force is provided by the UvrB-associated ATPase. The dual incision reaction is initiated by the binding of the UvrC protein to the Uvr(A)2B-nucleoprotein complex. The proteins in this post-incision nucleoprotein complex do not turn over and require the presence of the UvrD protein and DNA polymerase I under polymerizing conditions. The final integrity of the DNA strands is restored with polynucleotide ligase.
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PMID:The UvrABC endonuclease system of Escherichia coli--a view from Baltimore. 214 12

An assay has been developed that permits analysis of repair of A/G mismatches to C.G base pairs in cell extracts of Salmonella typhimurium LT2. This A/G mismatch repair is independent of ATP, dam methylation, and mutS gene function. The gene product of mutB has been shown to be involved in the dam-independent pathway through the in vitro assay. Moreover, specific DNA-protein complexes and an endonuclease can be detected in S. typhimurium extracts by using DNA fragments containing an A/G mismatch. These activities are not observed with substrates which have a T/G mismatch or no mismatch. The S. typhimurium endonuclease, like the A/G endonuclease found in Escherichia coli (A-L. Lu and D.-Y. Chang, Cell 54:805-812, 1988), makes incisions at the first phosphodiester bond 3' to and the the second phosphodiester bond 5' to the dA of the A/G mismatch. No incision site was detected on the other DNA strand. Extracts prepared from mutB mutants cannot form A/G mismatch-specific DNA-protein complexes and do not contain the A/G endonuclease activity. Thus the A/G mismatch specific binding and nicking activities are probably involved in the A/G mismatch repair pathway. Preliminary analysis of the mutational spectrum of the mutB strain has indicated that this mutator allele causes an increase in C.G-to-A.T transversions without affecting the frequencies of other transversion or transition events. In addition, the mutB gene has been mapped to the 64-min region of the S. typhimurium chromosome. Together, this biochemical and genetic evidence suggests that the mutB gene product of S. typhimurium is the homolog of the E. coli micA (and/or mutY) gene product.
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PMID:Specific A/G-to-C.G mismatch repair in Salmonella typhimurium LT2 requires the mutB gene product. 215 96

Genetic studies of adeno-associated virus (AAV) indicate that two AAV genes are required for viral DNA replication: the palindromic terminal repeat, which is the origin for DNA replication, and the rep gene, which codes for a family of at least four viral nonstructural proteins. To determine the biochemical function of the Rep proteins, we have purified the AAV Rep68 protein to apparent homogeneity. We find that it contains a site-specific and strand-specific endonuclease activity that specifically cuts the AAV origin at the terminal resolution site (TRS). The TRS endonuclease requires the presence of ATP for activity and becomes covalently attached to the 5' end at the cut site. In addition to the specific endonuclease activity, Rep68 also contains a DNA helicase activity. These results demonstrate that the large AAV Rep proteins have a direct role in AAV DNA replication; namely, they provide the activities required for the resolution of covalently joined AAV termini.
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PMID:The AAV origin binding protein Rep68 is an ATP-dependent site-specific endonuclease with DNA helicase activity. 215 83

Ammonium sulfate fractionation of a Saccharomyces cerevisiae whole-cell extract yielded a preparation which carried out correct and efficient endonucleolytic cleavage and polyadenylation of yeast precursor mRNA substrates corresponding to a variety of yeast genes. These included CYC1 (iso-1-cytochrome c), HIS4 (histidine biosynthesis), GAL7 (galactose-1-phosphate uridyltransferase), H2B2 (histone H2B2), PRT2 (a protein of unknown function), and CBP1 (cytochrome b mRNA processing). The reaction processed these pre-mRNAs with varying efficiencies, with cleavage and polyadenylation exceeding 70% in some cases. In each case, the poly(A) tail corresponded to the addition of approximately 60 adenosine residues, which agrees with the usual length of poly(A) tails formed in vivo. Addition of cordycepin triphosphate or substitution of CTP for ATP in these reactions inhibited polyadenylation but not endonucleolytic cleavage and resulted in accumulation of the cleaved RNA product. Although this system readily generated yeast mRNA 3' ends, no processing occurred on a human alpha-globin pre-mRNA containing the highly conserved AAUAAA polyadenylation signal of higher eucaryotes. This sequence and adjacent signals used in mammalian systems are thus not sufficient to direct mRNA 3' end formation in yeast. Despite the lack of a highly conserved nucleotide sequence signal, the same purified fraction processed the 3' ends of a variety of unrelated yeast pre-mRNAs, suggesting that endonuclease cleavage and polyadenylation may produce the mature 3' ends of all mRNAs in S. cerevisiae.
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PMID:RNA processing in vitro produces mature 3' ends of a variety of Saccharomyces cerevisiae mRNAs. 216 May 81

Ditercalinium (NSC 335153) was synthesized as a bifunctional DNA intercalator. It is made of two 7-H pyridocarbazole rings joined by a rigid bis-ethyl bispiperidine chain. It binds to DNA with high affinity and elicits anti-tumor activity on a variety of animal tumors. 1H n.m.r. studies of ditercalinium bis-intercalated into d(CpGpCpG)2 have shown that the intercalation process occurs from the large groove of the DNA helix while the two intercalated rings are separated by two base pairs. Because of the linking chain rigidity of ditercalinium, DNA conformation has to be altered to permit the intercalation of the two rings. DNA must be bent toward the minor groove. In E. coli, ditercalinium elicits a specific toxicity on polA strains which is suppressed by an additional uvrA mutation. In vitro, the purified UvrA and UvrB proteins bind to the DNA-ditercalinium complex in an ATP dependent manner. The UvrABC complex induces single-strand nicks, but only when ditercalinium is bound to negatively supercoiled DNA. The life-time of the UvrAB-DNA-ditercalinium complex is greater than 50 min when free ditercalinium concentration is maintained constant in the incubation medium. The cytotoxicity of ditercalinium in E. coli results from the induction of a futile and abortive DNA repair. The reversible ditercalinium-DNA complex mimics a bulky DNA lesion, yet the UvrABC endonuclease is unable to cope with a reversible lesion since it cannot eliminate the causative agent. The interaction of UvrA and UvrB proteins has also been studied with DNA and other DNA-binding drugs forming high-affinity complexes such as distamycin. The Uvr protein recognition process appears to be associated with specific DNA structural alterations. In eukaryotic cells, ditercalinium is concentrated in mitochondria. Mitochondrial DNA is rapidly and totally degraded. Mitochondrial DNA coded proteins being no longer synthesized, the respiratory chain is progressively inactivated. The stimulation of the glycolytic pathway allows the cells to continue growth for several generations. Dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase is located in the inner membrane of mitochondria and its activity is dependent on mitochondria energization. It becomes inactive after ditercalinium treatment. A drop of the pyrimidine pool is then observed. Complementation of treated cells with uridine decreases 10-fold the ditercalinium toxicity. The cellular delayed toxicity of ditercalinium results from the slow induction of a pyrimidineless state associated with the progressive inactivation of mitochondria. The results show that DNA structural alterations induced by reversible drug-DNA complexes can be recognized by DNA repair enzymes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Recognition by the DNA repair system of DNA structural alterations induced by reversible drug-DNA interactions. 218 Apr 23

Mature DNA from phage T3 or T7 is a linear duplex DNA with direct repeats at its ends known as "terminally redundant sequences." The DNA of these phages is synthesized as concatemers in which unit length molecules are joined together in a head-to-tail fashion through the terminally redundant sequences and processed to form mature DNA with coupling to DNA packaging. When linearized plasmid DNA carrying a concatemer joint, a terminally redundant sequence and its flanking sequences from the concatemer, was incubated in a defined in vitro system for packaging T3 DNA, composed of purified proheads and packaging proteins (gp 18 and gp 19), DNA was cleaved at the left end of the terminally redundant sequence. The cleavage reaction required all factors necessary for DNA packaging. The DNA fragment with the left end was preferentially protected from DNase I digestion, indicating that the cleavage reaction occurs at the left end of the terminally redundant sequence in the concatemer when DNA is packaged leftward, corresponding to the direction from the right to the left end of the T3 genome. The cleavage reaction was stimulated by high concentrations of NaCl and ATP, a condition in which DNA translocation into the head is slowed down. The cleavage reaction was not specific between T3 and T7. The right end of the concatemer joint was not required for cleavage at the left end. In the absence of ATP, DNA was extensively degraded by gp 19. gp 19 by itself had nonspecific endonuclease activity, making double-stranded breaks. The activity was inhibited by either ATP or gp 18.
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PMID:In vitro cleavage of the concatemer joint of bacteriophage T3 DNA. 229 41

We previously reported a double-stranded endonuclease from HeLa cells, endonuclease R (endo R), which specifically cleaves duplex DNA at sites rich in G.C base pairs. In this report we describe the purification of endo R to near homogeneity by conventional and affinity chromatography. The molecular mass of the active form of endo R is approximately 115-125 kDa. SDS-gel electrophoresis reveals a major protein species of 100 kDa. The enzyme requires Mg2+ as a cofactor and is equally active on closed circular and linear duplex DNA substrates that contain G-rich sequences. A 50% reduction in cleavage activity is observed with Ca2+ ions and no double-stranded cleavage occurs with Zn2+. Use of Mn2+ causes an altered specificity at low concentrations of enzyme or divalent metal ion and nonspecific degradation of the substrate at higher concentrations. Endo R is strongly inhibited by sodium or potassium chloride and exhibits a wide pH optimum of 6.0-9.0. The pI of the enzyme is between 6.5 and 7.0. A 2-fold stimulation is observed with the addition of dGTP or dATP but specific cleavage is inhibited by ATP at an equivalent concentration. Cleavage activity is competitively inhibited 10-fold more efficiently by single-stranded poly(dG)12 than by other DNA competitors. The ends of endo R cleavage products contain 5'-phosphate and 3'-hydroxyl groups, and a significant portion of these products were substrates for T4 DNA ligase. Endo R appears to be a previously uncharacterized mammalian endonuclease.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of HeLa endonuclease R. A G-specific mammalian endonuclease. 235 41

The requirement for nucleotide hydrolysis in the DNA repair mechanism of the Escherichia coli UvrABC protein complex has been analyzed. The DNA-activated UvrAB ATPase activity is part of a helicase activity exhibited by the UvrAB protein complex. The helicase acts only on short duplexes and, therefore, is unlike other helicases such as those involved in DNA replication that unwind long duplexes. The strand displacement activity occurs in the 5'----3' direction and requires either ATP or dATP. The helicase activity is inhibited by UV photoproducts. The absence of this activity in a complex formed with proteolyzed UvrB (UvrB*), a complex also deficient in the endonuclease activity, suggests that this activity is important in the repair mechanism. The UvrAB protein complex may remain bound to a damaged site and by coupling the energy derived from ATP hydrolysis, alter the DNA conformation around the damage site to one that is permissive for endonucleolytic events. The conformational changes may take the form of DNA unwinding.
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PMID:Characterization of the helicase activity of the Escherichia coli UvrAB protein complex. 253 20

recA protein forms stable filaments on duplex DNA at low pH. When the pH is shifted above 6.8, recA protein remains stably bound to nicked circular DNA, but not to linear DNA. Dissociation of recA protein from linear duplex DNA proceeds to a non-zero endpoint. The kinetics and final extent of dissociation vary with several experimental parameters. The instability on linear DNA is most readily explained by a progressive unidirectional dissociation of recA protein from one end of the filament. Dissociation of recA protein from random points in the filament is eliminated as a possible mechanism by several observations: (1) the requirement for a free end; (2) the inverse and linear dependence of the rate of dissociation on DNA length (at constant DNA base-pair concentration); and (3) the kinetics of exposure of a restriction endonuclease site in the middle of the DNA. Evidence against another possible mechanism, ATP-mediated translocation of the filament along the DNA, is provided by a novel effect of the non-hydrolyzable ATP analog, ATP gamma S, which generally induces recA protein to bind any DNA tightly and completely inhibits ATP hydrolysis. We find that very low, sub-saturating levels of ATP gamma S completely stabilize the filament, while most of the ATP hydrolysis continues. If these levels of ATP gamma S are introduced after dissociation has commenced, further dissociation is blocked, but re-association does not occur. These observations are inconsistent with movement of recA protein along DNA that is tightly coupled to ATP hydrolysis. The recA nucleoprotein filament is polar and the protein binds the two strands asymmetrically, polymerizing mainly in the 5' to 3' direction on the initiating strand of a single-stranded DNA tailed duplex molecule. A model consistent with these results is presented.
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PMID:Dissociation pathway for recA nucleoprotein filaments formed on linear duplex DNA. 253 35


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