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)

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

One prominent lesion induced in DNA by ultraviolet (UV) radiation is the cyclobutyl pyrimidine dimer formed between adjacent pyrimidines on the same DNA strand. We investigated whether people who have developed basal cell carcinoma on sun-exposed skin have an altered ability to repair UV-induced pyrimidine dimers in DNA. Twenty-two patients with at least one basal cell carcinoma, aged 31-84 years, and 19 healthy volunteers, aged 25-61 years, took part in the study. Both groups were given one minimal erythema dose (MED) of simulated solar radiation on the lower back. DNA was extracted from the irradiated skin 0 to 6 h later, and the number of UV-induced pyrimidine dimers was determined using a dimer-specific endonuclease. At time 0, the average number of dimers per unit of DNA was similar in the two groups. After 6 h, an average of 22 +/- 4% of the dimers were removed in the group with basal cell carcinoma compared to 33 +/- 4% in the cancer-free group. In the basal cell carcinoma group, only 23% of the patients repaired more than 30% of the dimers after 6 h, compared with 53% of the cancer-free subjects (p less than 0.05). We conclude that patients who develop basal cell carcinoma on sun-exposed skin may have a decreased ability to repair pyrimidine dimers induced in skin exposed to simulated solar radiation.
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PMID:Excision repair of pyrimidine dimers induced by simulated solar radiation in the skin of patients with basal cell carcinoma. 223 Feb 12

High sequence selectivity in DNA-protein interactions was analyzed by measuring discrimination by Eco RI endonuclease between the recognition site GAATTC and systematically altered DNA sites. Base analogue substitutions that preserve the sequence-dependent conformational motif of the GAATTC site permit deletion of single sites of protein-base contact at a cost of +1 to +2 kcal/mol. However, the introduction of any one incorrect natural base pair costs +6 to +13 kcal/mol in transition state interaction energy, the resultant of the following interdependent factors: deletion of one or two hydrogen bonds between the protein and a purine base; unfavourable steric apposition between a group on the protein and an incorrectly placed functional group on a base; disruption of a pyrimidine contact with the protein; loss of some crucial interactions between protein and DNA phosphates; and an increased energetic cost of attaining the required DNA conformation in the transition state complex. Eco RI endonuclease thus achieves stringent discrimination by both "direct readout" (protein-base contracts) and "indirect readout" (protein-phosphate contacts and DNA conformation) of the DNA sequence.
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PMID:The energetic basis of specificity in the Eco RI endonuclease--DNA interaction. 223 28

Pyrimidine oligonucleotides recognize extended purine sequences in the major groove of double-helical DNA by triple-helix formation. The resulting local triple helices are relatively stable and can block DNA recognition by sequence-specific DNA binding proteins such as restriction endonucleases. Association and dissociation kinetics for the oligodeoxyribonucleotide 5'-CTCTTTCCTCTCTTTTTCCCC (bold C's indicate 5-methylcytosine residues) are now measured with a restriction endonuclease protection assay. When oligonucleotides are present in greater than 10-fold excess over the DNA target site, the binding reaction kinetics are pseudo first order in oligonucleotide concentration. Under our standard conditions (37 degrees C, 25 mM Tris-acetate, pH 6.8, 70 mM sodium chloride, 20 mM magnesium chloride, 0.4 mM spermine tetrahydrochloride, 10 mM beta-mercaptoethanol, 0.1 mg/mL bovine serum albumin) the value of the observed pseudo-first-order association rate constant, k2obs, is 1.8 x 10(3) +/- 1.9 x 10(2) L.(mol of oligomer-1.s-1. Measurement of the dissociation rate constant yields an equilibrium dissociation constant of approximately 10 nM. Increasing sodium ion concentration slightly decreased the association rate, substantially increased the dissociation rate, and thereby reduced the equilibrium binding constant. This effect was reversible by increasing multivalent cation concentration, confirming the significant role of multivalent cations in oligonucleotide-directed triple-helix formation under these conditions. Finally, a small reduction in association rate, a large increase in dissociation rate, and a resulting reduction in the equilibrium binding constant were observed upon increasing the pH between 6.8 and 7.2.
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PMID:Kinetic analysis of oligodeoxyribonucleotide-directed triple-helix formation on DNA. 227 58

Ultraviolet irradiation of poly(dG-dC) and poly(dA-dU) in solution produces pyrimidine hydrates that are repaired by bacterial and mammalian DNA glycosylases [Boorstein et al. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 6164-6170]. Escherichia coli endonuclease III was used to quantitate the formation and stability of these hydrates in the double-stranded alternating copolymers poly(dG-dC) and poly(dA-dU). When poly(dG-dC) was irradiated with 100 kJ/m2 of 254-nm light at pH 8.0, 2.2% of the cytosine residues were converted to cytosine hydrate (6-hydroxy-5,6-dihydrocytosine) while 0.09% were converted to uracil hydrate (6-hydroxy-5,6-dihydrouracil). To measure the stability of these products, poly(dG-dC) was incubated in solution for up to 24 h after UV irradiation. Cytosine hydrate was stable at 4 degrees C and decayed at 25, 37, and 55 degrees C with half-lives of 75, 25, and 6 h. Uracil hydrate produced in irradiated poly(dA-dU) was stable at 4 degrees C and at 25 degrees C and decayed with a half-life of 6 h at 37 degrees C and less than 0.5 h at 55 degrees C. Uracil hydrate and uracil were also formed in irradiated poly(dG-dC). These experiments demonstrate that UV-induced cytosine hydrate may persist in DNA for prolonged time periods and also undergo deamination to uracil hydrate, which in turn undergoes dehydration to yield uracil. The formation and stability of these photoproducts in DNA may have promoted the evolutionary development of the repair enzyme endonuclease III and analogous DNA glycosylase/endonuclease activities of higher organisms, as well as the development of uracil-DNA glycosylase.
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PMID:Formation and stability of repairable pyrimidine photohydrates in DNA. 227 56

An action spectrum for the induction of pyrimidine dimers in human peripheral lymphocytes was determined between 254 and 405 nm. The presence of pyrimidine dimers was determined as UV-induced lesions that were sensitive to the dimer-specific endonuclease from Micrococcus luteus in conjunction with agarose gel electrophoresis. The rate of induction of pyrimidine dimers was maximal at 254 nm. These values can be compared with action spectra for UV-induced in vitro responses of lymphocytes.
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PMID:Wavelength dependence for UV-induced pyrimidine dimer formation in DNA of human peripheral blood lymphocytes. 234 5

The limited DNA-excision repair in UV-irradiated nondividing fibroblasts from xeroderma pigmentosum complementation group C (XP-C) occurs in localized chromatin regions generating large DNA segments (at least 30-70 kb) free of pyrimidine dimers. A genomic fraction enriched for this DNA was isolated on the basis of the larger size of the repaired fragments after UV-endonuclease treatment and screened for specific genes. It contains more copies per microgram DNA of two transcriptionally active genes, beta-actin and dihydrofolate reductase, compared to the remaining DNA but an equal number of copies per microgram DNA of an inactive locus termed 754. We confirmed that the active genes were preferentially repaired by measuring the removal of pyrimidine dimers from specific genomic restriction fragments comprising these sequences. These results mean that a unique set of relatively large chromatin domains are repaired in nondividing XP-C cells, even though most of the DNA remains unrepaired. The repaired domains may be those containing the active genes. This specific repair may account for the relatively high UV-resistance of the nondividing cells. In normal cells, a very rapid repair of a restriction fragment containing the beta-actin gene and slow repair of the 754-containing fragment was detected indicating that a similar domain-oriented repair process also exists in these cells. These results are consistent with the previously discovered rapid repair of active genes compared to bulk DNA. Separate damage-recognition systems may exist in human cells for chromatin domains that contain transcribed regions and those that contain no transcribed regions. The latter system may be deficient in XP-C.
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PMID:Selective repair of specific chromatin domains in UV-irradiated cells from xeroderma pigmentosum complementation group C. 234 4

We have compared video and photographic methods for calculating the number of ultraviolet radiation (uv)-induced pyrimidine dimers in DNA from the bacteriophage T7 exposed to uv (0 to 800 J/m2) from an FS40 sunlamp. DNA was incubated with a pyrimidine dimer-specific Micrococcus luteus uv endonuclease, subjected to alkaline agarose gel electrophoresis, neutralized, and stained with ethidium bromide, and the DNA fluorescence was recorded either with a video camera or on photographic film. The slopes of the dose-response curves for the number of uv-endonuclease-sensitive sites per 10(3) bases (pyrimidine dimers) was 1.2 (+/- 0.1) X 10(-4) uv-endonuclease-sensitive sites per J/m2 for the video analysis and 1.3 (+/- 0.04) X 10(-4) uv-endonuclease-sensitive sites per J/m2 for the photographic analysis. Results for pyrimidine dimer determination by either method were statistically comparable.
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PMID:Quantitation of ultraviolet radiation-induced cyclobutyl pyrimidine dimers in DNA by video and photographic densitometry. 236 92

Cells from patients with xeroderma pigmentosum, complementation group A (XPA), are known to be defective in repair of pyrimidine dimers and other forms of damage produced by 254-nm ultraviolet (UVC) radiation. We have isolated a DNA endonuclease, pI 7.6, from the chromatin of normal human lymphoblastoid cells which recognizes damage produced by UVC light, and have introduced this endonuclease into UVC-irradiated XPA cells in culture to determine whether it can restore their markedly deficient DNA repair-related unscheduled DNA synthesis (UDS). Introduction of the normal endonuclease, which recognizes predominantly pyrimidine dimers, but not the corresponding XPA endonuclease into UVC-irradiated XPA cells restored their levels of UDS to approximately 80% of normal values. Electroporation of both the normal and the XPA endonuclease into normal human cells increases UDS in normal cells to higher than normal values. These results indicate that the normal endonuclease can restore UDS in UVC-irradiated XPA cells. They also indicate that XPA cells have an endonuclease capable of increasing the efficiency of repair of UVC damage in normal cells.
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PMID:Correction of the ultraviolet light induced DNA-repair defect in xeroderma pigmentosum cells by electroporation of a normal human endonuclease. 236 20

Photoproducts in double-stranded DNA induced by 193 nm radiation have been investigated. Double-stranded, supercoiled pBR322 DNA in buffered aqueous solution was exposed to varying fluences of 193 nm radiation from an ArF excimer laser. The quantum yields for formation of cyclobutylpyrimidine dimers, frank strand breaks and alkali labile sites were calculated from the conversion of supercoiled (Form I) DNA to relaxed (Form II) DNA after treatment with Micrococcus luteus dimer-specific endonuclease, no treatment, or treatment with alkali and heat, respectively. The quantum yields were 1.65 (+/- 0.03) X 10(-3) for pyrimidine dimers, 9.4 (+/- 3.2) X 10(-5) for frank strand breaks and 9.6 (+/- 3.6) X 10(-5) for alkali labile sites. The quantum yields for pyrimidine dimers and strand breaks and alkali labile sites were not affected by 10 nM mannitol. The relative quantum yields for these DNA photoproducts induced by 193 nm radiation differed markedly from those produced by 254 nm radiation.
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PMID:Photochemistry of DNA using 193 nm excimer laser radiation. 236 50


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