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)

Cloning of the phi X174 viral origin of replication into phage M13mp8 produced an M13-phi X174 chimera, the DNA of which directed efficient replicative-form----single-strand rolling-circle replication in vitro. This replication assay was performed with purified phi X174-encoded gene A protein, Escherichia coli rep helicase, single-stranded DNA-binding protein, and DNA polymerase III holoenzyme. The nicking of replicative-form I (RFI) DNA by gene A protein was essentially unaffected by the presence of UV lesions in the DNA. However, unwinding of UV-irradiated DNA by the rep helicase was inhibited twofold as compared with unwinding of the unirradiated substrate. UV irradiation of the substrate DNA caused a strong inhibition in its ability to direct DNA synthesis. However, even DNA preparations that contained as many as 10 photodimers per molecule still supported the synthesis of progeny full-length single-stranded DNA. The appearance of full-length radiolabeled products implied at least two full rounds of replication, since the first round released the unlabeled plus viral strand of the duplex DNA. Pretreatment of the UV-irradiated DNA substrate with purified pyrimidine dimer endonuclease from Micrococcus luteus, which converted photodimer-containing supercoiled RFI DNA into relaxed, nicked RFII DNA and thus prevented its replication, reduced DNA synthesis by 70%. Analysis of radiolabeled replication products by agarose gel electrophoresis followed by autoradiography revealed that this decrease was due to a reduction in the synthesis of progeny full-length single-stranded DNA. This implies that 70 to 80% of the full-length DNA products produced in this system were synthesized on molecules that carried photodimers. Thus, similarly to its activity on UV-irradiated single-stranded DNA, DNA polymerase III holenzyme can bypass pyrimidine photodimers in the more complex replicative form --->single-strand replication, which involves, in addition to the polymerizing activity, the unwinding of the duplex by the rep helicase and the participation of a more complex multiprotein replisome.
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PMID:Rolling-circle replication of UV-irradiated duplex DNA in the phi X174 replicative-form----single-strand replication system in vitro. 252 71

Both ultraviolet irradiation and oxidation of DNA produce a variety of pyrimidine base damages. A human endonuclease recognizes such altered bases on these DNA substrates. This human endonuclease incises ultraviolet-irradiated DNA exclusively at sites of photochemically modified cytosines. The precise sites of incision by the human enzyme were determined by DNA sequencing. Chemically oxidized DNA was incised exclusively at thymine loci. The degree of enzymic cleavage at cytosine photoproducts was identical at each site. However, the extent of incision at selected oxidized thymine residues varied within the DNA sequence. These results indicate that the distribution of thymine oxidative modifications is influenced by the neighboring DNA bases.
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PMID:A human endonuclease incises ultraviolet-irradiated DNA at cytosines and oxidized DNA at thymines. 255 50

The biological effectiveness of thymine-thymine cyclobutane dimers specifically induced by photosensitized ultraviolet-B irradiation was analyzed by host-cell reactivation of triplet-sensitized, UV-B irradiated plasmid pRSV beta gal DNA transfected into normal and repair-deficient Chinese hamster ovary cells. For comparison, pRSV beta gal DNA was also UV-C irradiated and transfected into the same cell lines. Ultraviolet endonuclease-sensitive site induction was determined after UV-C irradiation or acetophenone-sensitized UV-B irradiation of plasmid pRSV beta gal DNA. These data were used to calculate the number of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers required to inactivate expression of the lacZ reporter gene in each irradiation condition. Transfection with UV-C-irradiated plasmid DNA resulted in a significantly greater reduction of reporter gene expression than did transfection with acetophenone-sensitized UV-B-irradiated pRSV beta gal DNA at equivalent induction of enzyme-sensitive sites. Since only a fraction of the inhibition could be accounted for by noncyclobutane dimer photoproducts, these results suggest that cytosine-containing pyrimidine cyclobutane dimers may be more effective than thymine-thymine dimers in inhibiting transient gene expression as measured in such host-cell reactivation experiments in mammalian cells.
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PMID:Inhibition of transient gene expression in Chinese hamster ovary cells by triplet-sensitized UV-B irradiation of transfected DNA. 256 Feb 14

The human alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) gene was isolated into three overlapping clones in bacteriophage lambda vectors and its sequence organization analyzed by restriction endonuclease mapping and nucleotide sequencing. The human AFP gene is about 20 kilobase pairs long and contains 15 exons and 14 introns. The overall organization of the human AFP gene is similar to that of the mouse AFP gene, with all but two exons showing identical sizes. Nucleotide sequences at all exon/intron junctions display similarity to the consensus boundary sequence (Breathnach, R., and Chambon, P. (1981) Annu. Rev. Biochem. 50, 349-383), with the GT-AG rule applied to the splicing point. The cap site maps 44 nucleotides upstream from the translation initiation site. The "TATA box" is located 27 nucleotides upstream from the putative cap site and is flanked by sequences with dyad symmetry. The TATA box can thus be placed in the loop portion of a possible stem-loop structure formed by intrastrand base-pairing. Other characteristic nucleotide sequences in the 5' flanking region include a CCAAC pentamer, a 14-base pair (bp) enhancer-like sequence, and a 9-bp sequence homologous to the glucocorticoid responsive element. A long (90 bp) direct repeat and several alternating purine/pyrimidine sequences are also present in the 5' flanking region. A 736-bp sequence of the 5' flanking region adjacent to the cap site of the human AFP gene shows a 61% similarity with the corresponding region of the mouse AFP gene. There are two Alu family sequences and two poly(dT-dG) repeats in the human AFP gene that show different distribution patterns from those in the mouse AFP gene.
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PMID:The human alpha-fetoprotein gene. Sequence organization and the 5' flanking region. 258 Aug 30

A previously unreported endoribonuclease has been identified in Escherichia coli, which has a preference for hydrolysis of pyrimidine-adenosine (Pyd-Ado) bonds in RNA. It was purified about 7000-fold to give a single band after SDS/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; the eluted protein gave the same RNase specificity. The sizes of the native and denatured enzymes agreed suggesting that the enzyme exists as a monomer of approximately 26 kDa. It is called RNase M. The only other reported broadly specific endoribonuclease in E. coli is RNase I, a periplasmic enzyme. Based on differences in charge, heat stability and substrate specificity, it was clear that RNase M is not RNase I. The specificity of RNase M was remarkably similar to that of pancreatic RNase A even though the two enzymes differ in charge characteristics and size. Earlier studies had shown that mRNA from the lactose operon of E. coli is hydrolyzed in vivo primarily between Pyd-Ado bonds [Cannistraro et al. (1986) J. Mol. Biol. 192, 257-274] We propose that this major RNase activity accounts for these cleavages observed in vivo and that it is the endonuclease for mRNA degradation in E. coli.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of ribonuclease M and mRNA degradation in Escherichia coli. 265 29

Ultraviolet irradiation of DNA produces a variety of pyrimidine base damages. The activities of Escherichia coli endonuclease III and a human lymphoblast endonuclease that incises ultraviolet-irradiated DNA at modified cytosine moieties were compared. Both the bacterial and human enzymes release this cytosine photoproduct as a free base. These glycosylase activities are linear with times of reaction, quantities of enzyme, and irradiation dosages of the substrates. Both enzyme activities are similarly inhibited by the addition of monovalent and divalent cations. Analysis by DNA sequencing identified loci of endonucleolytic incision as cytosines. These are neither cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers, 6-(1,2-dihydro-2-oxo-4-pyrimidinyl)-5-methyl-2,4(1H,3H)-pyrimidinediones, nor apyrimidinic sites. This cytosine photoproduct is separable from unmodified cytosine by high-performance liquid chromatography. This separation should facilitate identification of this modified cytosine and elucidation of its biological significance.
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PMID:Cytosine photoproduct-DNA glycosylase in Escherichia coli and cultured human cells. 265 93

We have demonstrated that the noncovalent complex formed between DNA and an antitumor bifunctional intercalator, ditercalinium, is recognized in vitro as bulky covalent DNA lesions by the purified Escherichia coli UvrABC endonuclease. It was established that no covalent drug-DNA adduct was formed during the incubation of the drug with DNA or during subsequent incubation with the UvrAB proteins. The nucleoprotein-ditercalinium complexes appear different from those generated by repair of pyrimidine dimers. The UvrA protein is able to form a stable complex with ditercalinium-intercalated DNA in the presence of ATP, whereas both UvrA and UvrB proteins are required to form a stable complex with pyrimidine dimer-containing DNA. The apparent half-life of the UvrA- and UvrAB-ditercalinium-DNA complexes following removal of free ditercalinium is 5 min. However, if the free ditercalinium concentration is maintained to allow the intercalation of one molecule of ditercalinium per 3000 base pairs, the half-life of the UvrA- or UvrAB-ditercalinium-DNA complex is 50 min, comparable to that of the complex of UvrAB proteins formed with pyrimidine dimer-containing DNA. UvrABC endonuclease incises ditercalinium-intercalated DNA as efficiently as pyrimidine dimer-containing DNA. However, unlike repair of pyrimidine dimers, the incision reaction is strongly favored by the supercoiling of the DNA substrate. Because UvrA- or UvrAB-ditercalinium-DNA complexes can be formed with relaxed DNA without leading to a subsequent incision reaction, these apparently dead-end nucleoprotein complexes may become lesions in themselves resulting in the cytotoxicity of ditercalinium. Our results show that binding of excision repair proteins to a noncovalent DNA-ligand complex may lead to cell toxicity.
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PMID:The noncovalent complex between DNA and the bifunctional intercalator ditercalinium is a substrate for the UvrABC endonuclease of Escherichia coli. 267 94

Endonuclease V, a pyrimidine dimer specific endonuclease in T4 bacteriophage, is able to scan DNA, recognize pyrimidine dimer photoproducts produced by exposure to ultraviolet light, and effectively incise DNA through a two-step mechanism at the damaged bases. The interaction of endonuclease V with nontarget DNA is thought to occur via electrostatic interactions between basic amino acids and the acidic phosphate DNA backbone. Arginine-3 was chosen as a potential candidate for involvement in this protein-nontarget DNA interaction and was extensively mutated to assess its role. The mutations include changes to Asp, Glu, Leu, and Lys and deleting it from the enzyme. Deletion of Arg-3 resulted in an enzyme that retained marginal levels of AP specificity, but no other detectable activity. Charge reversal to Glu-3 and Asp-3 results in proteins that exhibit AP-specific nicking and low levels of dimer-specific nicking. These enzymes are incapable of affecting cellular survival of repair-deficient Escherichia coli after irradiation. Mutations of Arg-3 to Lys-3 or Leu-3 also are unable to complement repair-deficient E. coli. However, these two proteins do exhibit a substantial level of in vitro dimer- and AP-specific nicking. The mechanism by which the Leu-3 and Lys-3 mutant enzymes locate pyrimidine dimers within a population of heavily irradiated plasmid DNA molecules appears to be significantly different from that for the wild-type enzyme. The wild-type endonuclease V processively incises all dimers on an individual plasmid prior to dissociation from that plasmid and subsequent reassociation with other plasmids, yet neither of these mutants exhibits any of the characteristics of this processive nicking activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Site-directed mutagenesis of the T4 endonuclease V gene: the role of arginine-3 in the target search. 269 Sep 47

Young and old rats were compared with respect to the capacity of their skin fibroblasts and epidermal keratinocytes to remove low levels of ultraviolet light (UV) induced UV-endonuclease sensitive sites (pyrimidime dimers) from their DNA, in vitro and in vivo, respectively. In vitro, over a 24-h time period, fibroblasts from both young and old rats were found to remove about 20% of the pyrimidine dimers originally induced by 4.6 J/m2 of UV-C. In vivo, after 2.6 kJ/m2 of UV-B hardly any UV lesions were found to be present in fibroblasts, as demonstrated by immunohistochemistry using an anti-thymine dimer antibody. As reported earlier (Mullaart et al., J. Invest. Dermatol., 90 (1988) 346-349) cultured epidermal keratinocytes do not differ from cultured fibroblasts in UV repair kinetics, whereas in vivo they remove at least 50% of the pyrimidine dimers induced by 4 kJ/m2 of UV-B within 3 h. We now show that epidermal keratinocytes from old rats are not deficient in their in vivo repair characteristics upon this low UV-B dose. However, since a considerable fraction of the pyrimidine dimers appeared to be persistent in fibroblasts and keratinocytes, demonstrated by both enzymatic and immunochemical assays, the possibility is discussed that long-term exposure of skin cells to UV may lead to an accumulation of DNA damage with age.
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PMID:The removal of UV-induced pyrimidine dimers from DNA of rat skin cells in vitro and in vivo in relation to aging. 271 71

Excision repair of pyrimidine dimers induced by 254 nm UV was examined in the genome overall and in a specific sequence containing a transfected gene for hygromycin B resistance, in RBCF-1 cells derived from a goldfish, by the use of UV endonuclease of Micrococcus luteus and alkaline agarose gel electrophoresis. More than 40% of dimers were removed from the specific sequence, while about 20% were removed from the genome overall, within 24 h after exposure to UV (2.5-7.5 J/m2).
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PMID:More efficient excision repair of pyrimidine dimers in the specific DNA sequence than in the genome overall in goldfish cells. 272 81


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