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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)
Oxidative damage to mitochondrial DNA has been implicated in human degenerative diseases and aging. Although removal of oxidative lesions from mitochondrial DNA occurs, the responsible DNA repair enzymes are poorly understood. By expressing the epitope-tagged proteins in COS-7 cells, we examined subcellular localizations of gene products of human DNA glycosylases: hOGG1, hMYH and
hNTH1
. A gene encoding for hOGG1 which excises 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG) from DNA generates four isoforms by alternative splicing (types 1a, 1b, 1c and 2). Three tagged isoforms (types 1b, 1c and 2) were localized in the mitochondria. Type 1a protein, which exclusively contains a putative nuclear localization signal, was sorted to the nucleus and lesser amount to the mitochondria. hMYH, a human homolog gene product of Escherichia coli mutY was mainly transported into the mitochondria.
hNTH1
protein excising several pyrimidine lesions was transported into both the nucleus and mitochondria. In contrast to the three DNA glycosylases, translocation of the human major AP
endonuclease
(hAPE) into the mitochondria was hardly observed in COS-7 cells. These results suggest that the previously observed removal of oxidative base lesions in mitochondrial DNA is initiated by the above DNA glycosylases.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial targeting of human DNA glycosylases for repair of oxidative DNA damage. 961 Dec 36
The
endonuclease III
from Escherichia coli is a repair enzyme which exhibits both a glycosylase and an
endonuclease
function. The activity of the enzyme can be assayed by measuring the released targeted bases in solution from a sample of modified DNA. In the present study, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry was used together with an HPLC prepurification step in order to single out the released bases. The prepurification was found to enhance the specificity and the sensitivity of the assay. Thus, the overall method allowed us to analyze separately 5-hydroxy-5,6-dihydrothymine from the cis and trans isomers of 6-hydroxy-5,6-dihydrothymine. Examples of application of the assay are provided with the measurement of the E. coli endonuclease III-mediated excision of 5-hydroxy-5,6-dihydrothymine and 5,6-dihydrothymine from samples of gamma-irradiated DNA in the presence of cysteine.
...
PMID:Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry with high-performance liquid chromatography prepurification for monitoring the endonuclease III-mediated excision of 5-hydroxy-5,6-dihydrothymine and 5,6-dihydrothymine from gamma-irradiated DNA. 968 72
Mitochondrial DNA is exposed to oxygen radicals produced during oxidative phosphorylation. Accumulation of several kinds of oxidative lesions in mitochondrial DNA may lead to structural genomic alterations, mitochondrial dysfunction, and associated degenerative diseases. The pyrimidine hydrate thymine glycol, one of many oxidative lesions, can block DNA and RNA polymerases and thereby exert negative biological effects. Mitochondrial DNA repair of this lesion is important to ensure normal mitochondrial DNA metabolism. Here, we report the purification of a novel rat liver mitochondrial thymine glycol
endonuclease
(mtTGendo). By using a radiolabeled oligonucleotide duplex containing a single thymine glycol lesion, damage-specific incision at the modified thymine was observed upon incubation with mitochondrial protein extracts. After purification using cation exchange, hydrophobic interaction, and size exclusion chromatography, the most pure active fractions contained a single band of approximately 37 kDa on a silver-stained gel. MtTGendo is active within a broad KCl concentration range and is EDTA-resistant. Furthermore, mtTGendo has an associated apurinic/apyrimidinic-lyase activity. MtTGendo does not incise 8-oxodeoxyguanosine or uracil-containing duplexes or thymine glycol in single-stranded DNA. Based upon functional similarity, we conclude that mtTGendo may be a rat mitochondrial homolog of the Escherichia coli
endonuclease III
protein.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a mitochondrial thymine glycol endonuclease from rat liver. 1006 71
The removal of oxidative damage from Saccharomyces cerevisiae DNA is thought to be conducted primarily through the base excision repair pathway. The Escherichia coli
endonuclease III
homologs Ntg1p and Ntg2p are S. cerevisiae N-glycosylase-associated apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) lyases that recognize a wide variety of damaged pyrimidines (H. J. You, R. L. Swanson, and P. W. Doetsch, Biochemistry 37:6033-6040, 1998). The biological relevance of the N-glycosylase-associated AP lyase activity in the repair of abasic sites is not well understood, and the majority of AP sites in vivo are thought to be processed by Apn1p, the major AP
endonuclease
in yeast. We have found that yeast cells simultaneously lacking Ntg1p, Ntg2p, and Apn1p are hyperrecombinogenic (hyper-rec) and exhibit a mutator phenotype but are not sensitive to the oxidizing agents H2O2 and menadione. The additional disruption of the RAD52 gene in the ntg1 ntg2 apn1 triple mutant confers a high degree of sensitivity to these agents. The hyper-rec and mutator phenotypes of the ntg1 ntg2 apn1 triple mutant are further enhanced by the elimination of the nucleotide excision repair pathway. In addition, removal of either the lesion bypass (Rev3p-dependent) or recombination (Rad52p-dependent) pathway specifically enhances the hyper-rec or mutator phenotype, respectively. These data suggest that multiple pathways with overlapping specificities are involved in the removal of, or tolerance to, spontaneous DNA damage in S. cerevisiae. In addition, the fact that these responses to induced and spontaneous damage depend upon the simultaneous loss of Ntg1p, Ntg2p, and Apn1p suggests a physiological role for the AP lyase activity of Ntg1p and Ntg2p in vivo.
...
PMID:Overlapping specificities of base excision repair, nucleotide excision repair, recombination, and translesion synthesis pathways for DNA base damage in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 1008 60
Purified repair endonucleases such as Fpg protein,
endonuclease III
and IV allow a very sensitive quantification of various types of oxidative DNA modifications in mammalian cells. By means of these assays, the numbers of base modifications sensitive to Fpg protein, which include 8-hydroxyguanine (8-oxoG), were determined to be less than 0.3 per 10(6) bp in several types of untreated cultured mammalian cells and human lymphocytes and less than 10 per 10(6) bp in mitochondrial DNA from rat and porcine liver. Oxidative 5,6-dihydropyrimidine derivatives sensitive to
endonuclease III
and sites of base loss sensitive to
endonuclease
IV or exonuclease III were much less frequent than Fpg-sensitive modifications. Here, we summarize our indications that all Fpg-sensitive modifications are recognized under the assay conditions and that on the other hand there is no artifactual generation of oxidative damage during the analysis. In addition, we show that the steady-state levels of Fpg-sensitive modifications in human lymphocytes and in two mammalian cell lines were higher in proliferating than in resting (confluent) cells. Only some of the Fpg-sensitive base modifications induced by various oxidants are 8-oxoG residues, as demonstrated for the damage under cell-free conditions. The percentage was dependent on the species ultimately responsible for the DNA damage and was approx. 40% in the case of hydroxyl radicals and peroxynitrite, 75% for type II photosensitizers (reacting via singlet oxygen) and only 20-30% in the case of type I photosensitizers such as riboflavin and acridine orange, which are assumed to react directly with the DNA.
...
PMID:DNA oxidation products determined with repair endonucleases in mammalian cells: types, basal levels and influence of cell proliferation. 1009 63
In contrast to the DNA damage caused by far-UV (lambda < 290 nm), near-UV (290 < lambda < 400 nm) induced DNA damage is partially oxygen dependent, suggesting the involvement of reactive oxygen species. To test the hypothesis that enzymes that protect cells from oxidative DNA damage are also involved in preventing near-UV mediated DNA damage, isogenic strains deficient in one or more of exonuclease III (xthA),
endonuclease
IV (nfo), and
endonuclease III
(nth) were exposed to increasing levels of far-UV and near-UV. All strains, with the exception of the nth single mutant, were found to be hypersensitive to the lethal effects of near-UV relative to a wild-type strain. A triple mutant strain (nth nfo xthA) exhibited the greatest sensitivity to near-UV-mediated lethality. The triple mutant was more sensitive than the nfo xthA double mutant to the lethal effects of near-UV, but not far-UV. A forward mutation assay also revealed a significantly increased sensitivity for the triple mutant compared to the nfo xthA deficient strain in the presence of near-UV. However, the triple mutant was no more sensitive to the mutagenic effects of far-UV than a nfo xthA double mutant. These data suggest that exonuclease III,
endonuclease
IV, and
endonuclease III
are important in protection against near-UV-induced DNA damage.
...
PMID:Endonuclease III and endonuclease IV protect Escherichia coli from the lethal and mutagenic effects of near-UV irradiation. 1049 92
The oxidative DNA damage induced by the polar photosensitizer Ro19-8022 in the presence of light was studied and correlated with the associated mutagenicity. Both in isolated DNA and AS52 Chinese hamster ovary cells, photoexcited Ro19-8022 gave rise to a DNA damage profile that was similar to that caused by singlet oxygen: base modifications sensitive to the repair
endonuclease
Fpg protein, which according to high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis were predominantly 8-hydroxyguanine (8-oxoG) residues, were generated in much higher yield than single-strand breaks, sites of base loss (AP sites) and oxidative pyrimidine modifications sensitive to
endonuclease III
. Fifty percent of the Fpg-sensitive modifications were repaired within 2 h. Under conditions that induced 10 Fpg-sensitive modifications per 10(6) bp (six 8-oxoG residues per 10(6) bp), approximately 60 mutations per 10(6) cells were induced in the gpt locus of the AS52 cells. A rather similar mutation frequency was observed when a plasmid carrying the gpt gene was exposed to Ro19-8022 plus light under cell-free conditions and subsequently replicated in bacteria. Sequence analysis revealed that GC-->TA and GC-->CG transversions accounted for 90% of the base substitutions. A significant generation of micronuclei was detectable in AS52 cells exposed to the photosensitizer plus light as well.
...
PMID:Oxidative DNA damage and mutations induced by a polar photosensitizer, Ro19-8022. 1052 20
Rubrobacter radiotolerans is an extremely radioresistant bacterium. It exhibits higher resistance than the well-known radioresistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans, but the molecular mechanisms responsible for the radio-resistance of R. radiotolerans remain unknown. In the present study, we have demonstrated the presence of a novel DNA repair enzyme in R. radiotolerans cells that recognizes radiation-induced DNA damages such as thymine glycol, urea residues, and abasic sites. The enzyme was purified from the crude cell extract by a series of chromatography to an apparent physical homogeneity. The purified enzyme showed a single band with a molecular mass of approximately 40 kDa in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and was designated as R-
endonuclease
. R-Endonuclease exhibited repair activity for thymine glycol, urea residues, and abasic sites present in plasmid DNA, but did not act on intact DNA, UV-irradiated DNA and DNA containing reduced abasic sites. The substrate specificity together with the salt and pH optima suggests that R-
endonuclease
is a functional homolog of
endonuclease III
of Escherichia coli.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a novel DNA repair enzyme from the extremely radioresistant bacterium Rubrobacter radiotolerans. 1083 7
The nuclease activity of FEN-1 is essential for both DNA replication and repair. Intermediate DNA products formed during these processes possess a variety of structures and termini. We have previously demonstrated that the 5'-->3' exonuclease activity of the Schizosaccharomyces pombe FEN-1 protein Rad2p requires a 5'-phosphoryl moiety to efficiently degrade a nick-containing substrate in a reconstituted alternative excision repair system. Here we report the effect of different 5'-terminal moieties of a variety of DNA substrates on Rad2p activity. We also show that Rad2p possesses a 5'-->3' single-stranded exonuclease activity, similar to Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rad27p and phage T5 5'-->3' exonuclease (also a FEN-1 homolog). FEN-1 nucleases have been associated with the base excision repair pathway, specifically processing cleaved abasic sites. Because several enzymes cleave abasic sites through different mechanisms resulting in different 5'-termini, we investigated the ability of Rad2p to process several different types of cleaved abasic sites. With varying efficiency, Rad2p degrades the products of an abasic site cleaved by Escherichia coli
endonuclease III
and
endonuclease
IV (prototype AP endonucleases) and S.POMBE: Uve1p. These results provide important insights into the roles of Rad2p in DNA repair processes in S.POMBE:
...
PMID:The nature of the 5'-terminus is a major determinant for DNA processing by Schizosaccharomyces pombe Rad2p, a FEN-1 family nuclease. 1090 51
We have analyzed the recognition by various repair endonucleases of DNA base modifications induced by three oxidants, viz. [4-(tert-butyldioxycarbonyl)benzyl]triethylammonium chloride (BCBT), a photochemical source of tert-butoxyl radicals, disodium salt of 1,4-etheno-2,3-benzodioxin-1,4-dipropanoic acid (NDPO(2)), a chemical source of singlet oxygen, and riboflavin, a type-I photosensitizer. The base modifications induced by BCBT, which were previously shown to be mostly 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoGua) residues, were recognized by Fpg and Ogg1 proteins, but not by
endonuclease
IIII, Ntg1 and Ntg2 proteins. In the case of singlet oxygen induced damage, 8-oxoGua accounted for only 35% of the base modifications recognized by Fpg protein. The remaining Fpg-sensitive modifications were not recognized by Ogg1 protein and relatively poor by
endonuclease III
, but they were relatively good substrates of Ntg1 and Ntg2. In the case of the damage induced by photoexcited riboflavin, the fraction of Fpg-sensitive base modifications identified as 8-oxoGua was only 23%. In contrast to the damage induced by singlet oxygen, the remaining lesions were not only recognized by Ntg1 and Ntg2 proteins and (relatively poor) by
endonuclease III
, but also by Ogg1 protein. The analysis of the mutations observed after transfection of modified plasmid pSV2gpt into Escherichia coli revealed that all agents induced near exclusively GC-->TA and GC-->CG transversions, the numbers of which were correlated with the numbers of 8-oxoGua residues and Ntg-sensitive modifications, respectively. In conclusion, both singlet oxygen and the type-I photosensitizer riboflavin induce predominantly oxidative guanine modifications other than 8-oxoGua, which most probably give rise to GC-->CG transversions and in which eukaryotic cells are substrates of Ntg1 and Ntg2 proteins.
...
PMID:Oxidative DNA base damage induced by singlet oxygen and photosensitization: recognition by repair endonucleases and mutagenicity. 1101 87
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