Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.4.1 (phosphodiesterase)
18,767 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

DNA polymerase III of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been reported to be encoded at the CDC2 locus based on two observations. First, the CDC2 gene has homology to known DNA polymerase genes [Boulet et al. (1989) EMBO J. 8, 1849-1854], and second, the mutants cdc2-1 and cdc2-2 yield little or no DNA polymerase III activity in vitro [Boulet et al. (1989); Sitney et al. (1989) Cell 56, 599-605]. We describe here the isolation of temperature-sensitive DNA polymerase III from cdc2-2 strains. Our results provide direct experimental confirmation of the previously inferred gene/enzyme relationship and verify the conclusion that DNA polymerase III is required to replicate the genome. We isolated DNA polymerase III from two cdc2-2 strains, one containing the wild-type allele for DNA polymerase I (CDC17) and the other a mutant DNA polymerase I allele (cdc17-1). Yields from cdc2-2 cells of both DNA polymerase III activity and an associated 3'-5'-exonuclease activity [exonuclease III; Bauer et al. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 917-924] were decreased relative to yields from CDC2 cells. DNA polymerase III activity from cdc2-2 strains is thermolabile, displaying at least a 4-fold reduction in half-life at 44 degrees C. The activity is also labile at 37 degrees C, a temperature which is restrictive for growth of cdc2-2 but not CDC2 strains. At 23 degrees C, a temperature which is permissive for growth of both cdc2-2 and CDC2 strains, the mutant and wild-type DNA polymerase III activities display equal stability. These observations provide a demonstrable biochemical basis for the thermosensitive phenotype of cdc2-2 cells.
...
PMID:Isolation of temperature-sensitive DNA polymerase III from Saccharomyces cerevisiae cdc2-2. 167 79

The repair of apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites is described. The major pathway involves hydrolysis of the stable phosphodiester bond on the 5' side of the lesion by an AP endonuclease. The 5' terminal deoxyribose-phosphate residue is excised by a separate phosphodiesterase which does not appear to be an exonuclease. Repair replication of the single missing nucleotide residue by a DNA polymerase and ligation complete the excision-repair process. The possibility that minor DNA lesions may accumulate with time in long-lived cells is considered. Such lesions should be chemically stable and should not be recognized by DNA-repair enzymes.
...
PMID:Repair of intrinsic DNA lesions. 169 69

The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae catalytic DNA polymerase I 180-kDa subunit and the tightly associated 86-kDa polypeptide have been purified using immunoaffinity chromatography, permitting further characterization of the DNA polymerase activity of the DNA primase-DNA polymerase protein complex. The subunits were purified to apparent homogeneity from separate overproducing yeast strains using monoclonal antibodies specifically recognizing each subunit. When the individual subunits were recombined in vitro a p86p180 physical complex formed spontaneously, as judged by immunoprecipitation of 180-kDa polypeptide and DNA polymerase activity with the anti-86-kDa monoclonal antibody. The 86-kDa subunit stabilized the DNA polymerase activity of the 180-kDa catalytic subunit at 30 degrees C, the physiological temperature. The apparent DNA polymerase processivity of 50-60 nucleotides on poly(dA).oligo(dT)12 or poly(dT).oligo(A)8-12 template-primer was not affected by the presence of the 86-kDa subunit but was reduced by increased Mg2+ concentration. The Km of the catalytic 180-kDa subunit for dATP or DNA primer terminus was unaffected by the presence of the 86-kDa subunit. The isolated 180-kDa polypeptide was sufficient to catalyze all the DNA synthesis that had been observed previously in the DNA primase-DNA polymerase protein complex. The 180-kDa subunit possessed a 3'----5'-exonuclease activity that catalyzed degradation of polynucleotides, but degradation of oligonucleotide substrates of chain lengths up to 50 was not detected. This exonuclease activity was unaffected by the presence of the 86-kDa subunit. Despite the striking physical similarity of the DNA primase-DNA polymerase protein complex in all eukaryotes examined, the data presented here indicate differences in the enzymatic properties detected in preparations of the DNA polymerase subunits isolated from S. cerevisiae as compared with the properties of preparations from Drosophila cells. In particular, the 3'----5'-exonuclease activity associated with the yeast catalytic DNA polymerase subunit was not masked by the 86-kDa subunit.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of the 180- and 86-kilodalton subunits of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae DNA primase-DNA polymerase protein complex. The 180-kilodalton subunit has both DNA polymerase and 3'----5'-exonuclease activities. 170 71

The bacteriophage phi 29 DNA polymerase, involved both in the protein-primed initiation and elongation steps of the viral DNA replication, displays a very processive 3',5'-exonuclease activity acting preferentially on single-stranded DNA. This exonucleolytic activity showed a marked preference for excision of a mismatched versus a correctly paired 3' terminus. These characteristics enable the phi 29 DNA polymerase to act as a proofreading enzyme. A comparative analysis of the wild-type phi 29 DNA polymerase and a mutant lacking 3',5'-exonuclease activity indicated that a productive coupling between the exonuclease and polymerase activities is necessary to prevent fixation of polymerization errors. Based on these data, the phi 29 DNA polymerase, a model enzyme for protein-primed DNA replication, appears to share the same mechanism for the editing function as that first proposed for T4 DNA polymerase and Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I on the basis of functional and structural studies.
...
PMID:The bacteriophage phi 29 DNA polymerase, a proofreading enzyme. 173 57

alpha-like and beta-like DNA polymerases have previously been isolated from a halophilic archaebacterium Halobacterium halobium. In this report, we show that the alpha-like DNA polymerase has an associated 3' to 5'-exonuclease activity which is specific for single-stranded DNA, sensitive to both aphidicolin and N-ethylmaleimide and dependent on high salt concentrations like the polymerase activity. As this DNA polymerase has been shown to contain a primase activity, it may be considered as the equivalent to both eukaryotic DNA polymerases alpha and delta. As shown by glycerol-gradient centrifugation and electrophoresis under denaturing conditions, the beta-like polymerase would appear to have a monomeric structure and comprise of a single 65-kDa polypeptide. This DNA polymerase has both 3' to 5'-exonuclease and 5' to 3'-exonuclease activities which, contrary to polymerase activity, are inhibited by high salt concentrations.
...
PMID:Exonuclease activities associated with DNA polymerases alpha and beta of the archaebacterium Halobacterium halobium. 185 84

We purified a mouse DNA repair enzyme having apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease, DNA 3'-phosphatase, 3'-5'-exonuclease and DNA 3' repair diesterase activities, and designated the enzyme as APEX nuclease. A cDNA clone for the enzyme was isolated from a mouse spleen cDNA library using probes of degenerate oligonucleotides deduced from the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the enzyme. The complete nucleotide sequence of the cDNA (1.3 kilobases) was determined. Northern hybridization using this cDNA showed that the size of its mRNA is about 1.5 kilobases. The complete amino acid sequence for the enzyme predicted from the nucleotide sequence of the cDNA (APEX nuclease cDNA) indicates that the enzyme consists of 316 amino acids with a calculated molecular weight of 35,400. The predicted sequence contains the partial amino acid sequences determined by a protein sequencer from the purified enzyme. The coding sequence of APEX nuclease was cloned into pUC18 SmaI and HindIII sites in the control frame of the lacZ promoter. The construct was introduced into BW2001 (xth-11, nfo-2) strain cells of Escherichia coli. The transformed cells expressed a 36.4-kDa polypeptide (the 316 amino acid sequence of APEX nuclease headed by the N-terminal decapeptide of beta-galactosidase) and were less sensitive to methyl methanesulfonate than the parent cells. The fusion product showed priming activity for DNA polymerase on bleomycin-damaged DNA and acid-depurinated DNA. The deduced amino acid sequence of mouse APEX nuclease exhibits a significant homology to those of exonuclease III of E. coli and ExoA protein of Streptococcus pneumoniae and an intensive homology with that of bovine AP endonuclease 1.
...
PMID:cDNA and deduced amino acid sequence of a mouse DNA repair enzyme (APEX nuclease) with significant homology to Escherichia coli exonuclease III. 193 31

The analysis of the deduced amino acid sequence of the herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) DNA polymerase reported here suggests that the polymerase structure consists of domains carrying separate biological functions. The HSV-1 enzyme is known to possess 5'-3'-exonuclease (RNase H), 3'-5'-exonuclease, and DNA polymerase catalytic activities. Sequence analysis suggests an arrangement of these activities into distinct domains resembling the organization of Escherichia coli polymerase I. In order to more precisely define the structure and C-terminal limits of a putative catalytic domain responsible for the DNA polymerization activity of the HSV-1 enzyme, we have undertaken in vitro mutagenesis and computer modeling studies of the HSV-1 DNA polymerase gene. Sequence analysis predicts that the major DNA polymerization domain of the HSV-1 enzyme will be contained between residues 690 and 1100, and we present a three-dimensional model of this region, on the basis of the X-ray crystallographic structure of the E. coli polymerase I. Consistent with these structural and modeling studies, deletion analysis by in vitro mutagenesis of the HSV-1 DNA polymerase gene expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae has confirmed that certain amino acids from the C terminus (residues 1073 to 1144 and 1177 to 1235) can be deleted without destroying HSV-1 DNA polymerase catalytic activity and that the extreme N-terminal 227 residues are also not required for this activity.
...
PMID:Structure-function studies of the herpes simplex virus type 1 DNA polymerase. 216 83

DNA polymerase delta was isolated from human placenta and identified as such on the basis of its association with a 3'- to 5'-exonuclease activity. The association of the polymerase and exonuclease activities was maintained throughout purification and attempted separations by physical or electrophoretic methods. Moreover, ratios of the two activities remained constant during the purification steps, and both activities were inhibited by aphidicolin, oxidized glutathione, and N-ethylmaleimide. The purified enzyme had an estimated molecular weight of 172,000, on the basis of a Stokes radius of 53.6 A and a sedimentation coefficient of 7.8 S. On sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gel electrophoresis, polymerase delta preparations contained a band of ca. 170 kilodaltons (kDa) as well as several smaller polypeptides. The 170-kDa polypeptide was identified as the largest polypeptide component in the preparation possessing DNA polymerase activity by an activity staining procedure following gel electrophoresis in the presence of SDS. Western blotting of DNA polymerase delta with polyclonal antisera also revealed a single 170-kDa immunoreactive polypeptide. Monoclonal antibodies to KB cell polymerase alpha inhibited placental polymerase alpha but did not inhibit DNA polymerase delta, while the murine polyclonal antisera to polymerase delta inhibited delta but not alpha. These findings establish the existence of DNA polymerase delta in a human tissue and support the view that both its polymerase and its exonuclease activities may be associated with a single protein.
...
PMID:Human placental DNA polymerase delta: identification of a 170-kilodalton polypeptide by activity staining and immunoblotting. 243 59

The DNA sequence of the polA gene of Streptococcus pneumoniae was determined, and the DNA polymerase I encoded by the gene was purified to homogeneity. Determination of the amino-terminal amino acid sequence of the protein showed it to correspond to the Mr 99,487 polypeptide predicted from the nucleotide sequence. The mRNA transcript was mapped with respect to its sites of initiation and termination in the DNA. Inasmuch as the mRNA begins only two nucleotides before the first codon, it lacks a typical ribosome binding site. Nevertheless, 500 molecules of the protein are produced per cell. Like the Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I, the protein from S. pneumoniae has 5'- and 3'-exonuclease as well as polymerase activities, and it also undergoes a single cleavage on mild proteolysis. Alignment of the two different polymerase I proteins shows 40% of their amino acid residues to be identical. Homology is evident also with the DNA polymerase encoded by phage T7 gene 5. In addition, the amino-terminal regions of the bacterial polymerase I proteins are homologous to the separate 5'-exonuclease protein encoded by phage T7 gene 6. Analysis of the patterns of homology suggests that the bacterial polymerase I may represent the accretion of at least six separate genetic regions.
...
PMID:Characterization of the polA gene of Streptococcus pneumoniae and comparison of the DNA polymerase I it encodes to homologous enzymes from Escherichia coli and phage T7. 253 9

Bacteriophage T7 DNA polymerase, the product of gene 5 of the phage, has both polymerase and single-and double-stranded DNA 3'-to 5'-exonuclease activities. The exonuclease activities can be inactivated selectively by an oxidation reaction that requires molecular oxygen, a reducing agent, and iron at a concentration less than or equimolar to that of the gene 5 protein. Both exonuclease activities can be diminished by several thousandfold, with only a small decline in the polymerase activity. Escherichia coli thioredoxin, an accessory protein that binds tightly to the gene 5 protein and increases the processivity of the polymerization reaction, has no effect on the rate of oxidation. We propose that iron binds specifically to the exonuclease domain and, in the presence of molecular oxygen and a reducing agent, generates reactive oxygen species that selectively modify amino acid residues essential for the exonuclease activities.
...
PMID:Selective oxidation of the exonuclease domain of bacteriophage T7 DNA polymerase. 282 55


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>