Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.5.1.4 (deaminase)
5,113 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Somatic hypermutation and class-switch-recombination are initiated by the deamination of deoxycytosine in DNA by activation-induced-deaminase, AID. Recently, there has been much research into how AID targets double-stranded DNA in sub-regions of Ig genes, the involvement of co-factors and posttranslational modifications in this process, the co-option of DNA 'repair' mechanisms and AID evolution.
...
PMID:AID in somatic hypermutation and class switch recombination. 1646 63

The DNA deaminase family encompasses enzymes that have been highly conserved throughout vertebrate evolution and which display wide-ranging positive effects upon innate and adaptive immune system and development. Activation-induced cytidine deaminase was identified as a DNA mutator after its necessity in the successful development of high-affinity B cells via somatic hypermutation, class switch recombination, and gene conversion was determined. APOBEC3 exhibits the ability to deaminate retroviral first strand cDNA in a variety of viral infections, including HIV and hepatitis. Recent work has highlighted the potential importance of activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) and APOBEC1 in epigenetic reprogramming, and also the role that AID and the APOBECs may have in the development of cancer. In addition to the known activities of these members of the protein family, there are still other deaminases, such as APOBEC2, whose targets and functions are as yet unknown. This chapter provides the details of two assays that have proved to be invaluable in elucidating the exact specificities of deaminases both in vitro and in Escherichia coli. The application of these assays to future studies of the deaminase family will provide an indispensible tool in determining the potentially diverse functions of the remainder of this family of enzymes.
...
PMID:Genetic and in vitro assays of DNA deamination. 1679 68

AID deaminates cytosine in the context of single stranded DNA to generate uracil, essential for effective class-switch recombination, somatic hypermutation and gene conversion at the B cell immunoglobulin locus. As a nuclear DNA mutator, AID activity must be tightly controlled and regulated, but the genetic analysis of AID and other DNA deaminases has left unstudied a number of important biochemical details. We have asked fundamental questions regarding AID's substrate recognition and processing, i.e. whether AID acts distributively or processively. We demonstrate that in vitro, human AID exhibits turnover, a prerequisite for our analysis, and show that it exhibits a distributive mode of action. Using a variety of different assays, we established that human AID is alone unable to act processively on any of a number of DNA substrates, i.e. one AID molecule is unable to carry out multiple, sequential deamination events on the same substrate. This is in contrast to the cytoplasmically expressed anti-viral DNA deaminase APOBEC3G, which acts in a processive manner, possibly suggesting that evolutionary pressure has altered the ability of DNA deaminases to act in a processive or distributive manner, depending on the physiological need.
...
PMID:The nuclear DNA deaminase AID functions distributively whereas cytoplasmic APOBEC3G has a processive mode of action. 1729 35

Infection with Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) is a risk factor for the development of gastric cancer. Here we show that infection of gastric epithelial cells with 'cag' pathogenicity island (cagPAI)-positive H. pylori induced aberrant expression of activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID), a member of the cytidine-deaminase family that acts as a DNA- and RNA-editing enzyme, via the IkappaB kinase-dependent nuclear factor-kappaB activation pathway. H. pylori-mediated upregulation of AID resulted in the accumulation of nucleotide alterations in the TP53 tumor suppressor gene in gastric cells in vitro. Our findings provide evidence that aberrant AID expression caused by H. pylori infection might be a mechanism of mutation accumulation in the gastric mucosa during H. pylori-associated gastric carcinogenesis.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori infection triggers aberrant expression of activation-induced cytidine deaminase in gastric epithelium. 1741 70

The activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID)/apolipoprotein B RNA-editing catalytic component (APOBEC) family is a vertebrate-restricted subgrouping of a superfamily of zinc (Zn)-dependent deaminases that has members distributed throughout the biological world. AID and APOBEC2 are the oldest family members with APOBEC1 and the APOBEC3s being later arrivals restricted to placental mammals. Many AID/APOBEC family members exhibit cytidine deaminase activity on polynucleotides, although in different physiological contexts. Here, we examine the AID/APOBEC proteins in the context of the entire Zn-dependent deaminase superfamily. On the basis of secondary structure predictions, we propose that the cytosine and tRNA deaminases are likely to provide better structural paradigms for the AID/APOBEC family than do the cytidine deaminases, to which they have conventionally been compared. These comparisons yield predictions concerning likely polynucleotide-interacting residues in AID/APOBEC3s, predictions that are supported by mutagenesis studies. We also focus on a specific comparison between AID and the APOBEC3s. Both are DNA deaminases that function in immunity and are responsible for the hypermutation of their target substrates. AID functions in the adaptive immune system to diversify antibodies with targeted DNA deamination being central to this function. APOBEC3s function as part of an innate pathway of immunity to retroviruses with targeted DNA deamination being central to their activity in retroviral hypermutation. However, the mechanism by which the APOBEC3s fulfill their function of retroviral restriction remains unresolved.
...
PMID:DNA deamination in immunity: AID in the context of its APOBEC relatives. 1756 Feb 71

Recent developments in the field of antibody (Ab) diversification have rapidly advanced our understanding of the molecular mechanism underlying these events. Key to these developments was the identification of activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) as the central regulator of secondary Ab diversification, and the elucidation of its primary function as a DNA deaminase. Incredibly, current literature suggests the existence of a shared pathway, common to all secondary diversification processes, from which the separate outcomes branch outwards at various points. Immunoglobulin gene conversion (IGC) is one of these mechanisms and is used by a number of vertebrate species in both the development of the pre-immune repertoire and in affinity maturation. In a manner similar to other Ab diversification mechanisms, IGC has managed to co-opt a normal DNA repair pathway for the generation of receptor diversity. In the case of IGC specifically, that pathway is homologous recombination (HR). A burgeoning wealth of genetic, biochemical and structural data has clarified the roles of many key HR factors, allowing new insight into its molecular mechanism. These insights, combined with those from the common mechanism of AID action, synergize to develop an emerging picture of the mechanism underlying IGC.
...
PMID:Immunoglobulin gene conversion: synthesizing antibody diversification and DNA repair. 1760 Jul 74

The human APOBEC3G (apolipoprotein B messenger-RNA-editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide-like 3G) protein is a single-strand DNA deaminase that inhibits the replication of human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1), other retroviruses and retrotransposons. APOBEC3G anti-viral activity is circumvented by most retroelements, such as through degradation by HIV-1 Vif. APOBEC3G is a member of a family of polynucleotide cytosine deaminases, several of which also target distinct physiological substrates. For instance, APOBEC1 edits APOB mRNA and AID deaminates antibody gene DNA. Although structures of other family members exist, none of these proteins has elicited polynucleotide cytosine deaminase or anti-viral activity. Here we report a solution structure of the human APOBEC3G catalytic domain. Five alpha-helices, including two that form the zinc-coordinating active site, are arranged over a hydrophobic platform consisting of five beta-strands. NMR DNA titration experiments, computational modelling, phylogenetic conservation and Escherichia coli-based activity assays combine to suggest a DNA-binding model in which a brim of positively charged residues positions the target cytosine for catalysis. The structure of the APOBEC3G catalytic domain will help us to understand functions of other family members and interactions that occur with pathogenic proteins such as HIV-1 Vif.
...
PMID:Structure of the DNA deaminase domain of the HIV-1 restriction factor APOBEC3G. 1828 8

APOBEC3G (apolipoprotein B mRNA-editing enzyme catalytic polypeptide-like 3G) was identified as an anti-HIV-1 (human immunodeficiency virus type 1) cellular factor in target CD4 T cells. It is a member of the APOBEC family of cytidine deaminases consisting of APOBEC1, APOBEC2, APOBEC3 (A to H), and AID (activation induced deaminase). During reverse transcription, it deaminates dC to dU in nascent minus-strand viral DNA, resulting in G-to-A hypermutation in the plus strand DNA to inhibit the replication of HIV-1. On the contrary, HIV-1 Vif protein counteracts this enzyme by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway to enable HIV-1 replicate in target cells. Vif forms an E3 ligase complex with cellular proteins including Cullin5, ElonginB, and ElonginC (Vif-BC-Cul5) and functions as a substrate recognition subunit of the complex to target APOBEC3G for ubiquitin-proteasome dependent degradation in virus-producing cells. APOBEC3G has also been shown to have a broad antiviral activity on a wide variety of viruses which include not only retroviruses such as other lentiviruses, murine leukemia virus (MLV), and human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) but also other viruses such as hepatitis B virus (HBV) and adeno-associated virus. Furthermore, other members of the APOBEC family also show a broad antiviral activity, but target virus specificities vary among APOBEC members. On the other hand, viruses have their own mechanisms to escape from APOBEC. These expanding evidences suggest that the APOBEC family of cytidine deaminases plays an important role in antiviral innate immunity and might be a novel target for an antiviral therapy. Here we review the present understanding of APOBEC3 proteins as an antiviral innate immunity and battles between APOBEC3 and viruses.
...
PMID:Cytidine deaminases as a weapon against retroviruses and a new target for antiviral therapy. 1833 43

The AID/APOBECs, a group of cytidine deaminases, represent a somewhat unusual protein family that can insert mutations in DNA and RNA as a result of their ability to deaminate cytidine to uridine. The ancestral AID/APOBECs originated from a branch of the zinc-dependent deaminase superfamily at the beginning of the vertebrate radiation. Other members of the family have arisen in mammals and present a history of complex gene duplications and positive selection. All AID/APOBECs have a characteristic zinc-coordination motif, which forms the core of the catalytic site. The crystal structure of human APOBEC2 shows remarkable similarities to that of the bacterial tRNA-editing enzyme TadA, which suggests a conserved mechanism by which polynucleotides are recognized and deaminated. The AID/APOBECs seem to have diverse roles. AID and the APOBEC3s are DNA mutators, acting in antigen-driven antibody diversification processes and in an innate defense system against retroviruses, respectively. APOBEC1 edits the mRNA for apolipoprotein B, a protein involved in lipid transport. A detailed understanding of the biological roles of the family is still some way off, however, and the functions of some members of the family are completely unknown. Given their ability to mutate DNA, a role for the AID/APOBECs in the onset of cancer has been proposed.
...
PMID:The AID/APOBEC family of nucleic acid mutators. 1859 72

Immunoglobulin class switch recombination deficiencies in humans are exquisite models to analyse the mechanisms of class switch recombination (CSR). Besides defects in CD40L/CD40 interaction, others result from an intrinsic B-cell deficiency. The recent elucidation of the molecular basis of some of them has made it possible to delineate the molecular events involved in antibody maturation. Activation-induced (cytidine) deaminase (AID) and uracil-N-glycosylase deficiencies have demonstrated the role of AID as the inducer of DNA lesions in switch and variable regions. However, most of these CSR deficiencies remain molecularly undefined. Their characterization would lead to a better understanding of the complex machinery involved in CSR.
...
PMID:Immunoglobulin class switch recombination: study through human natural mutants. 1900 92


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next >>