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Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (
ATPase
)
65,361
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Drosophila brahma (brm) gene encodes an activator of homeotic genes that is highly related to the yeast transcriptional activator SWI2 (SNF2), a potential helicase. To determine whether brm is a functional homolog of SWI2 or merely a member of a family of SWI2-related genes, we searched for additional Drosophila genes related to SWI2 and examined their function in yeast cells. In addition to brm, we identified one other Drosophila relative of SWI2: the closely related
ISWI
gene. The 1,027-residue
ISWI
protein contains the DNA-dependent
ATPase
domain characteristic of the SWI2 protein family but lacks the three other domains common to brm and SWI2. In contrast, the
ISWI
protein is highly related (70% identical) to the human hSNF2L protein over its entire length, suggesting that they may be functional homologs. The DNA-dependent
ATPase
domains of brm and SWI2, but not
ISWI
, are functionally interchangeable; a chimeric SWI2-brm protein partially rescued the slow growth of swi2- cells and supported transcriptional activation mediated by the glucocorticoid receptor in vivo in yeast cells. These findings indicate that brm is the closest Drosophila relative of SWI2 and suggest that brm and SWI2 play similar roles in transcriptional activation.
...
PMID:Identification and characterization of Drosophila relatives of the yeast transcriptional activator SNF2/SWI2. 790 17
The generation of an accessible heat shock promoter in chromatin in vitro requires the concerted action of the GAGA transcription factor and NURF, an ATP-dependent nucleosome remodeling factor. NURF is composed of four subunits and is biochemically distinct from the SWI2/SNF2 multiprotein complex, a transcriptional activator that also appears to alter nucleosome structure. We have obtained protein microsequence and immunological evidence identifying the 140 kDa subunit of NURF as
ISWI
, previously of unknown function but highly related to SWI2/SNF2 only in the
ATPase
domain. The
ISWI
protein is localized to the cell nucleus and is expressed throughout Drosophila development at levels as high as 100,000 molecules/cell. The convergence of biochemical and genetic studies on
ISWI
and SWI2/SNF2 underscores these ATPases and their close relatives as key components of independent systems for chromatin remodeling.
...
PMID:ISWI, a member of the SWI2/SNF2 ATPase family, encodes the 140 kDa subunit of the nucleosome remodeling factor. 852 2
The yeast SWI2/SNF2 polypeptide is a subunit of the SWI/SNF protein complex that is required for many transcriptional activators to function in a chromatin context. SWI2 is believed to be the founding member of a new subfamily of DNA-stimulated ATPases/DNA helicases that includes proteins that function in DNA repair (RAD5, RAD16, ERCC6), recombination (RAD54), transcription (MOT1,
ISWI
, brm, BRG1, hBRM) and cell cycle control (STH1). We have created a set of 16 mutations within the SWI2
ATPase
domain and have analyzed the functional consequences of these mutations in vivo. We have identified residues within each of the seven
ATPase
motifs that are required for SWI2 function. We have also identified crucial residues that are interspersed between the known
ATPase
motifs. In contrast, we identify other highly conserved residues that appear to be dispensable for SWI2 function. We also find that single amino acid changes in
ATPase
motifs IV and VI lead to a dominant negative phenotype. None of the 12 SWI2 mutations that disrupt SWI2 activity in vivo alter the assembly of the SWI/SNF complex. These studies provide an invaluable framework for biochemical analysis of the SWI2
ATPase
and for functional analysis of other SWI2 family members.
...
PMID:Functional analysis of the DNA-stimulated ATPase domain of yeast SWI2/SNF2. 887 45
Repressive chromatin structures need to be unravelled to allow DNA-binding proteins access to their target sequences. This de-repression constitutes an important point at which transcription and presumably other nuclear processes can be regulated. Energy-consuming enzyme complexes that facilitate the interaction of transcription factors with chromatin by modifying nucleosome structure are involved in this regulation. One such factor, nucleosome-remodelling factor (NURF), has been isolated from Drosophila embryo extracts. We have now identified a chromatin-accessibility complex (CHRAC) which uses energy to increase the general accessibility of DNA in chromatin. However, unlike other known chromatin remodelling factors, CHRAC can also function during chromatin assembly: it uses ATP to convert irregular chromatin into a regular array of nucleosomes with even spacing. CHRAC combines enzymes that modulate nucleosome structure and DNA topology. Using mass spectrometry, we identified two of the five CHRAC subunits as the
ATPase
ISWI
, which is also part of NURF, and topoisomerase II. The presence of
ISWI
in different contexts suggests that chromatin remodelling machines have a modular nature and that
ISWI
has a central role in different chromatin remodelling reactions.
...
PMID:Chromatin-remodelling factor CHRAC contains the ATPases ISWI and topoisomerase II. 925 92
Chromatin is a dynamic material; chromatin structures can repress transcription and their remodeling accompanies activation. Recent biochemical studies in Drosophila have revealed three multi-protein complexes with ATP-dependent chromatin restructuring activities. Although all contain the
ATPase
ISWI
, their properties in vitro are markedly different, distinct from SWI-SNF and reveal intriguing connections to both transcription and chromatin assembly.
...
PMID:Chromatin remodeling machines: similar motors, ulterior motives. 947 31
We have isolated a novel cDNA encoding a peptide with 86% sequence homology to hSNF2L protein, a previously isolated human homologue of Drosophila
ISWI
. This gene, designated SMARCA5, contained an open reading frame of 3,156 nucleotides encoding a 1,052 amino-acid peptide (hSNF2H). As this product also revealed a significant (73%) identity in amino acid sequence to
ISWI
, a key component of chromatin-remodeling factors in Drosophila, hSNF2H may be another human homologue of this protein and, as such, could be involved in chromatin remodeling in humans. An
ATPase
domain characteristic of the SWI2/SNF2 family of proteins was highly conserved in
ISWI
, hSNF2L, and hSNF2H. Northern-blot analysis demonstrated ubiquitous expression of 5.1-kb and 4.1-kb transcripts of the hSNF2H gene. This gene was mapped by FISH to chromosome bands 4q31.1-->q31.2.
...
PMID:Cloning and mapping of SMARCA5 encoding hSNF2H, a novel human homologue of Drosophila ISWI. 973 Jun
The
ATPase
ISWI
is a subunit of several distinct nucleosome remodeling complexes that increase the accessibility of DNA in chromatin. We found that the isolated
ISWI
protein itself was able to carry out nucleosome remodeling, nucleosome rearrangement, and chromatin assembly reactions. The
ATPase
activity of
ISWI
was stimulated by nucleosomes but not by free DNA or free histones, indicating that
ISWI
recognizes a specific structural feature of nucleosomes. Nucleosome remodeling, therefore, does not require a functional interaction between
ISWI
and the other subunits of
ISWI
complexes. The role of proteins associated with
ISWI
may be to regulate the activity of the remodeling engine or to define the physiological context within which a nucleosome remodeling reaction occurs.
...
PMID:ISWI is an ATP-dependent nucleosome remodeling factor. 1007 6
We have identified and characterized two Imitation Switch genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, ISW1 and ISW2, which are highly related to Drosophila
ISWI
, encoding the putative ATPase subunit of three ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling factors. Purification of ISW1p reveals a four-subunit complex with nucleosome-stimulated
ATPase
activity, as well as ATP-dependent nucleosome disruption and spacing activities. Purification of ISW2p reveals a two-subunit complex also with nucleosome-stimulated
ATPase
and ATP-dependent nucleosome spacing activities but no detectable nucleosome disruption activity. Null mutations of ISW1, ISW2, and CHD1 genes cause synthetic lethality in various stress conditions in yeast cells, revealing the first in vivo functions of the
ISWI
subfamily of chromatin-remodeling complexes and demonstrating their genetic interactions. A single point mutation within the
ATPase
domain of both ISW1p and ISW2p inactivated all ATP-dependent biochemical activities of the complexes, as well as the ability of the genes to rescue the mutant phenotypes. This demonstrates that the ATP-dependent chromatin-remodeling activities are essential for the in vivo functions of both ISW1 and ISW2 complexes.
...
PMID:Characterization of the imitation switch subfamily of ATP-dependent chromatin-remodeling factors in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 1009 Jul 25
The chromatin accessibility complex (CHRAC) belongs to the class of nucleosome remodeling factors that increase the accessibility of nucleosomal DNA in an ATP-dependent manner. We found that CHRAC induces movements of intact histone octamers to neighboring DNA segments without facilitating their displacement to competing DNA or histone chaperones in trans. CHRAC-induced energy-dependent nucleosome sliding may, in principle, explain nucleosome remodeling, nucleosome positioning, and nucleosome spacing reactions known to be catalyzed by CHRAC. The catalytic core of CHRAC, the
ATPase
ISWI
, also mobilized nucleosomes at the expense of energy. However, the directionality of the CHRAC- and
ISWI
-induced nucleosome movements differed drastically, indicating that the geometry of the native complex modulates the activity of its catalytic core.
...
PMID:Nucleosome movement by CHRAC and ISWI without disruption or trans-displacement of the histone octamer. 1039 13
Recent studies have shown that two nucleosome-remodeling complexes, NURF and CHRAC, open chromatin for transcription and replication by using their common catalytic subunit, the nucleosomal
ATPase
ISWI
, to increase the mobility of nucleosomes relative to DNA sequence.
...
PMID:SWItched-on mobility. 1053 Sep 96
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