Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:4.1.99.3 (PRE)
1,923 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cyclic voltammetry was used to study the reduction and oxidation behaviour of several pyrimidine cyclobutane dimers mimicking UV induced lesion in DNA strands in polar solvents (N,N-dimethylformamide and acetonitrile). Both electron injection and removal to and from the dimers, respectively, lead to their cleavage and reformation of the monomeric base. The influence of stereochemistry and substitution pattern at the cyclobutane motif on the reactivity has been studied. It appears that the repair process always proceeds in a sequential fashion with initial formation of a dimer ion radical intermediate, which then undergoes ring opening by homolytic cleavage of the two C-C bonds. Standard redox potentials for the formation of both radical anion and radical cation state of the dimers were determined. Quantum calculations on simplified model compounds reveal the reason for the finding that the exergonic homolytic cleavages of the carbon-carbon bonds are endowed with sizeable activation barriers. The consequences of these mechanistic studies on the natural enzymatic repair by photolyase enzyme are discussed.
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PMID:Dissociative electron transfer to and from pyrimidine cyclobutane dimers: an electrochemical study. 1545 45

The mechanism employed by DNA photolyase to repair 6-4 photoproducts in UV-damaged DNA is explored by means of quantum chemical calculations. Considering the repair of both oxetane and azetidine lesions, it is demonstrated that reduction as well as oxidation enables a reversion reaction by creating anionic or cationic radicals that readily fragment into monomeric pyrimidines. However, on the basis of calculated reaction energies indicating that electron transfer from the enzyme to the lesion is a much more favorable process than electron transfer in the opposite direction, it is suggested that the photoenzymic repair can only occur by way of an anionic mechanism. Furthermore, it is shown that reduction of the oxetane facilitates a mechanism involving cleavage of the C-O bond followed by cleavage of the C-C bond, whereas reductive fragmentation of the azetidine may proceed with either of the intermonomeric C-N and C-C bonds cleaved as the first step. From calculations on neutral azetidine radicals, a significant increase in the free-energy barrier for the initial fragmentation step upon protonation of the carbonylic oxygens is predicted. This effect can be attributed to protonation serving to stabilize reactant complexes more than transition structures.
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PMID:Electron-transfer induced repair of 6-4 photoproducts in DNA: a computational study. 1738 21