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Query: EC:4.1.99.3 (
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1,923
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Anacystis nidulans
photolyase
gene inserted in an expression vector plasmid was introduced into Escherichia coli cells and the production of Anacystis
photolyase
protein was confirmed by reaction with antibodies raised against
photolyase
purified from A. nidulans cells. The Anacystis
photolyase
functioned in photoreactivation repair defective E. coli cells. The E. coli transformants exhibited an action spectrum with a maximum around 380 nm similar to that of E. coli
photolyase
in contrast with the action spectrum of A. nidulans cells which has a maximum at 437 nm. These results indicate that the Anacystis
photolyase
produced in E. coli cells has enzymatic activity in spite of the apparent lack of its intrinsic 8-hydroxy-5-deazaflavin cofactor.
...
PMID:Expression of an Anacystis nidulans photolyase gene in Escherichia coli; functional complementation and modified action spectrum of photoreactivation. 251 29
Syrian hamster fetal fibroblasts (HFC) were examined for
photolyase
-induced break-sensitive sites after ultraviolet light (UV) exposure and growth. These sites, observed in excision-defective human xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) cells, are due to cleavage of the internal phosphodiester bond of UV-induced pyrimidine dimers. Excision-inefficient HFC acquired
photolyase
-induced break-sensitive sites during incubation after UV (10 J/m2). However, these were observed transiently, with a maximum of 5% of the pyrimidine dimers at 9 h post UV; by 18 h they were undetectable. Caffeine (1 mM) delayed the peak of
photolyase
-induced break-sensitive sites by 2 h. In human XP cells
photolyase
-induced break-sensitive sites accumulate to a plateau level of about 20% of the pyrimidine dimers. The present results extend to rodent cells the observation that cleavage of the internal phosphodiester bond of pyrimidine dimers may be an early step in their excision repair. Furthermore, the data suggest that
photolyase
-induced break-sensitive sites might be necessary for replication bypass at pyrimidine dimers.
...
PMID:Transient appearance of photolyase-induced break-sensitive sites in the DNA of ultraviolet light-irradiated Syrian hamster fetal cells. 264 27
DNA photolyase
catalyzes the photoreversal of pyrimidine dimers. The enzymes from Escherichia coli and yeast contain a flavin chromophore and a folate cofactor, 5,10-methenyltetrahydropteroylpolyglutamate. E. coli
DNA photolyase
contains about 0.3 mol of folate/mol flavin, whereas the yeast
photolyase
contains the full complement of folate. E. coli
DNA photolyase
is reconstituted to a full complement of the folate by addition of 5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolate to cell lysates or purified enzyme samples. The reconstituted enzyme displays a higher photolytic cross section under limiting light. Treatment of
photolyase
with sodium borohydride or repeated camera flashing results in the disappearance of the absorption band at 384 nm and is correlated with the formation of modified products from the enzyme-bound 5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolate. Photolyase modified in this manner has a decreased photolytic cross section under limiting light. Borohydride reduction results in the formation of 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate and 5-methyltetrahydrofolate, both of which are released from the enzyme. Repeated camera flashing results in photodecomposition of the enzyme-bound 5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolate and release of the decomposition products. Finally, it is observed that
photolyase
binds 10-formyltetrahydrofolate and appears to cyclize it to form the 5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolate chromophore.
...
PMID:Role of enzyme-bound 5,10-methenyltetrahydropteroylpolyglutamate in catalysis by Escherichia coli DNA photolyase. 265 1
We have purified
DNA photolyase
from the autotrophic anaerobic archaebacterium Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum to near homogeneity by a two-column affinity chromatography. The purified enzyme has an Mr = 60,000 and shows near UV absorption peak at 440 nm and a fluorescence emission maximum at 462 nm indicating that it contains 8-hydroxy-5-deazaflavin (coenzyme F420) as an intrinsic chromophore. The
photolyase
binds with high specificity to thymine dimer in DNA with an equilibrium binding constant, KA = 1.4 x 10(9) M-1, and a dissociation rate constant, koff = 1.4 x 10(-4) s-1 (t1/2 = 43 min). Despite 6-fold higher affinity compared to the folate-containing Escherichia coli
photolyase
the two enzymes apparently contact the same phosphates around the thymine dimer: the phosphate immediately 5' and the three phosphates immediately 3' to the dimer on the damaged strand and the phosphate across from the dimer in the minor groove on the complementary strand. The absolute action spectrum of the Methanobacterium
photolyase
in the 400-500-nm region closely matches the absorption of the enzyme-bound F420. The quantum yield (phi) over this region is constant and is approximately 0.2. The value is measurably smaller than the quantum yields reported for other DNA photolyases.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum DNA photolyase. 266 76
A DNA fragment containing the
photolyase
gene was cloned from Halobacterium halobium. The deduced amino acid sequence is highly similar to those of four known photolyases from eubacteria and a eucaryote. The cloned gene expressed in Escherichia coli cells the survival of UV-irradiated host cells by photoreactivation. These results indicate that photolyases of eucaryotes, eubacteria, and archaebacteria are derived from a common origin. In this cloned DNA fragment, two additional open reading frames (ORFs), ORF 151 and ORF 200, were found in the 5' and 3' adjacent flanking regions of the
photolyase
gene. ORF 200 shows unequivocal amino acid sequence homology to all known manganese and iron superoxide dismutases. Northern (RNA) hybridization analysis of H. halobium RNA revealed the existence of three transcripts, one of which covered all three ORFs, indicating that
photolyase
and superoxide dismutase are partly cotranscribed in this bacterium.
...
PMID:Tandem arrangement of photolyase and superoxide dismutase genes in Halobacterium halobium. 268 Nov 64
The PHR1 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes a
DNA photolyase
that catalyzes the light-dependent repair of pyrimidine dimers. In the absence of photoreactivating light, this enzyme binds to pyrimidine dimers but is unable to repair them. We have assessed the effect of bound
photolyase
on the dark survival of yeast cells carrying mutations in genes that eliminate either nucleotide excision repair (RAD2) or mutagenic repair (RAD18). We found that a functional PHR1 gene enhanced dark survival in a rad18 background but failed to do so in a rad2 or rad2 rad18 background and therefore conclude that
photolyase
stimulates specifically nucleotide excision repair of dimers in S. cerevisiae. This effect is similar to the effect of Escherichia coli
photolyase
on excision repair in the bacterium. However, despite the functional and structural similarities between yeast
photolyase
and the E. coli enzyme and complementation of the photoreactivation deficiency of E. coli phr mutants by PHR1, yeast
photolyase
failed to enhance excision repair in the bacterium. Instead, Phr1 was found to be a potent inhibitor of dark repair in recA strains but had no effect in uvrA strains. The results of in vitro experiments indicate that inhibition of nucleotide excision repair results from competition between yeast
photolyase
and ABC excision nuclease for binding at pyrimidine dimers. In addition, the A and B subunits of the excision nuclease, when allowed to bind to dimers before
photolyase
, suppressed photoreactivation by Phr1. We propose that enhancement of nucleotide excision repair by photolyases is a general phenomenon and that
photolyase
should be considered an accessory protein in this pathway.
...
PMID:Interactions between yeast photolyase and nucleotide excision repair proteins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Escherichia coli. 268 65
DNA photolyases catalyze the light-dependent repair of pyrimidine dimers in DNA. The results of nucleotide sequence analysis and spectroscopic studies demonstrated that photolyases from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Escherichia coli share 37% amino acid sequence homology and contain identical chromophores. Do the similarities between these two enzymes extend to their interactions with DNA containing pyrimidine dimers, or does the organization of DNA into nucleosomes in S. cerevisiae necessitate alternative or additional recognition determinants? To answer this question, we used chemical and enzymatic techniques to identify the contacts made on DNA by S. cerevisiae
photolyase
when it is bound to a pyrimidine dimer and compared these contacts with those made by E. coli
photolyase
and by a truncated derivative of the yeast enzyme when bound to the same substrate. We found evidence for a common set of interactions between the photolyases and specific phosphates in the backbones of both strands as well as for interactions with bases in both the major and minor grooves of dimer-containing DNA. Superimposed on this common pattern were significant differences in the contributions of specific contacts to the overall binding energy, in the interactions of the enzymes with groups on the complementary strand, and in the extent to which other DNA-binding proteins were excluded from the region around the dimer. These results provide strong evidence both for a conserved dimer-binding motif and for the evolution of new interactions that permit photolyases to also act as accessory proteins in nucleotide excision repair. The locations of the specific contacts made by the yeast enzyme indicate that the mechanism of nucleotide excision repair in this organism involves incision(s) at a distance from the pyrimidine dimer.
...
PMID:Photolyases from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Escherichia coli recognize common binding determinants in DNA containing pyrimidine dimers. 268 66
Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) patients are deficient in the excision repair of damaged DNA. Recognition of the DNA lesion appears to involve a nuclear factor that is defective in complementation group E (XPE binding factor). We have now identified a factor in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae that shares many properties with XPE binding factor, including cellular location, abundance, magnesium dependence, and relative affinities for multiple forms of damaged DNA. Yeast binding activity is dependent on
photolyase
, which catalyzes the photoreactivation of pyrimidine dimers. These results suggest that yeast
photolyase
may also function as an auxiliary protein in excision repair. Furthermore, XPE binding factor appears to be the human homolog of yeast
photolyase
.
...
PMID:Evidence that xeroderma pigmentosum cells from complementation group E are deficient in a homolog of yeast photolyase. 268 72
Similar rates have been observed for dimer repair with Escherichia coli
photolyase
and the heterogeneous mixtures generated by UV irradiation of oligothymidylates [UV-oligo(dT)n, n greater than or equal to 4] or DNA. Comparable stability was observed for ES complexes formed with UV-oligo(dT)n, (n greater than or equal to 9) or dimer-containing DNA. In this paper, binding studies with E. coli
photolyase
and a series of homogeneous oligonucleotide substrates (TpT, TpTp, pTpT, TpTpT, TpTpT, TpTpTpT, TpTpTpT, TpTpTpT, TpTpTpT) show that about 80% of the binding energy observed with DNA as substrate (delta G approximately 10 kcal/mol) can be attributed to the interaction of the enzyme with a dimer-containing region that spans only four nucleotides in length. This major binding determinant (TpTpTpT) coincides with the major conformational impact region of the dimer and reflects contributions from the dimer itself (TpT, delta G = 4.6 kcal/mol), adjacent phosphates (5'p, 0.8 kcal/mol; 3'p, 1.1 kcal/mol), and adjacent thymine residues (5'T, 0.8 kcal/mol; 3'T, 1.3 kcal/mol). Similar turnover rates (average kcat = 6.7 min-1) are observed with short-chain oligonucleotide substrates and UV-oligo(dT)18, despite a 25,000-fold variation in binding constants (Kd). In contrast, the ratio Km/Kd decreases as binding affinity decreases and appears to plateau at a value near 1. Turnover with oligonucleotide substrates occurs at a rate similar to that estimated for the photochemical step (5.1 min-1), suggesting that this step is rate determining. Under these conditions, Km will approach Kd when the rate of ES complex dissociation exceeds kcat.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Reaction of Escherichia coli and yeast photolyases with homogeneous short-chain oligonucleotide substrates. 269 Sep 34
Ultraviolet light at 254 nm induces various kinds of DNA damage. We have located and quantified the pyrimidine (6-4) pyrimidone photoproducts along three hundred and forty two nucleotides of SV40 DNA. The level of photoproduct induction varies greatly according to the position on the DNA, but unlike what happens with pyrimidine dimers, the very adjacent nucleotides do not play a major role in the frequency of formation. A new alkali-sensitive site has been found on the ACA sequence after UV irradiation. This complex lesion is insensitive to the T4 endonuclease V and the E. coli
photolyase
, and may be involved with mutagenesis.
...
PMID:Sequence effect on alkali-sensitive sites in UV-irradiated SV40 DNA. 282 22
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