Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:5.99.1.2 (topoisomerase)
9,166 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Reverse gyrase, an ATP-dependent topoisomerase that positively supercoils DNA, has been purified to near-homogeneity from the hyperthermophile Methanopyrus kandleri. It migrates on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis as two principal bands with apparent molecular masses of 150 and 50 kDa. Both proteins remain associated throughout all chromatographic steps. Transfer of a radioactive phosphate from DNA to the 50-kDa protein and gel retardation experiments indicate that this protein forms the covalent complex with DNA. A blot overlay assay identifies the 150-kDa protein as the potential ATPase. This is the first evidence that a reverse gyrase can be a topoisomerase consisting of two protomers. In analogy with the DNA gyrase A subunit (DNA breakage and reunion activity) and the B subunit (ATPase), the 50- and 150-kDa components of Mka reverse gyrase have been designated the A and B subunits, respectively. Methanopyrus reverse gyrase changes DNA linking number in steps of one and its A subunit covalently binds to the 5'-DNA phosphoryl group. It nicks DNA at sites that predominantly have a cytosine at the -4-position. The same rule was derived previously for monomeric reverse gyrase from sulfur-metabolizing hyperthermophiles and for topoisomerase I from mesophilic bacteria. Based on these results, Mka reverse gyrase is classified as belonging to group A of type I topoisomerases. The structural diversity of type I group A topoisomerases parallels the diversity of type II enzymes and suggests the evolution of an essential function by gene fusion.
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PMID:A reverse gyrase with an unusual structure. A type I DNA topoisomerase from the hyperthermophile Methanopyrus kandleri is a two-subunit protein. 815 33

Pulse treatments of U-937 human promonocytic leukemia cells with the DNA topoisomerase-II inhibitors 4'-(9-acridynilamino)methanesulfon-m-anisidide (amsacrine, mAMSA) or etoposide (VP-16) caused growth inhibition, G2-arrest, increase in cell size and expression of differentiation markers. All these effects were greatly reduced by the presence of 5-10 mM caffeine. In addition, caffeine partially prevented the increase in the number of topoisomerase-DNA cleavable complexes caused by the topoisomerase inhibitors, as determined by SDS/CIK precipitation assays; it caused chromatin condensation, as determined by flow cytometry assays, and interacted with mAMSA in solution, as suggested by spectrophotometric assays. Pulse treatment with caffeine greatly inhibited RNA synthesis but not DNA or protein synthesis, as indicated by labelled precursor incorporation assays. The transcription inhibitor 5,6-dichloro-I-beta-D-ribofuranosylbenzymidazole reduced the mAMSA- and VP-16-produced growth inhibition in a similar manner. It is concluded that RNA synthesis inhibition is one of the possible mechanisms by which caffeine protects cells from the action of topoisomerase-II inhibitors.
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PMID:Caffeine attenuates the action of amsacrine and etoposide in U-937 cells by mechanisms which involve inhibition of RNA synthesis. 820 82

beta-Lapachone is a plant product that has been found to have many pharmacological effects. To date, very little is known about its biochemical target. In this study, we found that beta-lapachone inhibits the catalytic activity of topoisomerase I from calf thymus and human cells. But, unlike camptothecin, beta-lapachone does not stabilize the cleavable complex, indicating a different mechanism of action. beta-Lapachone inhibits topoisomerase I-mediated DNA cleavage induced by camptothecin. Incubation of topoisomerase I with beta-lapachone before adding DNA substrate dramatically increases this inhibition. Incubation of topoisomerase I with DNA prior to beta-lapachone makes the enzyme refractory, and treatment of DNA with beta-lapachone before topoisomerase has no effect. These results suggest a direct interaction of beta-lapachone with topoisomerase I rather than DNA substrate. beta-Lapachone does not inhibit binding of enzyme to DNA substrate. In cells, beta-lapachone itself does not induce a SDS-K(+)-precipitable complex, but it inhibits complex formation with camptothecin. We propose that the direct interaction of beta-lapachone with topoisomerase I does not affect the assembly of the enzyme-DNA complex but does inhibit the formation of cleavable complex.
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PMID:beta-Lapachone, a novel DNA topoisomerase I inhibitor with a mode of action different from camptothecin. 822 54

Anion-exchange chromatography of partially purified human HL-60 topoisomerase II resolves the known alpha (170 kDa) and beta (180 kDa) isoenzymes at 150 mM NaCl and 230 mM NaCl, respectively. An additional topoisomerase II fraction was eluted by > 300 mM NaCl. It could be identified by Western blotting as a late-eluting variant of topoisomerase II alpha, which is functionally altered as compared to the early-eluting form, having the following properties: a shift in the catalytic optimum to pH 9; increased stability in DNA complex formation; approximately 100-fold resistance to orthovanadate; approximately 1000-fold resistance to the cytostatic substances N-[4-(9-acridinylamino)-3-methoxyphenyl]-methanesulphonamide (amsacrine) and the podophyllotoxin etoposide (VP 16). 80% of the late-eluting topoisomerase II alpha could be captured by SDS on calf thymus DNA without further enhancement by drugs. In contrast, the early-eluting topoisomerase II alpha exhibits 10% complex formation with SDS alone, and an increase to 90% complex formation in the presence of drugs. A HL-60 subline (HL-60/R), approximately 1000-fold resistant to etoposide and amsacrine, has equivalent proportions of topoisomerase II alpha and topoisomerase II beta and similar levels of both isoenzymes, as compared to the drug-sensitive HL-60/WT cells. However, determination of the cellular levels of the early-eluting and late-eluting forms of topoisomerase II alpha revealed that the HL-60/R cell line contains approximately 80% of the late-eluting topoisomerase II alpha, whereas the sensitive HL-60/WT cell line contains only 15-20% of this form. The nuclear distribution of the two forms also differs. Sensitive HL-60/WT cells show a diffuse nuclear distribution but in resistant cells the distribution is localized in the nucleoli. Apparently two functionally distinct subforms of topoisomerase II alpha coexist in drug-sensitive and drug-resistant HL-60 cells and changes in their relative levels affect the cellular sensitivity to topoisomerase-II-targeting drugs.
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PMID:A drug-resistant variant of topoisomerase II alpha in human HL-60 cells exhibits alterations in catalytic pH optimum, DNA binding and sub-nuclear distribution. 826 48

A Z-DNA binding protein has been isolated and characterized by biochemical means from Drosophila melanogaster tissue culture cells and embryos. This protein shares the following properties with the known, cloned Drosophila topoisomerase II: (1) expression of an ATP-dependent relaxation activity on supercoiled DNA; (2) a monomer mass of 165 kDa in SDS denaturing gels; (3) a sedimentation coefficient, S20,w, of approximately 10 S for the active enzyme; (4) cross-reactivity for the respective monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies; (5) generation of covalent enzyme-DNA intermediates at preferred cutting sites in the Drosophila HSP70 intergenic spacer region; (6) inhibition of DNA relaxation activity by antitumor drugs, e.g., the etoposide VM26, and by monospecific antibodies raised against the protein; and (7) in vitro phosphorylation by a casein kinase activity. However, we have identified new properties for our topoisomerase II preparation not previously reported for the conventionally isolated enzyme: (1) The enzyme binds to Z-DNA with an affinity 2 orders of magnitude greater than that for B-DNA. (2) The binding to Z-DNA is increased 5-10-fold by GTP or GTP-gamma-S. (3) GTP and GTP-gamma-S inhibit the catalytic activity of topoisomerase II through a proposed allosteric mechanism. (4) Z-DNA inhibits the relaxation of closed circular supercoiled DNA. (5) The preparation consists of a single polypeptide chain of 165 kDa on denaturing SDS gels with no evidence of proteolytic degradation. We postulate that the Z-DNA binding activity of undegraded topoisomerase II may be important in targeting the enzyme both to structural motifs required for chromatin organization and to sites of local supercoiling. Some of these features arise during processes such as replication and gene expression and may be more frequent during embryogenesis and early development.
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PMID:Z-DNA binding and inhibition by GTP of Drosophila topoisomerase II. 838 19

Using a strand-displacement assay with 32P labeled oligonucleotide annealed to M13 ssDNA we have purified to apparent homogeneity and characterized a novel DNA unwinding enzyme from HeLa cell nuclei, human DNA helicase V (HDH V). This is present in extremely low abundance in the cells and has the highest turnover rate among other human helicases. From 300 grams of cultured cells only 0.012 mg of pure protein was isolated which was free of DNA topoisomerase, ligase, nicking and nuclease activities. The enzyme also shows ATPase activity dependent on single-stranded DNA and has an apparent molecular weight of 92 kDa by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Only ATP or dATP hydrolysis supports the unwinding activity. The helicase requires a divalent cation (Mg2+ > Mn2+) at an optimum concentration of 1.0 mM for activity; it unwinds DNA duplexes less than 25 bp long and having a ssDNA stretch as short as 49 nucleotides. A replication fork-like structure is not required to perform DNA unwinding. HDH V cannot unwind either blunt-ended duplex DNA or DNA-RNA hybrids; it unwinds DNA unidirectionally by moving in the 3' to 5' direction along the bound strand, a polarity similar to the previously described human DNA helicases I and III (Tuteja et al. Nucleic Acids Res. 18, 6785-6792, 1990; Tuteja et al. Nucleic Acid Res. 20, 5329-5337, 1992) and opposite to that of human DNA helicase IV (Tuteja et al. Nucleic Acid Res. 19, 3613-3618, 1991).
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PMID:Human DNA helicase V, a novel DNA unwinding enzyme from HeLa cells. 838 37

The morpholinyl analogues of doxorubicin (DOX) have previously been reported to be non-cross-resistant in multidrug resistant (MDR) cells due to a lower affinity for P-glycoprotein relative to the parent compound. In order to further investigate the mechanisms of action of these morpholinyl anthracyclines, we examined their ability to cause DNA single- and double-strand breaks (SSB, DSB) and their interactions with topoisomerases. Alkaline elution curves were determined after 2-h drug treatment at 0.5, 2 and 5 microM, while neutral elution was conducted at 5, 10 and 25 microM in a human ovarian cell line, ES-2. A pulse-field gel electrophoresis assay was used to confirm the neutral elution data under the same conditions. Further, K-SDS precipitation and topoisomerase drug inhibition assays were used to determine the effects of DOX and the morpholinyl analogues on topoisomerase (Topo) I and II. Under deproteinated elution conditions (pH 12.1), DOX, morpholinyl DOX (MRA), methoxy-morpholinyl DOX (MMDX) and morpholinyl oxaunomycin (MX2) were equipotent at causing SSB in the human ovarian carcinoma cell line, ES-2. However, neutral elution (pH 9.6) under deproteinated conditions revealed marked differences in the degree of DNA DSB. After 2-h drug exposures at 10 microM, DSBs were 3300 rad equivalents for MX2, 1500 for DOX and 400 for both MRA and MMDX in the ES-2 cell line. Pulse-field data substantiated these differences in DSBs, with breaks easily detected after MX2 and DOX treatment, but not with MRA and MMDX. DOX and MX2 thus cause DNA strand breaks selectively through interaction with Topo II, but not Topo I. In contrast, MRA and MMDX cause DNA breaks through interactions with both topoisomerases with a predominant inhibition of Topo I.
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PMID:Differential single- versus double-strand DNA breakage produced by doxorubicin and its morpholinyl analogues. 864 94

A number of studies in yeast have shown that DNA topoisomerase II is essential for chromosome condensation and disjunction during mitosis at the metaphase/anaphase transition and meiosis I. Accordingly, kinetic and mechanistic studies have implied a role for topoisomerase II in chromosome disjunction. As a step toward understanding the nature and role of topoisomerase II in a mammalian germline in vivo, we have purified topoisomerase II from rat testis to homogeneity and ascertained several of its catalytic activities in conjunction with that of the purified enzyme from liver. The purified enzymes appeared to be monomers under denaturing conditions; however, they differed in their relative molecular mass. Topoisomerase II from testis and liver have apparent molecular masses of 150 +/- 10 kDa and 160 +/- 10 kDa, respectively. The native molecular mass of testis topoisomerase II as assayed by immunoblot analysis of cell-free extracts, prepared in the presence of SDS and a number of protease inhibitors, corroborated with the size of the purified enzyme. Both enzymes are able to promote decatenation and relax supercoiled DNA substrates in an ATP and Mg(2+)-dependent manner. However, quantitative comparison of catalytic properties of topoisomerase II from testis with that of the enzyme from liver displayed significant differences in their efficiencies. Optimal pH values for testis enzyme are 6.5 to 8.5 while they are 6 to 7.5 for the liver enzyme. Intriguingly, the relaxation activity of liver topoisomerase II was inhibited by potassium glutamate at 1 M, whereas testis enzyme required about half its concentration. These findings argue that topoisomerase II from rat testis is structurally distinct from that of its somatic form and the functional differences between the two enzymes parallels with the physiological environment that is unique to these two tissues.
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PMID:Purification and functional characterization of type II DNA topoisomerase from rat testis and comparison with topoisomerase II from liver. 876 51

Topoisomerase I and DNA gyrase are the major topoisomerase activities responsible for the regulation of DNA supercoiling in the bacterium Escherichia coli. The P1 promoter of topA has previously been shown to be a delta 32-dependent heat-shock promoter. A mutant strain with a deletion of P1 was constructed. This mutant is > 10-fold more sensitive to heat treatment (52 degrees C) than the wild type. After brief treatment at 42 degrees C, wild-type Escherichia coli acquires an enhanced resistance to the effects of a subsequent 52 degrees C treatment. This is not the case for the P1 deletion mutant, which, and under these conditions, is about 100-fold less thermotolerant than the wild type. The presence of a plasmid expressing topoisomerase I restored the heat-survival level of the mutant to that of the wild type. During heat shock, the superhelical density of a plasmid with the heat-inducible rpoD promoter is increased in the P1 deletion mutant. We also note that the pulse-labelling pattern of proteins at 42 C (displayed on SDS-polyacrylamide gels) is different in the mutant, and, most notably, the amounts of DnaK and of GroEL protein are reduced. A model is proposed in order to unify these observations.
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PMID:Effect of the deletion of the sigma 32-dependent promoter (P1) of the Escherichia coli topoisomerase I gene on thermotolerance. 887 34

Using the technique of alkaline filter elution, we have evaluated the DNA damage induced by doxorubicin and etoposide in a rat glioblastoma cell line, C6, and its doxorubicin-selected resistant variant, C6 0.5. DNA damage paralleled drug-induced cytotoxicity, but it appeared that the same DNA damage generated much less cytotoxicity in resistant cells than in sensitive ones, resistant cells being able to tolerate more DNA damage than sensitive cells. We have then quantified the doxorubicin- and etoposide-induced complexes between topoisomerase II (topoII) DNA with the technique of SDS/KCl precipitation. Etoposide produced a concentration-dependent increase in topoII-DNA complexes, which was higher in resistant cells at equitoxicity, just as was DNA damage. In contrast, doxorubicin-induced topoII-DNA complexes, which were much less abundant than those induced by etoposide, were not differently produced in sensitive and resistant cells. This indicates that the DNA damage occurring in resistant cells at high doxorubicin concentrations might originate from source other than topoII-DNA complex formation. When verapamil was added during drug exposure, it restored doxorubicin intracellular accumulation to the level reached in sensitive cells, partially reversed both doxorubicin and etoposide resistance, increased the formation of etoposide-induced topoII-DNA complexes, but not those induced by doxorubicin. Immunoblot analysis of topoII as well as the measure of its catalytic activity in nuclear extracts revealed a quantitative defect of this enzyme in the resistant line. When inhibiting this activity by doxorubicin and etoposide, we observed that the concentrations of etoposide required for a given inhibition of kinetoplast DNA decatenation are much higher that those of doxorubicin. The topoII extracted from both cell lines is, therefore, much more sensitive to doxorubicin than to etoposide, but no difference in drug sensitivity was evident between sensitive and resistant cells, indicating that no qualitative alteration in topoII catalytic activity was likely to occur.
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PMID:Differential stabilization of topoisomerase-II-DNA cleavable complexes by doxorubicin and etoposide in doxorubicin-resistant rat glioblastoma cells. 915 58


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