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)

Novobiocin inhibits DNA topoisomerases. It also inhibits excision repair of DNA photodamage, blocking both repair synthesis and the earlier step of incision at u.v. damage sites (as measured by the accumulation of DNA strand breaks in u.v.-irradiated interphase cells treated with DNA synthesis inhibitors such as hydroxyurea or cytosine arabinoside). It has been supposed, therefore, that novobiocin affects repair by blocking a putative topoisomerase step prior to incision. But we find that novobiocin also has a marked dose- and time-dependent effect on mitochondria: in cells exposed to novobiocin, mitochondria swell and their cristae become disrupted, and the intracellular ATP:ADP ratio is lowered, though the membrane potential is maintained as judged by rhodamine 123 fluorescence. Mitotic cells are more resistant to mitochondrial disruption by novobiocin than are interphase cells. This correlates with a relative resistance of u.v.-irradiated mitotic cells to the inhibition of incision by novobiocin. The chromosomal decondensation that results from the accumulation of DNA breaks due to incision when u.v.-irradiated mitotic cells are treated with hydroxyurea and cytosine arabinoside is largely suppressed by novobiocin. Furthermore, the suppression of induced strand break accumulation is partly due to a suppression by novobiocin of the uptake and phosphorylation of cytosine arabinoside; breaks accumulated in u.v.-irradiated cells in the presence of aphidicolin, an inhibitor of DNA polymerase alpha that does not require phosphorylation, are less novobiocin-sensitive. We conclude that the effects of novobiocin on excision repair are more likely to be due to a non-specific effect on ATP metabolism than to a specific effect on a repair-related topoisomerase.
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PMID:Novobiocin inhibition of DNA excision repair may occur through effects on mitochondrial structure and ATP metabolism, not on repair topoisomerases. 299 34

The effect of poly(ADP-ribosylation) on calf thymus topoisomerase type II reactions has been investigated. Unknotting of phage P4 head DNA, and relaxation and catenation of supercoiled PM2 DNA are inhibited. We conclude that the inhibition results from poly(ADP-ribosylation) on the following grounds. Firstly, the enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) (PADPR) synthetase and NAD are required, secondly, the competitive synthetase inhibitor nicotinamide abolishes topoisomerase inhibition, and thirdly, the polymer alone is not inhibitory. The mechanism of inhibition appears to be disruption of the strand cleavage reaction. A topoisomerase-DNA complex can be formed that upon treatment with protein denaturant at low ionic strength results in strand cleavage. The amount of DNA present in such a cleavable-complex progressively decreased following pretreatment of topoisomerase type II with PADPR synthetase and increasing concentrations of NAD. Treatment of the pre-formed complex with NAD and PADPR synthetase had no effect on its salt-induced dissociation. This suggests that either poly(ADP-ribosylation) has no influence on dissociation of topoisomerase, in contrast to association, or topoisomerase is not accessible to the synthetase when bound to DNA. Similar data were obtained with calf thymus type I topoisomerase.
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PMID:Inhibition of calf thymus type II DNA topoisomerase by poly(ADP-ribosylation). 299 83

Type I topoisomerases have been purified from nuclei and mitochondria of human acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells. Both of these ATP-independent enzymes are actually found to be inhibited by ATP at physiologically significant concentrations. Other adenine nucleotides showed varying effects: ADP inhibited only at high concentrations; AMP had no effect on either topoisomerase. Both enzymes were also inhibited by dATP. The importance of the adenine ring structure was confirmed by the lack of an inhibitory effect observed with equivalent levels of GTP, UTP, CTP, or their deoxy counterparts. Assays performed in the presence of nonhydrolyzable analogs of ATP suggest that hydrolysis of ATP does not accompany this enzyme inhibition. This was supported by direct determination of the ATPase activity of the purified enzymes. Type I topoisomerase from calf thymus and HeLa cells were also found to be sensitive to ATP. These results suggest that mammalian type I topoisomerases in general may possess a nucleotide-binding site that may be involved in regulation of enzyme activity.
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PMID:ATP inhibits nuclear and mitochondrial type I topoisomerases from human leukemia cells. 300 64

Poly(ADP-ribose) is synthesized in response to DNA strand breaks and covalently modifies numerous intracellular proteins. We have proposed that this modification regulates, i.e., inhibits, the activity of these enzymes, e.g., topoisomerases and proteases, which could otherwise cause additional DNA damage or alterations in chromatin structure. Inhibition of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase by 3-amino-benzamide (3AB) in cells exposed to DNA-damaging agents would, according to this proposal, eliminate the regulatory role of ADP-ribosylation. When Chinese hamster ovary cells are cultured with methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) and 3AB, a synergistic increase in sister chromatid exchange frequency is observed. We investigated the regulatory role of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase to see if topoisomerases or proteases are involved in this synergistic increase. Cells were exposed to MMS or the intercalating agent 4'-(9-acridinylamino)methanesulfon-m-anisidide (m-AMSA), 3AB, and either the topoisomerase inhibitor novobiocin or the protease inhibitor antipain. Neither novobiocin nor antipain affected the synergistic response of MMS and 3AB or the additive response of m-AMSA and 3AB. These results suggest that topoisomerases or proteases do not account for the effect of 3AB on sister chromatid exchange frequency after DNA damage.
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PMID:Potentiation of sister chromatid exchange by 3-aminobenzamide is not modulated by topoisomerases or proteases. 301 82

Results of filter elution assays of lesions produced in the DNA of cultured L1210 cells by the antineoplastic alkaloid camptothecin support the notion that topoisomerase I is an intracellular target of this drug. One to 10 microM camptothecin induced DNA single-strand, but not double-strand, breaks when incubated with intact cells or with their isolated nuclei. Approximately one half of the strand breakage was protein concealed, as judged by filter elution. Camptothecin-induced, protein-concealed DNA strand breaks disappeared rapidly after drug removal. DNA-protein cross-links were generated by camptothecin with frequencies approximately equal to those of protein-concealed DNA strand breaks. It is likely that camptothecin can inhibit topoisomerase I in intact cells in a manner similar to that in which other antineoplastic agents such as amsacrine or teniposide inhibit topoisomerase II. DNA-breaking lesions other than those resulting from trapped topoisomerase I-DNA complexes may also be generated by camptothecin. The yields of DNA strand breaks induced by camptothecin, amsacrine, or teniposide were approximately doubled when cells were incubated for 16 h with 3-aminobenzamide, an inhibitor of poly(ADP ribosylation) of proteins, prior to 1-h exposure to the antineoplastic compounds. 3-Aminobenzamide also enhanced the cytotoxic action of camptothecin, amsacrine, and teniposide. These results suggest that protein-concealed strand breaks can be lethal lesions and that intracellular topoisomerase I and II activity may be regulated coordinately through poly(ADP ribosylation).
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PMID:Relationship between the intracellular effects of camptothecin and the inhibition of DNA topoisomerase I in cultured L1210 cells. 302 14

The distribution of (ADP-ribose)n synthesized from [14C]NAD labeled at the adenyl ring in several protein fractions of isolated rat brain nuclei was studied. Preferential ADP-ribosylation of nonhistone nuclear proteins was shown to occur. It was demonstrated that pol (ADP-ribose)polymerase and DNA-topoisomerase II are located spatially close to each other. A correlation between ADP-ribosylation and the activity of nuclear matrix DNA-topoisomerase II was established.
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PMID:[ADP-ribosylation of nuclear proteins in the rat brain]. 317 53

Using kinetoplast DNA networks as a substrate in a decatenation assay, we have purified to apparent homogeneity a type II DNA topoisomerase from HeLa cell nuclei. The most pure preparations contain a single polypeptide of 172,000 daltons as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis. The molecular weight of the native protein, based on sedimentation and gel filtration analyses, is estimated to be 309,000. These results suggest that the enzyme is a dimer of 172,0090-dalton subunits. The enzyme is a type II topoisomerase as demonstrated by its ability to change the linking number of DNA circles in steps of two and to decatenate or unknot covalently closed DNA circles. No gyrase activity is detectable. ATP is required for the relaxation, decatenation, and unknotting of DNA, and a DNA-dependent ATPase activity is present in the most pure fractions. ATP is hydrolyzed to ADP in this properties to T4 DNA topoisomerase (Liu, L. F., Liu, C. C., and Alberts, B. M. (1979) Nature 281, 456-461).
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PMID:A homogeneous type II DNA topoisomerase from HeLa cell nuclei. 626 71

A DNA topoisomerase activity, copurifying with poly(ADP-ribose) synthetase from calf thymus, is greater than 95% inhibited if extensive poly(ADP-ribosylation) is allowed to occur. The inhibited DNA topoisomerase, which has drastically different elution properties on hydroxylapatite, can be reactivated by mild alkaline treatment. These results are consistent with a poly(ADP-ribosylation) of the DNA topoisomerase and covalent attachment of the poly(ADP-ribose) moieties to the topoisomerase by alkali-labile bonds.
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PMID:Poly(ADP-ribosylation) of a DNA topoisomerase. 630 23

Vaccinia virus cores contain a type I topoisomerase which promotes the relaxation of superhelical DNA of either handedness (Bauer et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 74:1841-1845, 1977). The activity of partially purified vaccinia virus topoisomerase (VV-Topo I) was determined in the presence of ATP, dATP, GTP, ADP, and ATP analogs in which hydrolysis of the alpha, beta or beta, gamma phosphate bond is restricted. Topoisomerase activity was stimulated 2.5-fold by the addition of 2 to 4 mM ATP or dATP to standard assay mixtures; 2 mM GTP produced no significant effect on enzyme activity. The addition of 2 mM beta, gamma-imido ATP or 2 mM gamma-thiophosphate ATP reduced VV-Topo I activity by 80 and 65%, respectively. In contrast, 4 mM alpha, beta-methylene ATP produced no significant change in topoisomerase activity compared to ATP itself. Assays performed in the presence of 4 mM ADP exhibited an 80% reduction in enzyme activity. The preparations of VV-Topo I used for these studies showed, however, no detectable DNA-dependent or -independent ATPase activity. The activity of VV-Topo I was similarly measured in the presence of the antibiotics novobiocin and coumermycin A1, which inhibited enzyme activity by 50% at concentrations of 180 and 40 microM, respectively. Comparable inhibition of VV-Topo I activity was observed in the presence of 1 mM beta, gamma-imido ATP. We determined that novobiocin inhibits vaccinia core transcription at the same concentrations which inhibit vaccinia core topoisomerase I activity. These results suggest that the vaccinia DNA topoisomerase may play a role in the ATP-dependent transcription of viral genes from intact core particles.
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PMID:Effects of ATP and inhibitory factors on the activity of vaccinia virus type I topoisomerase. 631 84

We demonstrate that the activity of the major DNA topoisomerase I from calf thymus is severely inhibited after modification by purified poly(ADP-ribose) synthetase. Polymeric chains of poly(ADP-ribose) are covalently attached to DNA topoisomerase I. These observations with highly purified enzymes suggest that poly(ADP-ribosylation) may be a cellular mechanism for modulating DNA topoisomerase I activity in response to the state of DNA in the nucleus. Although extensive poly(ADP-ribosylation) of the Mr = 100,000 DNA topoisomerase I from calf thymus resulted in greater than 90% enzyme inhibition, exogenous poly(ADP-ribose) does not, by itself, inhibit topoisomerase activity. After modification, the apparent molecular weight of both the topoisomerase enzyme protein and of the topoisomerase enzyme activity was increased. In vitro, the extent of modification of DNA topoisomerase I could be controlled either by changing the ratio of topoisomerase to the synthetase or by varying the reaction time. More than 40 residues of ADP ribose per topoisomerase molecule could be added by the synthetase. Analysis of a poly(ADP-ribosylated) topoisomerase preparation that was about 50% inhibited revealed an average polymer chain length of 7.4, with 1-2 chains per enzyme molecule.
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PMID:Poly(ADP-ribosylation) of DNA topoisomerase I from calf thymus. 632 15


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