Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:5.99.1.3 (
topoisomerase
)
9,911
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Topoisomerase I (Topo I) is involved in many cellular functions that involve unwinding of supercoiled DNA, such as transcription and replication. Topo I is also the target of autoimmune antibodies in progressive systemic sclerosis (scleroderma), and abnormal regulation of Topo I may influence the excessive production of collagen found in scleroderma. Topo I is phosphorylated in vivo at serine residues and, in vitro, the activity of Topo I is increased by phosphorylation by
casein kinase
type II (CKII) and protein kinase C (PKC). In this study, a
protein kinase
activity from rat liver nuclei is shown to copurify with Topo I during Bio-Rex 70 cation exchange chromatography. The kinase can phosphorylate Topo I at serine residues, resulting in a threefold increase in
topoisomerase
activity. A relatively tight association between this kinase and Topo I is demonstrated by the ability to coprecipitate the kinase with scleroderma autoimmune anti-Topo I antibodies. The kinase activity is similar to CKII since it is Ca2+ and cyclic nucleotide independent, it can utilize either ATP or GTP as phosphate donor, and it can phosphorylate casein and phosvitin, but not histones. However, unlike typical CKII, the Topo I-associated kinase could utilize Mn2+ almost as well as Mg2+, it is not stimulated by polyamines, and it does not appear to undergo autophosphorylation. In conclusion, we demonstrate that rat liver Topo I is relatively tightly associated with a CKII-like
protein kinase
that can phosphorylate and activate Topo I. These findings provide corroborative evidence that CKII, or a CKII-like
protein kinase
, is a physiologic regulator of Topo I.
...
PMID:A casein kinase type II (CKII)-like nuclear protein kinase associates with, phosphorylates, and activates topoisomerase I. 826 Jan 98
A normal consequence of mitosis in eukaryotes is the repression of transcription. Using Xenopus egg extracts shifted to a mitotic state by the addition of purified cyclin, we have for the first time been able to reproduce a mitotic repression of transcription in vitro. Active RNA polymerase III transcription is observed in interphase extracts, but strongly repressed in extracts converted to mitosis. With the
topoisomerase
II inhibitor VM-26, we demonstrate that this mitotic repression of RNA polymerase III transcription does not require normal chromatin condensation. Similarly; in vitro mitotic repression of transcription does not require the presence of nucleosome structure or involve a general repressive chromatin-binding protein, as inhibition of chromatin formation with saturating amounts of non-specific DNA has no effect on repression. Instead, the mitotic repression of transcription appears to be due to phosphorylation of a component of the transcription machinery by a mitotic
protein kinase
, either cdc2 kinase and/or a kinase activated by it. Mitotic repression of RNA polymerase III transcription is observed both in complete mitotic cytosol and when a kinase-enriched mitotic fraction is added to a highly simplified 5S RNA transcription reaction. We present evidence that, upon depletion of cdc2 kinase, a secondary
protein kinase
activity remains and can mediate this in vitro mitotic repression of transcription.
...
PMID:Mitotic repression of transcription in vitro. 838 Nov 19
The catalytic activity of
topoisomerase
II is stimulated approximately 2-3-fold following phosphorylation by either
casein kinase II
or protein kinase C. A previous study [Corbett, A. H., DeVore, R. F., & Osheroff, N. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 20513-20518] demonstrated that
casein kinase II
regulates the activity of
topoisomerase
II by specifically enhancing the ability of the enzyme to hydrolyze its ATP cofactor. To determine whether other protein kinases use a similar mechanism to activate the enzyme, the effects of protein kinase C mediated phosphorylation on the individual steps of the
topoisomerase
II catalytic cycle were assessed. Modification stimulated rates of enzyme-mediated ATP hydrolysis approximately 2.7-fold, but had no effect on any reaction that preceded this step, including enzyme.DNA binding, pre- or poststrand passage DNA cleavage/religation, or the double-stranded DNA strand passage event. Furthermore, the activation of ATP hydrolysis was reversed following treatment of phosphorylated
topoisomerase
II with alkaline phosphatase. As determined by partial proteolytic mapping, the site(s) of protein kinase C modification was (were) localized to the 350 amino acid C-terminal regulatory domain of
topoisomerase
II within approximately 50 amino acids of the site(s) phosphorylated by
casein kinase II
. Finally, while protein kinase C and
casein kinase II
were able to modify the enzyme simultaneously, rates of ATP hydrolysis for doubly-modified
topoisomerase
II were comparable to those observed for the enzyme following phosphorylation by either individual kinase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Protein kinase C modulates the catalytic activity of topoisomerase II by enhancing the rate of ATP hydrolysis: evidence for a common mechanism of regulation by phosphorylation. 838 33
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.
...
PMID:Z-DNA binding and inhibition by GTP of Drosophila topoisomerase II. 838 19
Mitotic division in yeast requires the activity of
topoisomerase
II, a DNA topology modifying enzyme that is able to disentangle sister chromatids after DNA replication. Previous work has shown that
topoisomerase
II is a phosphoprotein in intact yeast cells. We show here that when dephosphorylated in vitro,
topoisomerase
II is unable to cleave or decatenate kinetoplast DNA. An efficient kinase activity that modifies
topoisomerase
II on seven major sites was found to copurify with the enzyme purified from yeast. Characterization of this kinase, analysis of phosphotryptic peptides, and studies with a yeast mutant deficient in
casein kinase II
, indicate that the copurifying kinase is
casein kinase II
(
CKII
). Topoisomerase II itself has no self-phosphorylating activity. Modification of
topoisomerase
II by the copurifying kinase is sufficient to restore decatenation activity after dephosphorylation by alkaline phosphatase. The
CKII
target sites have been mapped to multiple serine and threonine residues on 4 tryptic fragments within the C-terminal 350 amino acids of yeast
topoisomerase
II. These results are consistent with a model in which the C-terminal domain of
topoisomerase
II is a negative regulatory domain that is neutralized by phosphorylation.
...
PMID:Casein kinase II copurifies with yeast DNA topoisomerase II and re-activates the dephosphorylated enzyme. 838 77
Drug resistance to anti-tumour agents often coincides with mutations in the gene encoding
DNA topoisomerase II
alpha. To examine how inactive forms of
topoisomerase
II can influence resistance to the chemotherapeutic agent VP-16 (etoposide) in the presence of a wild-type allele, we have expressed point mutations and carboxy-terminal truncations of yeast
topoisomerase
II from a plasmid in budding yeast. Truncations that terminate the coding region of
topoisomerase
II at amino acid (aa) 750, aa 951 and aa 1044 are localised to both the cytosol and the nucleus and fail to complement a temperature-sensitive top2-1 allele at non-permissive temperature. In contrast, the plasmid-borne wild-type TOP2 allele and a truncation at aa 1236 are nuclear localised and complement the top2-1 mutation. At low levels of expression, truncated forms of
topoisomerase
II render yeast resistant to levels of etoposide 2- and 3-fold above that tolerated by cells expressing the full-length enzyme. Maximal resistance is conferred by the full-length enzyme carrying a mutated active site (Y783F) or a truncation at aa 1044. The level of phosphorylation of
topoisomerase
II was previously shown to correlate with drug resistance in cultured cells, hence we tested mutants in the major
casein kinase II
acceptor sites in the C-terminal domain of yeast
topoisomerase
II for changes in drug sensitivity. Neither ectopic expression of the C-terminal domain alone nor phosphoacceptor site mutants significantly alter the host cell's sensitivity to etoposide.
...
PMID:Ectopic expression of inactive forms of yeast DNA topoisomerase II confers resistance to the anti-tumour drug, etoposide. 863 Feb 79
It has been suggested that
casein kinase II
phosphorylates
DNA topoisomerase II
alpha (topo II alpha) in mouse FM3A cells, by comparison of phosphopeptide maps of topo II alpha labeled in intact cells and of topo II alpha phosphorylated by various kinases in vitro. The phosphorylation of purified topo II alpha by
casein kinase II
, which attached a maximum of two phosphate groups per topo II alpha molecule, had no effect on the activity of topo II alpha. Dephosphorylation of purified topo II alpha by potato acid phosphatase, which almost completely dephosphorylated the topo II alpha, did not reduce the activity of topo II alpha. The incubation itself, regardless of phosphorylation or dephosphorylation status, stimulated the enzyme activity in both reactions. Topo II alpha activity was stimulated by incubation in a medium containing low concentrations of glycerol but not in that containing high concentrations of glycerol, such as the 50% in which purified topo II alpha is stored. The stimulation of topo II alpha activity by incubation was dependent on the concentration of topo II alpha, requiring a relatively high concentration of topo II alpha.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation-independent stimulation of DNA topoisomerase II alpha activity. 863 19
Topoisomerase II is an essential enzyme for proliferation of eukaryotic cells. It is also a target for many antineoplastic drugs that promote stabilization of covalent complexes between
topoisomerase
II and DNA. Topoisomerase II and protein kinases both catalyze the transfer of phosphoester bonds from nucleotides to proteins. This similarity suggests that inhibitors may affect both classes of enzymes. In the present study, we have examined the mechanism of
topoisomerase
II inhibition by three different classes of
protein kinase
inhibitors. We report that staurosporine inhibited the catalytic activity of
topoisomerase
II by blocking the transfer of phosphodiester bonds from DNA to the active tyrosine site, a mechanism of inhibition not previously reported for this enzyme. In contrast, other kinase inhibitors, such as methyl 2,5-dihydroxycinnamate, most likely inactivated
topoisomerase
II by alkylation of essential amino acids, whereas the mechanism of inhibition of bis-indolylmaleimide possibly involved a direct interaction with DNA.
...
PMID:Mechanism of topoisomerase II inhibition by staurosporine and other protein kinase inhibitors. 882 99
The purpose of this review is to summarize information published since 1990 on DNA replication, recombination and repair of vaccinia virus, a poxvirus. Temperature-sensitive mutations reveal four essential genes related to viral DNA replication: the E9L DNA polymerase, B1R
protein kinase
, D5R protein, and D4R uracil DNA glycosylase. Other proteins are likely to be also involved in viral DNA replication: the H6R
DNA topoisomerase
, I3L single stranded-DNA binding protein, H5R virosome-associated protein, and A50R DNA ligase. In addition, several viral-encoded proteins do regulate the level of the deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate pool: the J2R thymidine kinase, A48R thymidylate kinase, 14L and F4L subunits of ribonucleotide reductase, and F2L dUTPase. Despite the apparent simplicity of the mechanism of vaccinia virus DNA replication, several important questions related to the three Rs remain unsolved.
...
PMID:Vaccinia virus DNA replication: a short review. 882 74
To investigate the relationship between the modulation of
topoisomerase
II activity and its phosphorylation state during the cell cycle, a monoclonal antibody against C-terminal peptide (residues 1335-1350) of
topoisomerase
IIalpha containing a consensus sequence of
casein kinase II
, TDDE and its phosphorylated threonine were prepared. In an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, the antibody, named PT1342, recognized the immunogenic phosphopeptide but not the non-phosphorylated form of the peptide. The PT1342 antibody reacted only with a 170-kDa protein from HeLa cells and recognized anti-
topoisomerase
IIalpha immunoprecipitants. Furthermore, the antibody did not react with the human
topoisomerase
IIalpha mutated at codon 1342 from threonine to alanine, showing that PT1342 was directed against the phosphorylated threonine 1342. To examine the level of phosphorylation of threonine 1342 of
topoisomerase
IIalpha through the cell cycle, HeLa cells were stained simultaneously for phosphorylated
topoisomerase
IIalpha and DNA and analyzed by flow cytometry. Cells in the G2-M phase contained about double the PT1341-reacted
topoisomerase
IIalpha than did cells in G1 or S phases. The antibody stained the nuclei in interphase and mitotic chromosomes and its periphery, as seen with anti-
topoisomerase
IIalpha antibody. Thus, threonine 1342 in
topoisomerase
IIalpha is phosphorylated throughout the cell cycle.
...
PMID:Threonine 1342 in human topoisomerase IIalpha is phosphorylated throughout the cell cycle. 893 55
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