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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)
DNA topoisomerase II
is an essential nuclear enzyme for proliferation of eukaryotic cells and plays important roles in many aspects of DNA processes. In this report, we have demonstrated that the catalytic activity of
topoisomerase
IIalpha, as measured by decatenation of kinetoplast DNA and by relaxation of negatively supercoiled DNA, was stimulated approximately 2-3-fold by the tumor suppressor p53 protein. In order to determine the mechanism by which p53 activates the enzyme, the effects of p53 on the
topoisomerase
IIalpha-mediated DNA cleavage/religation equilibrium were assessed using the prototypical
topoisomerase
II poison, etoposide. p53 had no effect on the ability of the enzyme to make double-stranded DNA break and religate linear DNA, indicating that the stimulation of the enzyme catalytic activity by p53 was not due to alteration in the formation of covalent cleavable complexes formed between
topoisomerase
IIalpha and DNA. The effects of p53 on the catalytic inhibition of
topoisomerase
IIalpha were examined using a specific catalytic inhibitor,
ICRF
-193, which blocks the ATP hydrolysis step of the enzyme catalytic cycle. Clearly manifested in decatenation and relaxation assays, p53 reduced the catalytic inhibition of
topoisomerase
IIalpha by
ICRF
-193. ATP hydrolysis assays revealed that the ATPase activity of
topoisomerase
IIalpha was specifically enhanced by p53. Immunoprecipitation experiments revealed that p53 physically interacts with
topoisomerase
IIalpha to form molecular complexes without a double-stranded DNA intermediary in vitro. To investigate whether p53 stimulates the catalytic activity of
topoisomerase
II in vivo, we expressed wild-type and mutant p53 in Saos-2 osteosarcoma cells lacking functional p53. Wild-type, but not mutant, p53 stimulated
topoisomerase
II activity in nuclear extract from these transfected cells. Our data propose a new role for p53 to modulate the catalytic activity of
topoisomerase
IIalpha. Taken together, we suggest that the p53-mediated response of the cell cycle to DNA damage may involve activation of
topoisomerase
IIalpha.
...
PMID:The p53 tumor suppressor stimulates the catalytic activity of human topoisomerase IIalpha by enhancing the rate of ATP hydrolysis. 1076 86
Topoisomerase I-mediated DNA damage induced by camptothecin has been shown to induce rapid small ubiquitin-related modifier (SUMO)-1 conjugation to topoisomerase I. In the current study, we show that
topoisomerase
II-mediated DNA damage induced by teniposide (VM-26) results in the formation of high molecular weight conjugates of both
topoisomerase
IIalpha and IIbeta isozymes in HeLa cells. Immunological characterization of these conjugates suggests that both
topoisomerase
IIalpha and IIbeta isozymes are conjugated to SUMO-1. The involvement of SUMO-1/UBC9 in the modification of
topoisomerase
II isozymes is also supported by the demonstration of physical interaction between
topoisomerase
II and SUMO-1/UBC9. Surprisingly,
ICRF
-193, which does not induce
topoisomerase
II-mediated DNA damage but traps
topoisomerase
II into a circular clamp conformation, is also shown to induce similar SUMO-1 conjugation to
topoisomerase
II isozymes. In addition, we show that both oxidative and heat shock stresses, which can cause protein damage, rapidly increase nuclear SUMO-1 conjugates. These studies raise the question on whether SUMO-1 conjugation to topoisomerases is an indirect result of a DNA damage response or a direct result because of protein conformational changes.
...
PMID:SUMO-1 conjugation to human DNA topoisomerase II isozymes. 1086 13
DNA topoisomerase II
is an essential nuclear enzyme that modulates DNA topology during multiple cellular processes such as DNA replication and chromosome segregation. Several important clinical antitumor drugs and antibiotics act through inhibition of
topoisomerase
II. There are a number of different steps in the action of
topoisomerase
II, all of which are potential targets for inhibition through drugs and also for cellular and genetic toxicity as well as for mutagenesis. We have investigated and compared the genotoxicity and mutagenicity of the mechanistically different
topoisomerase
II inhibitors m-amsacrine, mitoxantrone, etoposide, genistein,
ICRF
193, and berenil using the in vitro micronucleus test, single cell gelelectrophoresis (comet assay) and the mutation assay (tk-locus) in L5178Y mouse lymphoma cells. All six compounds induced micronuclei and all except berenil were mutagenic. M-amsacrine, mitoxantrone, etopside and genistein induced DNA migration in the comet assay, whereas
ICRF
193 was only weakly positive and berenil was negative in this test. Our results are in good agreement with the compounds' proposed mechanisms of interaction with
topoisomerase
II.
...
PMID:Genotoxicity of several clinically used topoisomerase II inhibitors. 1090 17
Topoisomerase II is a target for a number of chemotherapeutic agents used in the treatment of cancer. Its essential physiological role in modifying the topology of DNA involves the generation of transient double-strand breaks. Anti-cancer drugs, such as mitoxantrone, that target this enzyme interrupt its catalytic cycle and give rise to persistent double strand breaks, which may be lethal to a cell. We investigated the role of such lesions in signaling the activation of the transcription factor nuclear factor kappaB (NFkappaB) by this drug. Mitoxantrone activated NFkappaB and stimulated IkappaBalpha degradation in the promyelocytic leukemia cell line HL60 but not in the variant cells, HL60/MX2 cells, which lack the beta isoform of
topoisomerase
II and express a truncated alpha isoform that results in an altered subcellular distribution. Treatment of sensitive HL60 cells with mitoxantrone led to a depletion of both isoforms, suggesting the stabilization of transient DNA-
topoisomerase
II complexes. This depletion was absent in the variant cells, HL60/MX2. Activation of caspase 3 by mitoxantrone was also impaired in the HL60/MX2 cells. NFkappaB activation in response to tumor necrosis factor and bleomycin, the latter causing
topoisomerase
II-independent DNA damage, was intact in both cell lines. An inhibitor rather than a poison of
topoisomerase
II, Imperial Cancer Research Fund 187 (
ICRF
187) the mechanism of which does not involve the generation of double strand breaks, did not activate NFkappaB, nor did it induce apoptosis in parental HL60 cells. However,
ICRF
187 protected against IkappaB degradation in parental HL60 cells in response to mitoxantrone. This protection was also shown with another
topoisomerase
II inhibitor, merbarone, which is structurally and functionally distinct from
ICRF
187. Their effects were specific, as neither protected against tumor necrosis factor-stimulated IkappaB degradation. The poisoning of topoiso- merase II with resultant DNA damage is therefore a critical signal for NFkappaB activation.
...
PMID:Topoisomerase II is required for mitoxantrone to signal nuclear factor kappa B activation in HL60 cells. 1094 Mar 16
Topoisomerase II is an ATP-operated protein clamp that captures a DNA helix and transports it through another DNA duplex, allowing chromosome segregation at mitosis. A number of cytotoxic bisdioxopiperazines such as
ICRF
-193 target
topoisomerase
II by binding and trapping the closed enzyme clamp. To investigate this unusual mode of action, we have used yeast to select plasmid-borne human
topoisomerase
IIalpha alleles resistant to
ICRF
-193. Mutations in
topoisomerase
IIalpha of Leu-169 to Phe (L169F) (in the N-terminal ATPase domain) and Ala-648 to Pro (A648P) (in the core domain) were identified as conferring >50-fold and 5-fold resistance to
ICRF
-193 in vivo, respectively. The L169F mutation, located next to the Walker A box ATP-binding sequence, resulted in a mutant enzyme displaying
ICRF
-193-resistant
topoisomerase
and ATPase activities and whose closed clamp was refractory to
ICRF
-193-mediated trapping as an annulus on closed circular DNA. These data imply that the mutation interferes directly with
ICRF
-193 binding to the N-terminal ATPase gate. In contrast, the A648P enzyme displayed
topoisomerase
activities exhibiting wild-type sensitivity to
ICRF
-193. We suggest that the inefficient trapping of the A648P closed clamp results either from the observed increased ATP requirement, or more likely, from lowered salt stability, perhaps involving destabilization of
ICRF
-193 interactions with the B'-B' interface in the core domain. These results provide evidence for at least two different phenotypic classes of
ICRF
-193 resistance mutations and suggest that bisdioxopiperazine action involves the interplay of both the ATPase and core domains of
topoisomerase
IIalpha.
...
PMID:Probing the interaction of the cytotoxic bisdioxopiperazine ICRF-193 with the closed enzyme clamp of human topoisomerase IIalpha. 1095 49
When
DNA topoisomerase II
(topo II) activity is inhibited with a non-DNA-damaging topo II inhibitor (
ICRF
-193), mammalian cells become checkpoint arrested in G2-phase. In this study, we analyzed chromosome structure in cells that bypassed this checkpoint. We observed a novel type of chromosome aberration, which we call omega-figures. These are entangled chromosome regions that indicate the persistence of catenations between nonhomologous sequences. The number of omega-figures per cell increased sharply as cells evaded the transient block imposed by the topo II-dependent checkpoint, and the presence of caffeine (a checkpoint-evading agent) potentiated this increase. Thus, the removal of nonreplicative catenations, a process that promotes chromosome individualization in G2, may be monitored by the topo II-dependent checkpoint in mammals.
...
PMID:Premitotic chromosome individualization in mammalian cells depends on topoisomerase II activity. 1096 52
Two isoforms of
DNA topoisomerase II
(topo II) have been identified in mammalian cells. While topo IIalpha is essential for chromosome segregation in mitotic cells, in vivo function of topo IIbeta remains to be clarified. Here we demonstrate that the nucleoplasmic topo IIbeta, highly expressed in differentiating cerebellar neurons, is the catalytically competent entity operating directly on chromatin DNA in vivo. When the cells reached terminal differentiation, this in vivo activity decreased to a negligible level with concomitant loss of the nucleoplasmic enzyme. Effects of topo II-specific inhibitors were analyzed in a primary culture of cerebellar granule neurons that can mimic the in vivo situation. Only the beta isoform was expressed in granule cells differentiating in vitro.
ICRF
-193, a catalytic topo II inhibitor, suppressed the transcriptional induction of amphiphysin I which is essential for mature neuronal activity. The effect decreased significantly as the cells differentiate. Expression profiling with a cDNA macroarray showed that 18% of detectable transcripts were up-regulated during the differentiation and one-third of them were susceptible to
ICRF
-193. The results suggest that topo IIbeta is involved in an early stage of granule cell differentiation by potentiating inducible neuronal genes to become transcribable probably through alterations in higher order chromatin structure.
...
PMID:Involvement of DNA topoisomerase IIbeta in neuronal differentiation. 1110 59
F 11782 is a newly identified catalytic inhibitor of topoisomerases I and II, without any detectable interaction with DNA. This study aimed to establish whether its catalytic inhibition of
topoisomerase
II was mediated by mechanisms similar to those identified for the bisdioxopiperazines. In vitro combinations of F 11782 with etoposide resulted in greater than additive cytotoxicity in L1210 cells, contrasting with marked antagonism for combinations of etoposide with either ICRF-187 or
ICRF
-193. All three compounds caused a G2/M blockade of P388 cells after an 18-h incubation, but by 40 h polyploidization was evident only with the bisdioxopiperazines. Gel retardation data revealed that only F 11782, and not the bisdioxopiperazines, was capable of completely inhibiting the DNA-binding activity of
topoisomerase
II, confirming its novel mechanism of action. Furthermore, unlike ICRF-187 and
ICRF
-193, the cytotoxicity of F 11782 appeared mediated, at least partially, by DNA damage induction in cultured GCT27 human teratoma cells, as judged by a fluorescence-enhancement assay and monitoring p53 activation. Finally, the major in vivo antitumor activity of F 11782 against the murine P388 leukemia (i.v. implanted) and the B16 melanoma (s.c. grafted) contrasted with the bisdioxopiperazines' general lack of activity. Overall, F 11782 and the bisdioxopiperazines appear to function as quite distinctive catalytic
topoisomerase
II inhibitors.
...
PMID:Characterization of the biological and biochemical activities of F 11782 and the bisdioxopiperazines, ICRF-187 and ICRF-193, two types of topoisomerase II catalytic inhibitors with distinctive mechanisms of action. 1114 91
DNA topoisomerase
(topo) IIalpha gene expression or activity is altered in tumor cells selected for resistance to inhibitors of topoII. To better understand the mechanisms by which topoIIalpha expression levels are modulated, we examined topoIIalpha transcriptional regulation in ICRF-187-sensitive and ICRF-187-resistant human leukemic cell lines that express an increased amount of topoIIalpha protein and mRNA. Transient transfections of luciferase reporter plasmids containing either the full-length human topoIIalpha promoter or fragments of it revealed that topoIIalpha transcriptional activity was significantly increased in the drug-resistant CEM/
ICRF
-8 cells, compared with CEM cells. Specifically, the transcriptional activity of the full-length topoIIalpha promoter (nucleotides -557 to +90) was doubled in CEM/
ICRF
-8 compared with CEM cells. Serial deletion of the topoIIalpha promoter permitted localization of the region responsible for its up-regulation in the drug-resistant cells between nucleotides -557 and -162, which includes the last three inverted CCAAT elements (ICE) 3 to 5. Note that construction of a point mutation in ICE3 resulted in a significant increase in transcriptional activity of the topoIIalpha promoter in the drug-sensitive CEM cells. In addition, by electrophoretic mobility shift assay, ICE3 was recognized by a protein complex containing NF-YB that was present at reduced levels in the topoIIalpha-overexpressing CEM/
ICRF
-8 extracts, suggesting that ICE3 plays a negative regulatory role in human topoIIalpha gene expression. This is the first study to show that topoIIalpha transcriptional up-regulation in ICRF-187-resistant cells is mediated in part by altered regulation of the third inverted CCAAT box in the topoIIalpha promoter.
...
PMID:Role of an inverted CCAAT element in human topoisomerase IIalpha gene expression in ICRF-187-sensitive and -resistant CEM leukemic cells. 1116 Aug 54
The bisdioxopiperazines ICRF-187 (dexrazoxane),
ICRF
-193, and
ICRF
-154 are catalytic noncleavable complex-forming inhibitors of
DNA topoisomerase II
that do not produce protein-linked DNA strand breaks. In this study, we showed that bisdioxopiperazines induced erythroid differentiation, inhibited human leukemia K562 cell growth, and caused a slow induction of apoptosis. Dexrazoxane treatment caused DNA endoreduplication resulting in large highly polyploid cells. This result suggested the lack of a
DNA topoisomerase II
activity-based cell cycle checkpoint. The percentage of K562 cells that became apoptotic was much larger than the percentage of cells that stained for hemoglobin, suggesting that prior differentiation was not required for induction of apoptosis. Use of the Bcr-Abl tyrosine kinase inhibitor STI-571 resulted in a reduction in Bcl-xL levels and potentiation of dexrazoxane-induced apoptosis related to an earlier onset and more extensive cleavage of caspase-3. These results indicated that dexrazoxane-induced apoptosis is associated with a caspase-3 activation/cleavage pathway. In addition, these results were consistent with the antiapoptotic signaling function of Bcr-Abl to regulate expression of Bcl-xL. The ability of dexrazoxane to induce differentiation and apoptosis suggests that bisdioxopiperazines may be useful in treating some types of leukemia.
...
PMID:The catalytic DNA topoisomerase II inhibitor dexrazoxane (ICRF-187) induces differentiation and apoptosis in human leukemia K562 cells. 1117 39
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