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Enzyme
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Query: EC:6.5.1.2 (
DNA ligase
)
2,749
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
By a combination of chemical and enzymatic methods, a 75 base pair DNA duplex containing the sequence of the lambda PR promoter including the OR1 and OR2 cI repressor binding sites was synthesized. The solid support phosphite triester procedure (Caruthers, M. H. et al.,
Cold
Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology XLVII, in press) was used for the synthesis of oligonucleotides comprising the sequence. We report here an adaptation of the method of DNA synthesis in test tubes. Assembly of the oligonucleotides involved the use of T4 polynucleotide kinase and T4
DNA ligase
. We show that the synthetic DNA is recognized by RNA polymerase and cI repressor in a manner identical to the same control region contained on a restriction fragment isolated from bacteriophage lambda DNA. Our synthetic approach using chemically synthesized promoter variants is thus suitable for studies probing the function of promoters.
...
PMID:Chemical synthesis and biochemical reactivity of bacteriophage lambda PR promoter. 630 Jul 67
The cloning, overexpression and characterization of a
cold
-adapted
DNA ligase
from the Antarctic sea water bacterium Pseudoalteromonas haloplanktis are described. Protein sequence analysis revealed that the
cold
-adapted Ph
DNA ligase
shows a significant level of sequence similarity to other NAD+-dependent DNA ligases and contains several previously described sequence motifs. Also, a decreased level of arginine and proline residues in Ph
DNA ligase
could be involved in the
cold
-adaptation strategy. Moreover, 3D modelling of the N-terminal domain of Ph
DNA ligase
clearly indicates that this domain is destabilized compared with its thermophilic homologue. The recombinant Ph
DNA ligase
was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. Mass spectroscopy experiments indicated that the purified enzyme is mainly in an adenylated form with a molecular mass of 74 593 Da. Ph
DNA ligase
shows similar overall catalytic properties to other NAD+-dependent DNA ligases but is a
cold
-adapted enzyme as its catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) at low and moderate temperatures is higher than that of its mesophilic counterpart E. coli
DNA ligase
. A kinetic comparison of three enzymes adapted to different temperatures (P. haloplanktis, E. coli and Thermus scotoductus DNA ligases) indicated that an increased kcat is the most important adaptive parameter for enzymatic activity at low temperatures, whereas a decreased Km for the nicked DNA substrate seems to allow T. scotoductus
DNA ligase
to work efficiently at high temperatures. Besides being useful for investigation of the adaptation of enzymes to extreme temperatures, P. haloplanktis
DNA ligase
, which is very efficient at low temperatures, offers a novel tool for biotechnology.
...
PMID:A DNA ligase from the psychrophile Pseudoalteromonas haloplanktis gives insights into the adaptation of proteins to low temperatures. 1084 66
Psychrophiles, host of permanently
cold
habitats, display metabolic fluxes comparable to those exhibited by mesophilic organisms at moderate temperatures. These organisms have evolved by producing, among other peculiarities,
cold
-active enzymes that have the properties to cope with the reduction of chemical reaction rates induced by low temperatures. The emerging picture suggests that these enzymes display a high catalytic efficiency at low temperatures through an improved flexibility of the structural components involved in the catalytic cycle, whereas other protein regions, if not implicated in catalysis, may be even more rigid than their mesophilic counterparts. In return, the increased flexibility leads to a decreased stability of psychrophilic enzymes. In order to gain further advances in the analysis of the activity/flexibility/stability concept, psychrophilic, mesophilic, and thermophilic DNA ligases have been compared by three-dimensional-modeling studies, as well as regards their activity, surface hydrophobicity, structural permeability, conformational stabilities, and irreversible thermal unfolding. These data show that the
cold
-adapted
DNA ligase
is characterized by an increased activity at low and moderate temperatures, an overall destabilization of the molecular edifice, especially at the active site, and a high conformational flexibility. The opposite trend is observed in the mesophilic and thermophilic counterparts, the latter being characterized by a reduced low temperature activity, high stability and reduced flexibility. These results strongly suggest a complex relationship between activity, flexibility and stability. In addition, they also indicate that in
cold
-adapted enzymes, the driving force for denaturation is a large entropy change.
...
PMID:Structural and functional adaptations to extreme temperatures in psychrophilic, mesophilic, and thermophilic DNA ligases. 1285 62
The Escherichia coli
DNA repair enzyme
endonuclease VIII (EndoVIII or Nei) excises oxidized pyrimidines from damaged DNA substrates. It overlaps in substrate specificity with endonuclease III and may serve as a back-up for this enzyme in E. coli. The three-dimensional structure of Nei covalently complexed with DNA has been recently determined, revealing the critical amino-acid residues required for DNA binding and catalytic activity. Based on this information, several site-specific mutants of the enzyme have been tested for activity against various substrates. Although the crystal structure of the DNA-bound enzyme has been fully determined, the important structure of the free enzyme has not previously been analyzed. In this report, the crystallization and preliminary crystallographic characterization of DNA-free Nei are described. Four different crystal habits are reported for wild-type Nei and two of its catalytic mutants. Despite being crystallized under different conditions, all habits belong to the same crystal form, with the same space group (I222) and a similar crystallographic unit cell (average parameters a = 57.7, b = 80.2, c = 169.7 A). Two of these crystal habits, I and IV, appear to be suitable for full crystallographic analysis. Crystal habit I was obtained by vapour diffusion using PEG 8000, glycerol and calcium acetate. Crystal habit IV was obtained by a similar method using PEG 400 and magnesium chloride. Both crystals are mechanically strong and stable in the X-ray beam once frozen under
cold
nitrogen gas. A full diffraction data set has recently been collected from a wild-type Nei crystal of habit I (2.6 A resolution, 85.2% completeness, Rmerge = 9.8%). Additional diffraction data were collected from an Nei-R252A crystal of habit IV (2.05 A resolution, 99.9% completeness, Rmerge = 6.0%) and an Nei-E2A crystal of habit IV (2.25 A resolution, 91.7% completeness, Rmerge = 6.2%). These diffraction data were collected at 95-100 K using a synchrotron X-ray source and a CCD area detector. All three data sets are currently being used to obtain crystallographic phasing via molecular-replacement techniques.
...
PMID:Crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of endonuclease VIII in its uncomplexed form. 1527 82
Uracil DNA glycosylase (UDG) is a
DNA repair enzyme
in the base excision repair pathway and removes uracil from the DNA strand. Atlantic cod UDG (cUDG), which is a
cold
-adapted enzyme, has been found to be up to 10 times more catalytically active in the temperature range 15-37 degrees C as compared with the warm-active human counterpart. The increased catalytic activity of
cold
-adapted enzymes as compared with their mesophilic homologues are partly believed to be caused by an increase in the structural flexibility. However, no direct experimental evidence supports the proposal of increased flexibility of
cold
-adapted enzymes. We have used molecular dynamics simulations to gain insight into the structural flexibility of UDG. The results from these simulations show that an important loop involved in DNA recognition (the Leu(272) loop) is the most flexible part of the cUDG structure and that the human counterpart has much lower flexibility in the Leu(272) loop. The flexibility in this loop correlates well with the experimental k(cat)/K(m) values. Thus, the data presented here add strong support to the idea that flexibility plays a central role in adaptation to
cold
environments.
...
PMID:Increased flexibility as a strategy for cold adaptation: a comparative molecular dynamics study of cold- and warm-active uracil DNA glycosylase. 1574 96
Uracil DNA glycosylase (UDG) is a
DNA repair enzyme
involved in the base excision repair (BER) pathway, removing misincorporated uracil from the DNA strand. The native and mutant forms of Atlantic cod and human UDG have previously been characterized in terms of kinetic and thermodynamic properties as well as the determination of several crystal structures. This data shows that the
cold
-adapted enzyme is more catalytically efficient but at the same time less resistant to heat compared to its warm-active counterpart. In this study, the structure-function relationship is further explored by means of comparative molecular dynamics (MD) simulations at three different temperatures (375, 400 and 425K) to gain a deeper insight into the structural features responsible for the reduced thermostability of the
cold
-active enzyme. The simulations show that there are distinct structural differences in the unfolding pathway between the two homologues, particularly evident in the N- and C-terminals. Distortion of the mesophilic enzyme is initiated simultaneously in the N- and C-terminal, while the C-terminal part plays a key role for the stability of the psychrophilic enzyme. The simulations also show that at certain temperatures the
cold
-adapted enzyme unfolds faster than the warm-active homologues in accordance with the lower thermal stability found experimentally.
...
PMID:Comparative unfolding studies of psychrophilic and mesophilic uracil DNA glycosylase: MD simulations show reduced thermal stability of the cold-adapted enzyme. 1713 24
Histone-like proteins (such as HU, H-NS, and Fis) participate in nucleoid organization and in DNA replication, recombination, and transcription.
Cold
shock and anoxia upregulates a homologue of HU (Hlp) in Mycobacterium smegmatis, the nonpathogenic model of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. We show using electrophoretic mobility shift assays that Hlp, which in addition to the HU fold has a basic C-terminal tail containing multiple PAKK and PAAK repeats, has very high affinity for DNA. The affinity of Hlp for 76 bp linear DNA is higher, K d = 0.037 +/- 0.001 nM, compared to an Hlp variant without the C-terminal repeats, K d = 2.5 +/- 0.1 nM and the isolated C-terminal repeat domain, K d = 0.8 +/- 0.2 nM, where K d in all cases reflects an aggregate affinity for the DNA probes, not the affinity for binding to a single site. Hlp lacking the entire C-terminal domain binds DNA only poorly. These data indicate that both Hlp domains contribute to high-affinity DNA binding. Hlp promotes DNA end-joining in the presence of T4
DNA ligase
, and this property is mediated by the C-terminal repeats. At <100 nM concentration, Hlp represses transcription by T7 RNA polymerase in vitro whereas the individual N- and C-terminal domains do not, even when present together. Notably, while DNA end-joining can be achieved by the isolated C-terminal domain, transcriptional repression requires for both domains to be present on a single polypeptide. Given the low cellular concentration of Hlp, our data suggest that its primary functional role may be in DNA-dependent responses to environmental stress rather than in nucleoid organization.
...
PMID:The C-terminal domain of HU-related histone-like protein Hlp from Mycobacterium smegmatis mediates DNA end-joining. 1865 56
All bacteria share a set of evolutionarily conserved essential genes that encode products that are required for viability. The great diversity of environments that bacteria inhabit, including environments at extreme temperatures, place adaptive pressure on essential genes. We sought to use this evolutionary diversity of essential genes to engineer bacterial pathogens to be stably temperature-sensitive, and thus useful as live vaccines. We isolated essential genes from bacteria found in the Arctic and substituted them for their counterparts into pathogens of mammals. We found that substitution of nine different essential genes from psychrophilic (
cold
-loving) bacteria into mammalian pathogenic bacteria resulted in strains that died below their normal-temperature growth limits. Substitution of three different psychrophilic gene orthologs of ligA, which encode NAD-dependent
DNA ligase
, resulted in bacterial strains that died at 33, 35, and 37 degrees C. One ligA gene was shown to render Francisella tularensis, Salmonella enterica, and Mycobacterium smegmatis temperature-sensitive, demonstrating that this gene functions in both Gram-negative and Gram-positive lineage bacteria. Three temperature-sensitive F. tularensis strains were shown to induce protective immunity after vaccination at a cool body site. About half of the genes that could be tested were unable to mutate to temperature-resistant forms at detectable levels. These results show that psychrophilic essential genes can be used to create a unique class of bacterial temperature-sensitive vaccines for important human pathogens, such as S. enterica and Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
...
PMID:Essential genes from Arctic bacteria used to construct stable, temperature-sensitive bacterial vaccines. 2062 65
A previously described mammalian cell activity, called VPg unlinkase, specifically cleaves a unique protein-RNA covalent linkage generated during the viral genomic RNA replication steps of a picornavirus infection. For over three decades, the identity of this cellular activity and its normal role in the uninfected cell had remained elusive. Here we report the purification and identification of VPg unlinkase as the
DNA repair enzyme
, 5'-tyrosyl-DNA phosphodiesterase-2 (TDP2). Our data show that VPg unlinkase activity in different mammalian cell lines correlates with their differential expression of TDP2. Furthermore, we show that recombinant TDP2 can cleave the protein-RNA linkage generated by different picornaviruses without impairing the integrity of viral RNA. Our results reveal a unique RNA repair-like function for TDP2 and suggest an unusual role in host-pathogen interactions for this cellular enzyme. On the basis of the identification of TDP2 as a potential antiviral target, our findings may lead to the development of universal therapeutics to treat the millions of individuals afflicted annually with diseases caused by picornaviruses, including myocarditis, aseptic meningitis, encephalitis, hepatitis, and the
common cold
.
...
PMID:An RNA virus hijacks an incognito function of a DNA repair enzyme. 2290 87
In any cell, the number of RNA species is remarkably complex. The sizes of RNAs can vary from 20 nucleotides to several kilobases, and abundances can vary from a few to hundreds of thousands of molecules per cell. It is of obvious interest to determine the abundance and integrity of specific RNA species within these complex mixtures. This protocol describes the splinted ligation method to detect small RNAs. It relies on the ability of T4
DNA ligase
to covalently join the terminal 3'-hydroxyl group of an RNA molecule to the labeled 5'-phosphate group of a DNA chain in the presence of a DNA "splint" or "bridge" oligonucleotide that is complementary to both. After ligation, the labeled small RNA, lengthened by the covalent addition of the (32)P-labeled oligonucleotide probe, is visualized by denaturing gel electrophoresis and phosphorimaging. This approach is recommended for the routine detection and quantification of specific small RNAs (e.g., microRNAs [miRNAs] and piwi-associated RNAs [piRNAs]).
Cold
Spring Harb Protoc 2013 Jan 01
PMID:Splinted ligation method to detect small RNAs. 2328 36
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