Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

DNA from a temperate phage rho 11 and chromosomal DNA of Bacillus subtilis 168 were digested with endonuclease EcoRI and then ligated with T4 polynucleotide ligase. The ligated DNA fragments were used to transform a lysogenic strain, B. subtilis spoA12 lys21 hisA1 leuA8 p11, and Lys+, His+ or Leu+ transformants were selected. The cells of each type were then mixed, grown and treated with mitomycin C; the induced phages were tested for abilities abilities to form plaques and to tranduce the auxotrophic marker. Various types of plaque-forming or defective phages which transduce hisA or lys marker at considerably high frequencies were thus obtained.
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PMID:A method for construction of specialized transducing phage rho 11 of Bacillus subtilis. 10 55

Gene 32 of bacteriophage T4 is essential for DNA replication, recombination, and repair. In an attempt to clarify the role of the corresponding gene product, we have looked for mutations that specifically inactivate one but not all of its functions and for compensating suppressor mutations in other genes. Here we describe a gene 32 ts mutant that does not produce progeny, but in contrast to an am mutant investigated by others, is capable of some primary and secondary DNA replication and of forming "joint" recombinational intermediates after infection of Escherichia coli B at the restrictive temperature. However, parental and progeny DNA strands are not ligated to covalently linked "recombinant" molecules, and single strands of vegetative DNA do not exceed unit length. Progeny production as well as capacity for covalent linkage in this gene 32 ts mutant are partially restored by additional rII mutations. Suppression by rII depends on functioning host ligase [EC 6.5.1.2; poly(deoxyribonucleotide):poly(deoxyribonucleotide) ligase (AMP-forming, NMN-forming)]. This gene 32 ts mutation (unlike some others) in turn suppresses the characteristic plaque morphology of rII mutants. We conclude that gene 32 protein, in addition to its role in DNA replication and in the formation of "joint" recombinational intermediates, interacts with T4 ligase [EC 6.5.1.1; poly(deoxyribonucleotide):poly(deoxyribonucleotide) ligase (AMP-forming)] when recombining DNA strands are covalently linked. The protein of the mutant that we describe here is mainly defective in this interaction, thus inactivating T4 ligase in recombination. Suppressing rII mutations facilitate substitution of host ligase. There is suggestive evidence that these interactions occur at the membrane.
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PMID:Genetic evidence for an additional function of phage T4 gene 32 protein: interaction with ligase. 105 98

Hershey circles and linear tandem aggregated forms of DNA have been obtained in vitro and treated with polynucleotide ligase to form phosphodiester bond. Using zone centrifugation in glycerol gradient covalently closed circles and linear dimers have been purified and their biological activity investigated. It was found that closed circular molecules lost most, if not all, of their activity in CaCl2-dependent system. In order to investigate the biological activity of tandem dimer molecules, hybrid dimers consisting of DNA's from lambda C1857 and lambda 1434 have been obtained. In plaque assay with the appropriate non-permissive strains of E. coli the efficiency of infectivity of hybrid dimers was measured. Biological activity of dimer molecules sealed with ligase was about 5% of the activity of linear monomers. Ig has been suggested that tandem dimers of lambda DNA joined by phosphodiester bond are able to penetrate into the CaCl2-treated host cells and both components of dimers are active during subsequent multiplication.
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PMID:[Biological activity of different forms of bacteriophage lambda DNA]. 121 77

The essentiality of the vaccinia virus DNA ligase gene, SalF 15R, for virus growth was tested by insertional mutagenesis. A plasmid containing E. coli gpt inserted within a large deletion in the DNA ligase gene was transfected into vaccinia virus-infected cells and recombinant viruses selected by three cycles of plaque purification in the presence of mycophenolic acid (MPA). Surprisingly, in some isolates, which replicated in a manner indistinguishable from wild type (WT) virus, the WT gene was replaced by the gpt allele, demonstrating that the DNA ligase gene is nonessential for growth in cultured cells. In other isolates the entire plasmid was integrated into the virus genome by a single crossover event and a functional copy of the DNA ligase was retained. Southern blot analyses of the latter, drug-resistant viruses indicated extra DNA fragments, of sizes inconsistent with predicted viral structures, which represent the plasmid products of homologous recombination. Hirt extracts from cells infected with such multiply plaque purified virus isolates yielded plasmids that produced ampicillin-resistant colonies after transformation of E. coli. These plasmids were of two structures, representing either the original plasmid used for transfection, or a plasmid containing the WT ligase gene rescued by recombination with the virus genome. Similarly, insertional mutagenesis of the vaccinia virus thymidine kinase (TK) gene with gpt yielded plasmids containing mutant or wild type TK alleles when recombinant viruses were selected in MPA. Such plasmids were not isolated when TK minus viruses were selected in 5-bromodeoxyuridine (BUdR).
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PMID:Vaccinia virus DNA ligase is nonessential for virus replication: recovery of plasmids from virus-infected cells. 198 87

The 20,000-dalton (20K) variant form of human growth hormone (hGH) present in extracts from pituitary glands differs from the major form of hGH (22K, 191 amino acids) by the deletion of amino acid residues 32-46. Using oligonucleotide-mediated mutagenesis, the DNA coding for these amino acids was deleted from the gene previously constructed by us (Goeddel et al., 1979) for microbial hGH production. The DNA to be deleted was looped out by the annealing of a synthetic oligodeoxyribonucleotide to the coding strand of the hGH gene contained on recombinant phage M13 mp8 DNA. Resulting heteroduplex structures were stabilized using primer-directed in vitro DNA synthesis in the presence of T4 DNA ligase. On transformation of Escherichia coli, these heteroduplex DNAs yielded phage whose genomes contained either the original or the partially deleted hGH gene, and genotypes were distinguished by in situ plaque hybridization with synthetic oligonucleotide probes. A gene with the correct deletion was used to express the short hGH variant in E. coli.
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PMID:In vitro deletional mutagenesis for bacterial production of the 20,000-dalton form of human pituitary growth hormone. 635 79

Etoposide, an inhibitor of the breakage-reunion reaction associated with cellular type II DNA topoisomerases, was shown to inhibit plaque formation of vaccinia virus. This drug had a major effect on the segregation of newly replicated DNA concatemers. Gene expression and the initiation and elongation phases of viral DNA replication were essentially unaffected. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis of viral DNA replicated in the presence of etoposide revealed two major classes of DNA: the mature monomeric linear genome and DNA that failed to enter the gel (the relative proportions depending on the concentrations of drug). Restriction enzyme analysis showed a severe defect in telomere resolution. In addition, slowly migrating restriction fragments were suggestive of a general recombination defect. We have isolated several etoposide-resistant mutants and used marker rescue and DNA sequencing to localize the resistance-causing mutation to the amino terminus of the viral DNA ligase gene. Inactivation of the DNA ligase also resulted in an etoposide-resistant phenotype, but to a lesser extent. The telomere resolution and segregation defects were corrected both in the drug-resistant mutants and in the DNA ligase knockout mutants. Reinsertion of wild-type or mutant DNA ligase in the viral thymidine kinase locus confirmed the role of the viral DNA ligase in conferring sensitivity not only to etoposide but also to another topoisomerase II inhibitor, 4'-(9-acridinylamino) methanesulphon-m-anisidide (mAMSA). The data suggest that the nonessential DNA ligase is involved in telomere resolution, possibly as part of a general recombinase.
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PMID:An etoposide-induced block in vaccinia virus telomere resolution is dependent on the virus-encoded DNA ligase. 788 54

The mutations spectra of cis-syn, trans-syn-I, (6-4), and Dewar pyrimidone photoproducts of the TT site of AATTAA and TATTAT in the (-) strand of a heteroduplex M13 vector were obtained in an excision and photoreversal repair deficient Escherichia coli host under SOS conditions. Oligonucleotides containing site-specific photoproducts were annealed to a complementary uracil-containing (+) strand that contained one or more unique pairs of nucleotide mismatches and used to prime (-) strand synthesis with a DNA polymerase and dNTPs. Following DNA synthesis, the reaction mixtures were incubated with T4 DNA ligase and ATP and then used to transfect SOS-induced competent CSRO6F' cells (uvrA6 and phr-1). The transfectants were plated, gridded, and probed by oligonucleotides specific for progeny of the (-) and (+) strands. Individual progeny of the photoproduct-containing (-) strands were plaque purified and sequenced by the dideoxy method. The cis-syn and trans-syn-I dimers were found not to be very mutagenic (<9%), the Dewar product more so (<33%), and the (6-4) product the most mutagenic (<73%). The mutation spectra were similar to those previously reported for the same photoproducts of the TT site of AGTTGG in the (+) strand of an M13 vector [Lawrence, C. W., et al. (1990) Mol. Gen Genet. 222, 166-168; LeClerc, J. E., et al. (1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 88, 9685-9689] except that -1 deletion mutations were not observed for the trans-syn-I photoproducts, and a lower frequency of 3'-T-->C mutations was observed for the (6-4) photoproduct. Evidence that a small percentage of (+) strand repair of a double mismatch to the 3'-side of the photoproduct. Evidence that a small percentage of (+) strand repair of a double mismatch to the 3'-side was obtained from transfection experiments in which a second double mismatch was introduced opposite or flanking the photoproduct. Analysis of the minor tandem mutations induced by the (6-4) and Dewar products suggests that the SOS polymerase complex is able to elongate what amounts to double mismatches opposite these photoproducts and is consistent with the action of a highly processive polymerase that lacks proofreading ability.
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PMID:Mutation spectra of M13 vectors containing site-specific Cis-Syn, Trans-Syn-I, (6-4), and Dewar pyrimidone photoproducts of thymidylyl-(3'-->5')-thymidine in Escherichia coli under SOS conditions. 867 50

Porphyromonas gingivalis is an anaerobic periodontal pathogen that resides in the complex multispecies microbial biofilm known as dental plaque. Effective reporter tools are increasingly needed to facilitate physiological and pathogenetic studies of dental biofilm. Fluorescent proteins are ideal reporters for conveniently monitoring biofilm growth, but are restricted by several environmental factors, such as a requirement of oxygen to emit fluorescence. We developed a fluorescent reporter plasmid, known as the SNAP-tag, for labeling P. gingivalis cells, which encode an engineered version of the human DNA repair enzyme O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase. Fluorescent substrates containing O(6)-benzylguanine covalently and specifically bind to the enzyme via stable thioether bonds. For the present study, we constructed a replicative plasmid carrying SNAP26b under the control of the P. gingivalis endogenous trxB promoter. The P. gingivalis-expressing SNAP26 protein was successfully labeled with specific fluorophores under anaerobic conditions. Porphyromonas gingivalis biofilm formation was investigated using flow cells and confocal laser scanning microscopy. A specific distribution of a strong fluorescence signal was demonstrated in P. gingivalis-SNAP26 monospecies and bispecies biofilms with Streptococcus gordonii-GFPmut3(*). These findings show that the SNAP-tag can be applied to studies of anaerobic bacteria in biofilm models and is a useful and advantageous alternative to existing labeling strategies.
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PMID:Development of SNAP-tag-mediated live cell labeling as an alternative to GFP in Porphyromonas gingivalis. 2048 22

Increasing evidence suggests that oxidative DNA damage accumulates in atherosclerosis. Recently, we showed that a genetic variant in the human DNA repair enzyme NEIL3 was associated with increased risk of myocardial infarction. Here, we explored the role of Neil3/NEIL3 in atherogenesis by both clinical and experimental approaches. Human carotid plaques revealed increased NEIL3 mRNA expression which significantly correlated with mRNA levels of the macrophage marker CD68. Apoe(-/-)Neil3(-/-) mice on high-fat diet showed accelerated plaque formation as compared to Apoe(-/-) mice, reflecting an atherogenic lipid profile, increased hepatic triglyceride levels and attenuated macrophage cholesterol efflux capacity. Apoe(-/-)Neil3(-/-) mice showed marked alterations in several pathways affecting hepatic lipid metabolism, but no genotypic alterations in genome integrity or genome-wide accumulation of oxidative DNA damage. These results suggest a novel role for the DNA glycosylase Neil3 in atherogenesis in balancing lipid metabolism and macrophage function, potentially independently of genome-wide canonical base excision repair of oxidative DNA damage.
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PMID:Neil3-dependent base excision repair regulates lipid metabolism and prevents atherosclerosis in Apoe-deficient mice. 2732 39

Vaccinia virus is the prototypic poxvirus. The 192 kilobase double-stranded DNA viral genome encodes most if not all of the viral replication machinery. The vaccinia virus DNA polymerase is encoded by the E9L gene. Sequence analysis indicates that E9 is a member of the B family of replicative polymerases. The enzyme has both polymerase and 3'-5' exonuclease activities, both of which are essential to support viral replication. Genetic analysis of E9 has identified residues and motifs whose alteration can confer temperature-sensitivity, drug resistance (phosphonoacetic acid, aphidicolin, cytosine arabinsode, cidofovir) or altered fidelity. The polymerase is involved both in DNA replication and in recombination. Although inherently distributive, E9 gains processivity by interacting in a 1:1 stoichiometry with a heterodimer of the A20 and D4 proteins. A20 binds to both E9 and D4 and serves as a bridge within the holoenzyme. The A20/D4 heterodimer has been purified and can confer processivity on purified E9. The interaction of A20 with D4 is mediated by the N'-terminus of A20. The D4 protein is an enzymatically active uracil DNA glycosylase. The DNA-scanning activity of D4 is proposed to keep the holoenzyme tethered to the DNA template but allow polymerase translocation. The crystal structure of D4, alone and in complex with A201-50 and/or DNA has been solved. Screens for low molecular weight compounds that interrupt the A201-50/D4 interface have yielded hits that disrupt processive DNA synthesis in vitro and/or inhibit plaque formation. The observation that an active DNA repair enzyme is an integral part of the holoenzyme suggests that DNA replication and repair may be coupled.
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PMID:The vaccinia virus DNA polymerase and its processivity factor. 2815 13


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