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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)
Bacteriophage T4 has a third pathway for repair of damaged DNA besides excision repair and recombination repair. This pathway is a mechanism for the toleration of lesions rather than the repair of lesions. The substrate for this process is gapped DNA copied from a damaged template. Evidence indicates that these gaps are filled, giving rise to daughter strands that are sensitive to heat and to treatments with RNAase. These daughter strands subsequently serve as templates for DNA that is resistant to RNAase. This third pathway is dependent upon gene 41 (RNA-priming protein), gene uvsZ (function unknown) and gene 30 (
polynucleotide ligase
) and is presumed to consist of 4 steps: (1) induction of primer RNA opposite the lesion in the template; (2) elongation of primers by
DNA polymerase
; (3) ligation of daughter-strand fragments, without removal of primer RNA; (4) replication of DNA carrying RNA sequences, giving homogeneous DNA strands. We have called this process 'Re-initiation repair'.
...
PMID:Bypass of pyrimidine dimers in DNA of bacteriophage T4 via induction of primer RNA. 618 40
A method is described for the rapid generation and cloning of deletion derivatives well-suited for the sequencing of long stretches of DNA. This method is based on two useful features of exonuclease III: (1) processive digestion at a very uniform rate and (2) failure to initiate digestion at DNA ends with four-base 3'-protrusions. The method was applied to a 4570-bp Drosophila genomic DNA fragment cloned in the single-stranded phage vector M 13mp18. An ordered set of deletion clones was made by first cutting replicative form(RF) DNA with two restriction enzymes in the polylinker region of the vector between the Drosophila DNA and the sequencing primer binding site. One enzyme left a four-base 3'-protrusion that protected the remainder of the vector from exonuclease III attack, allowing unidirectional digestion of the insert sequence from the 5'-protruding end left by the other enzyme. Aliquots were removed at uniform intervals, treated with S1 nuclease, Klenow
DNA polymerase
, T4
DNA ligase
, and then used to transfect competent cells. Most of the resulting clones derived from each aliquot were deleted to a predicted extent with only slight scatter, even for deletions of more than 4 kb. The method permits efficient isolation of clusters of deletion breakpoints within small preselected regions of large DNA segments, allowing nonrandom sequence analysis.
...
PMID:Unidirectional digestion with exonuclease III creates targeted breakpoints for DNA sequencing. 623 51
Synthetic oligonucleotides,
DNA ligase
and
DNA polymerase
were used to construct double-stranded DNA fragments homologous to the first 25, 27 or 30 b.p. of the origin of replication of bacteriophage phi X174 (nucleotides 4299-4328 of the phi X174 DNA sequence). The double-stranded DNA fragments were cloned into the unique SmaI or HindIII restriction sites in the kanamycin-resistance gene of pACYC177 (AmpR, KmR). Recombinant plasmids were picked up by colony hybridization. DNA sequencing showed that not only recombinant plasmids with the expected insert were formed, but also recombinant plasmids with a shorter insert. Recombinant plasmids with an insert homologous to the first 24, 25, 26, 27, 28 or all 30 b.p. of the phi X174 origin region were thus obtained. Supercoiled plasmids containing a sequence homologous to the first 27, 28 or 30 b.p. of the phi X174 origin region are nicked by the phi X174 gene A protein. However, the other supercoiled plasmids are not nicked by the phi X174 gene A protein. These results show that the first 27 b.p. of the phi X174 origin region are sufficient as well as required for the initiation step in phi X174 RF DNA replication, i.e. the cleavage by gene A protein.
...
PMID:Gene A protein cleavage of recombinant plasmids containing the phi X174 replication origin. 623 28
Synthetic oligodeoxyribonucleotides,
DNA ligase
and
DNA polymerase
were used to construct double-stranded DNA fragments homologous to the first 25, 27 or 30 b.p. of the 30 b.p. origin region of bacteriophage phi X174 (nucleotides 4299-4328 of the phi X174 DNA sequence). The double-stranded DNA fragments were cloned into the kanamycin resistance gene of pACYC177 (AmpR, KmR). Transformants were picked up by antibiotic selection and filter-hybridization using one of the oligodeoxyribonucleotides as a probe. Approximate lengths of the inserts were determined by restriction enzyme analysis. Exact length and orientation of each insert was determined by DNA sequencing. Plasmid DNA with an insert homologous to the first 25 b.p. of the phi X174 origin is not nicked by the gene A protein. However, plasmid DNA containing the 27 b.p. fragment in either orientation is nicked by the gene A protein, as well as plasmid DNAs containing the first 28 b.p. or the complete 30 b.p. conserved origin region of the isometric phages.
...
PMID:Gene A protein interacting with recombinant plasmid DNAs containing 25-30 b.p. of the phi X174 replication origin. 624 Sep 24
A procedure for simultaneous large-scale purification of the bacteriophage-T4-induced polynucleotide kinase,
DNA ligase
, RNA ligase and
DNA polymerase
has been developed. The method involves bacterial cell disruption by sonication, fractionation of cell extract with polymin P, salt elution from the polymin pellets, ammonium sulfate precipitation, and subsequent column chromatography purification of the enzymes. To enrich the enzyme content highly in the initial source non-permissive Escherichia coli B-23 cells infected with T4 amN82 phage were used. The procedure described is rapid, reproducible, high in yield, and able to handle preparations using from 1 g to 200 g cell paste. It can be easily scaled up. The method results in large amounts of the enzymes with very high specific activities, good stability essential lacking exonuclease and endonuclease contamination. The final enzyme preparations were efficiently used in DNA sequencing and in multiple experiments on construction of various recombinant DNAs for cloning and expression in vivo.
...
PMID:A new procedure for the simultaneous large-scale purification of bacteriophage-T4-induced polynucleotide kinase, DNA ligase, RNA ligase and DNA polymerase. 626 Apr 93
A new physical method was developed to assay genetic recombination of phage T7 in vivo. The assay utilized T7 mutants that carry unique restriction sites and was based on the detection of a new restriction fragment generated by recombination. Using this assay, we reexamined the genetic requirements for recombination of T7 DNA. Our results were in total agreement with previous findings in that recombination required the products of genes 3 (endonuclease), 4 (primase), 5 (
DNA polymerase
), and 6 (exonuclease). Recombination was found to be independent of
DNA ligase
and DNA packaging and maturation functions.
...
PMID:Genetic recombination of bacteriophage T7 in vivo studied by use of a simple physical assay. 627 19
DNA repair proficiency in cells is expressed by various enzymes which can recognize damaged sites arising from exogenous agents or endogenous conditions. Either a damaged base is recognized by DNA glycosylases, partially removed by hemi-DNA glycosylases acting on diadduct damage, or direct incision of the phosphodiester bond near the damaged site. Incision at those apurinic or apyrimidinic sites arising from depurination-depyrimidination or glycosylase reactions is effected by apurinic or apyrimidinic endonucleases. Excision of damaged sites is catalyzed by unique exonucleases followed by
DNA polymerase
catalyzed reinsertion of nucleotides. The integrity of the strands is restored by
polynucleotide ligase
when a juxtaposed nucleotide is properly reinserted.
...
PMID:Enzymatic mechanisms of DNA repair. 628 49
gamma-Irradiation of DNA in vitro produces two types of single strand breaks. Both types of strand breaks contain 5'-phosphate DNA termini. Some strand breaks contain 3'-phosphate termini, some contain 3'-phosphoglycolate termini (Henner, W.D., Rodriguez, L.O., Hecht, S. M., and Haseltine, W. A. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 711-713). We have studied the ability of prokaryotic enzymes of DNA metabolism to act at each of these types of gamma-ray-induced 3' termini in DNA. Neither strand breaks that terminate with 3'-phosphate nor 3'-phosphoglycolate are substrates for direct ligation by T4
DNA ligase
. Neither type of gamma-ray-induced 3' terminus can be used as a primer for DNA synthesis by either Escherichia coli
DNA polymerase
or T4
DNA polymerase
. The 3'-phosphatase activity of T4 polynucleotide kinase can convert gamma-ray-induced 3'-phosphate but not 3'-phosphoglycolate termini to 3'-hydroxyl termini that can then serve as primers for
DNA polymerase
. E. coli alkaline phosphatase is also unable to hydrolyze 3'-phosphoglycolate groups. The 3'-5' exonuclease actions of E. coli DNA polymerase I and T4
DNA polymerase
do not degrade DNA strands that have either type of gamma-ray-induced 3' terminus. E. coli exonuclease III can hydrolyze DNA with gamma-ray-induced 3'-phosphate or 3'-phosphoglycolate termini or with DNase I-induced 3'-hydroxyl termini. The initial action of exonuclease III at 3' termini of ionizing radiation-induced DNA fragments is to remove the 3' terminal phosphate or phosphoglycolate to yield a fragment of the same nucleotide length that has a 3'-hydroxyl terminus. These results suggest that repair of ionizing radiation-induced strand breaks may proceed via the sequential action of exonuclease,
DNA polymerase
, and
DNA ligase
. The possible role of exonuclease III in repair of gamma-radiation-induced strand breaks is discussed.
...
PMID:Enzyme action at 3' termini of ionizing radiation-induced DNA strand breaks. 636 Oct 28
Fractions containing a high molecular weight form (Mr approximately equal to 2 X 10(6] of the activity that replicates in vitro both the 2-micron yeast DNA plasmid and the chromosomal autonomously replicating sequence ars 1 can be prepared from cells of the budding yeast Saccharomyces. Protein complexes from the fractions associate in vitro with the replication origins of these DNA elements, as determined by electron microscopy. In the present study, the high molecular weight replicative fraction has been characterized in further detail. The DNA synthetic activity in the high molecular weight fraction was bound to the DNA and could be isolated with it. This binding of the replicating activity to the DNA was greatly reduced in the absence of the 2-micron origins of replication. Association of the protein complexes with DNA depended on the amount of replicating activity added, was sensitive to 0.2 M KCl, and exhibited a requirement for rATP and deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates. It was not blocked, however, by the
DNA polymerase
inhibitor aphidicolin or by the RNA polymerase inhibitor alpha-amanitin. The lack of inhibition by aphidicolin suggests that the deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates may function as cofactors in the binding of protein complexes to DNA or as substrates for a polymerizing activity such as a primase. Binding of the protein complexes as well as actual DNA replication were heat sensitive in the high molecular weight fraction prepared from the temperature-sensitive mutant of the cell division cycle cdc 8. This suggests that the cdc 8 gene product is present in a replicative protein complex and strengthens the conclusion that the presence of the protein complexes on the DNA is associated with replication. Using independent enzyme assays, several other possible replication proteins (including DNA polymerase I,
DNA ligase
, DNA primase, and DNA topoisomerase II) have been identified directly in the high molecular weight replicative fraction. All of these results provide support for the idea that a protein complex (or replisome ) is involved in the replication of both the extrachromosomal 2-micron DNA and chromosomal DNA in yeast.
...
PMID:Evidence for participation of a multiprotein complex in yeast DNA replication in vitro. 637 67
DNA from T7 phage containing AP (apurinic/apyrimidinic) sites was repaired by the successive actions of three chromatin enzymes [AP endodeoxyribonuclease, DNAase IV (5'----3'-exodeoxyribonuclease) and
DNA polymerase
-beta] prepared from rat liver and T4-phage
DNA ligase
. Since
DNA ligase
is also found in rat liver chromatin, all the activities used for the successful repair in vitro are thus present in the chromatin of a eukaryotic cell. Our results show, in particular, that the chromatin DNAase IV is capable of excising the AP site from the DNA strand nicked by the chromatin AP endodeoxyribonuclease. We did not try to combine all the enzymes, since competition between some of them might have prevented the repair; we have, for instance, shown that
DNA ligase
can seal the incision 5' to the AP site made by the AP endodeoxyribonuclease. Changes in chromatin structure during repair might perhaps prevent this competition when nuclear DNA is repaired in the living cell.
...
PMID:Repair of depurinated DNA with enzymes from rat liver chromatin. 674 58
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