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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 ligation entails AMP transfer from ATP to the 5' end of DNA to form a DNA-adenylate structure, A(5')pp(5')N. A similar reaction involving GMP transfer occurs during 5' capping of eukaryotic mRNA. In both cases, nucleotidyl transfer occurs through a covalent lysyl-NMP intermediate. There is local sequence conservation among ligases and capping enzymes in the vicinity of the active site lysine (KxDG) and at three other collinear motifs. The role of these motifs in DNA ligation was tested by mutating individual conserved residues in the vaccinia virus DNA ligase. Wild-type and mutated versions of vaccinia ligase were expressed in bacteria as His-tagged fusion proteins and purified by Ni-affinity and phosphocellulose chromatography steps. We found that Ala substitution for Lys-231 (the presumptive active site) abrogated enzyme-adenylate formation and DNA ligation activities. Ala mutations at conserved residues Glu-283, Glu-377, and Lys-397 also resulted in loss of ligation activity, which correlated with a defect in ligase-AMP formation. These results are concordant with mutational studies of yeast RNA capping enzyme and suggest a common structural basis for covalent nucleotidyl transfer.
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PMID:Mutational analysis of vaccinia DNA ligase defines residues essential for covalent catalysis. 764 38

The Apn1 DNA repair enzyme of Saccharomyces cerevisiae acts on abasic sites and oxygen radical damages. Apn1 is homologous to the repair endonuclease IV of Escherichia coli, but the yeast protein is approximately 80 residues longer at the C terminus. The Apn1 C terminus is rich in basic amino acids and includes two lysine/arginine clusters related to the nuclear transport signals of some other proteins. We show here by indirect immunofluorescence that Apn1 is localized to the yeast nucleus. Mutant Apn1 proteins were engineered with progressive deletions inward from the C terminus. Elimination of just the last 12 residues from Apn1 (to yield Apn355) did not alter the stability in yeast cells or the in vitro activity of the enzyme. Greater truncation of Apn1 produced proteins of apparently lower (Apn334) or much lower (Apn315 and Apn293) in vivo stability. Both Apn355 and Apn334 failed to concentrate in the yeast nucleus and remained in the cytoplasm. These delocalized derivatives also failed to restore wild-type resistance to oxidative or alkylating agents in a delta apn1 strain. Apn355 and Apn334 complemented repair-deficient E. coli as effectively as did wild-type Apn1. Resistance to these DNA-damaging agents in yeast was restored if Apn355 and Apn334 (but not Apn315 or Apn293) were overproduced approximately 20-fold, which suggests either weak active transport or passive diffusion of these derivatives into the nucleus. Replacement of the C-terminal 12 residues of Apn1 with the nuclear targeting sequence of SV40 T-antigen did not restore effective function or nuclear localization in yeast.
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PMID:Intracellular localization of the Apn1 DNA repair enzyme of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Nuclear transport signals and biological role. 769 Jul 56

Mammalian cells contain three biochemically distinct DNA ligases. In this report we describe the purification of DNA ligase II to homogeneity from bovine liver nuclei. This enzyme interacts with ATP to form an enzyme-AMP complex, in which the AMP moiety is covalently linked to a lysine residue. An adenylylated peptide from DNA ligase II contains the sequence, Lys-Tyr-Asp-Gly-Glu-Arg, which is homologous to the active site motif conserved in ATP-dependent DNA ligases. The sequences adjacent to this motif in DNA ligase II are different from the comparable sequences in DNA ligase I, demonstrating that these enzymes are encoded by separate genes. The amino acid sequences of 15 DNA ligase II peptides exhibit striking homology (65% overall identity) with vaccinia DNA ligase. These peptides are also homologous (31% overall identity) with the catalytic domain of mammalian DNA ligase I, indicating that the genes encoding DNA ligases I and II probably evolved from a common ancestral gene. Since vaccinia DNA ligase is not required for DNA replication but influences the ability of the virus to survive DNA damage, the homology between this enzyme and DNA ligase II suggests that DNA ligase II may be involved in DNA repair.
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PMID:Mammalian DNA ligase II is highly homologous with vaccinia DNA ligase. Identification of the DNA ligase II active site for enzyme-adenylate formation. 798 68

Bovine DNA ligases I and II were adenylylated in the presence of [alpha-32P]ATP and digested with limiting amounts of trypsin or V8 protease. The generation of radioactive peptides of decreasing size was monitored by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. Active site peptides obtained by complete proteolytic digestions with trypsin, V8, or Lys-C protease were also compared. The partial digestion products of DNA ligases I and II were entirely different, with no indication of extensive sequence homology. Furthermore, the sequence of the active site region of DNA ligase I is clearly different from that of DNA ligase II. Similar analysis of a third chromatographically distinct mammalian DNA ligase indicated that it is different from DNA ligase I but related to DNA ligase II.
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PMID:Different active sites of mammalian DNA ligases I and II. 810 23

Sequencing of the EcoRI N' fragment of African swine fever virus (ASFV) DNA revealed an open reading frame encoding a protein similar to ATP-dependent DNA ligases. When the gene encoding this protein was expressed in Escherichia coli, a protein of the expected molecular mass was labeled in bacterial extracts upon incubation with [alpha-32P]ATP. The recombinant protein comigrated in SDS-PAGE with the putative viral DNA ligase detected in extracts of infected cells. We demonstrate that the recombinant protein is a DNA ligase by dissociation of the protein-[32P]AMP adduct with pyrophosphate and nicked DNA. The putatively adenylylated lysine in ASFV is surrounded by two arginine residues, instead of by two hydrophobic amino acids as in the other ATP-dependent DNA ligases. This might explain the high concentration of pyrophosphate necessary to revert the DNA ligase--AMP adduct in ASFV, 10- to 100-fold higher than that required for other DNA ligases. A comparison of the amino acid sequences reported for ATP-dependent DNA ligases disclosed three new amino acid motifs around the adenylylation site of these enzymes. ASFV DNA ligase has little similarity to the other enzymes at the ends of the molecule, but conserves the amino acid motifs of the central region.
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PMID:African swine fever virus encodes a DNA ligase. 843 92

Treatment of T7 DNA ligase with a range of proteases generates two major fragments which are resistant to further digestion. These fragments, of molecular weight 16 and 26 kDa, are derived from the N- and C-termini of the protein, respectively. The presence of ATP or a non-hydrolysable analogue, ADPNP, during limited proteolysis greatly reduces the level of digestion. The N-terminal 16 kDa region of the intact T7 ligase is labelled selectively in the presence of [alpha-32P]ATP, confirming that it contains the active site lysine residue. In common with the intact enzyme, the C-terminal portion of the protein retains the ability to band shift DNA fragments of various lengths, implicating it in DNA binding. It can also inhibit ligation by the intact protein, apparently by competing for target sites on DNA. We conclude that the N-terminal region, which contains the putative active site lysine, plays a role in the transfer of AMP from the enzyme-adenylate complex to the 5'phosphate at the nick site, while the C-terminal 26 kDa fragment appears to position the enzyme at the target site on DNA.
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PMID:Characterization of proteolytic fragments of bacteriophage T7 DNA ligase. 871 Apr 97

DNA ligases play a pivotal role in DNA replication, repair and recombination. Reactions catalyzed by DNA ligases consist of three steps: adenylation of the ligase in the presence of ATP or NAD+, transferring the adenylate moiety to the 5'-phosphate of the nicked DNA substrate (deadenylation) and sealing the nick through the formation of a phosphodiester bond. Thermus thermophilus HB8 DNA ligase (Tth DNA ligase) differs from mesophilic ATP-dependent DNA ligases in three ways: (i) it is NAD+ dependent; (ii) its optimal temperature is 65 instead of 37 degrees C; (iii) it has higher fidelity than T4 DNA ligase. In order to understand the structural basis underlying the reaction mechanism of Tth DNA ligase, we performed site-directed mutagenesis studies on nine selected amino acid residues that are highly conserved in bacterial DNA ligases. Examination of these site-specific mutants revealed that: residue K118 plays an essential role in the adenylation step; residue D120 may facilitate the deadenylation step; residues G339 and C433 may be involved in formation of the phosphodiester bond. This evidence indicates that a previously identified KXDG motif for adenylation of eukaryotic DNA ligases [Tomkinson, A.E., Totty, N.F., Ginsburg, M. and Lindahl, T. (1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 88, 400-404] is also the adenylation site for NAD+-dependent bacterial DNA ligases. In a companion paper, we demonstrate that mutations at a different Lys residue, K294, may modulate the fidelity of Tth DNA ligase.
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PMID:Identification of essential residues in Thermus thermophilus DNA ligase. 876 Aug 97

The 552 amino acid vaccinia virus DNA ligase consists of three structural domains defined by partial proteolysis: (i) an amino-terminal 175 amino acid segment that is susceptible to digestion with chymotrypsin and trypsin; (ii) a protease-resistant central domain that contains the active site of nucleotidyl transfer (Lys-231); (iii) a protease-resistant carboxyl domain. The two protease-resistant domains are separated by a protease-sensitive interdomain bridge from positions 296 to 307. Adenylyltransferase and DNA ligation activities are preserved when the N-terminal 200 amino acids are deleted. However, the truncated form of vaccinia ligase has a reduced catalytic rate in strand joining and a lower affinity for DNA than does the full-sized enzyme. The 350 amino acid catalytic core of the vaccinia ligase is similar in size and protease-sensitivity to the full-length bacteriophage T7 DNA ligase.
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PMID:Domain structure of vaccinia DNA ligase. 901 21

Fpg protein (formamidopyrimidine/8-oxoguanine DNA N-glycosylase) is a DNA repair enzyme that catalyzes the removal of oxidized purines, most notably the mutagenic 7-hydro-8-oxoguanine (8oxoGua) lesion, by an N-glycosylase action. Additionally, Fpg protein catalyzes beta and delta elimination reactions subsequent to removal of the base lesions, as well as the analogous chemistry at abasic sites (AP sites). In this report, we show that of the two lysines that are conserved among the various putative prokaryotic Fpg proteins, a site specific alteration in one of them (lysine 155 changed to alanine) displays meaningful changes in substrate activities. However, lysine 155 is not required for the postulated covalent enzyme-substrate imine intermediate as demonstrated by trapping of the mutant protein-oligonucleotide complexes with cyanide or cyanoborohydride. The K155A mutant shows a decrease in activity with the 8oxoGua-substrate of approximately 50-fold under both k(cat)/Km and k(cat) conditions. This mutant also displays a similar reduction in activity with an oligonucleotide substrate possessing a single 2'-deoxy-8-oxonebularine site. In contrast, activity for a site specific 7-methylformamidopyrimidine-modified oligonucleotide is reduced approximately 3-4-fold, a much more modest decrease in activity. Interestingly, there is a concomitant increase in AP lyase activity above wild-type for the K155A mutant (1.6-fold increase in k(cat), 32-fold increase in k(cat)/Km), demonstrating retention of functional beta and delta lyase activities. Together these observations are readily accommodated by a model requiring a direct interaction of lysine 155 with the C8 oxygen of 8-oxopurines. Thus, conservation of this amino acid residue during evolution appears to be essential for specific incision of the mutagenic 8oxoGua base lesion by Fpg protein.
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PMID:Mechanism of action of base release by Escherichia coli Fpg protein: role of lysine 155 in catalysis. 912 31

Vaccinia virus DNA ligase has an intrinsic nick-sensing function. The enzyme discriminates at the substrate binding step between a DNA containing a 5' phosphate and a DNA containing a 5' hydroxyl at the nick. Further insights into nick recognition and catalysis emerge from studies of the active-site mutant K231A, which is unable to form the covalent ligase-adenylate intermediate and hence cannot activate a nicked DNA substrate via formation of the DNA-adenylate intermediate. Nonetheless, K231A does catalyze phosphodiester bond formation at a preadenylated nick. Hence, the active-site lysine of DNA ligase is not required for the strand closure step of the ligation reaction. The K231A mutant binds tightly to nicked DNA-adenylate but has low affinity for a standard DNA nick. The wild-type vaccinia virus ligase, which is predominantly ligase-adenylate, binds tightly to a DNA nick. This result suggests that occupancy of the AMP binding pocket of DNA ligase is essential for stable binding to DNA. Sequestration of an extrahelical nucleotide by DNA-bound ligase is reminiscent of the base-flipping mechanism of target-site recognition and catalysis used by other DNA modification and repair enzymes.
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PMID:Nick sensing by vaccinia virus DNA ligase requires a 5' phosphate at the nick and occupancy of the adenylate binding site on the enzyme. 937 33


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