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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)
The dam-3 mutation results in a five-fold reduction in the number of 6-methyl-adenine (6-meA) residues in the DNA of E. coli K12 or phage lambda. The DNA of phage fd appears to be devoid of 6-meA when propagated on dam-3 bacteria. The phenotypic differences between dam-3 and dam+ bacteria include: (i) increased free phage in lysogenic dam-3 cultures, (2) increased sensitivity to
methyl methanesulfonate
(
MMS
), (3) inviability of dam-3 lex-I strains, (4) lower molecular weight of DNA in dam-3 bacteria in the absence of
DNA ligase
and (5) increased rate of DNA degradation in dam-3 recA strains.
...
PMID:Pleiotropic effects of a DNA adenine methylation mutation (dam-3) in Escherichia coli K12. 16 79
Alkali-labile lesions introduced into T7 DNA by treatment with
methyl methanesulfonate
were removed and the DNA was repaired by incubation with DNA polymerase alpha and nuclease from a human lymphoblastoid line followed by the addition of
DNA ligase
. The nuclease preparation contains both apurinic endonuclease and 5'-3' exonuclease activities. Dinucleotides appear to be the first product of exonuclease action. Repair of
methyl methanesulfonate
-induced damage can occur by the insertion of only a few nucleotides per lesion as in vivo.
...
PMID:Repair of depurinated DNA in vitro by enzymes purified from human lymphoblasts. 27 43
The PHR1 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes the
DNA repair enzyme
photolyase. Transcription of PHR1 increases in response to treatment of cells with 254-nm radiation and chemical agents that damage DNA. We report here the identification of a damage-responsive DNA binding protein, termed photolyase regulatory protein (PRP), and its cognate binding site, termed the PHR1 upstream repression sequence, that together regulate induction of PHR1 transcription after DNA damage. PRP activity, monitored by electrophoretic-mobility-shift assay, was detected in cells during normal growth but disappeared within 30 min after irradiation. Copper-phenanthroline footprinting of PRP-DNA complexes revealed that PRP protects a 39-base-pair region of PHR1 5' flanking sequence beginning 40 base pairs upstream from the coding sequence. A prominent feature of the foot-printed region is a 22-base-pair palindrome. Deletion of the PHR1 upstream repression sequence increased the basal level expression of PHR1 in vivo and decreased induction after exposure of cells to UV radiation or
methyl methanesulfonate
, whereas insertion of the PRP binding site between the CYC1 upstream activation sequence and "TATA" sequence reduced basal level expression and conferred damage responsiveness upon a reporter gene. Thus these observations establish that PRP is a damage-responsive repressor of PHR1 transcription.
...
PMID:A damage-responsive DNA binding protein regulates transcription of the yeast DNA repair gene PHR1. 176 39
DNA repair synthesis induced by
methyl methanesulfonate
in preconditioned HeLa cells in which DNA replicative synthesis had been highly suppressed was inhibited by aphidicolin (an inhibitor of DNA polymerases alpha and delta) and dideoxythymidine (ddThR, an inhibitor of DNA polymerase beta). Incomplete repair patches sensitive to exonuclease III were accumulated in the presence of aphidicolin while not in the presence of ddThR. These patches were comopleted by the combined action of Klenow fragment and T4
DNA ligase
, indicating that the single-stranded gaps were formed during the repair synthesis. Moreover, ddThR had little effect on the repair synthesis in the presence of aphidicolin. Thus, the results suggest that the single-stranded gaps may be sealed first by aphidicolin-sensitive polymerase followed by ddThR-sensitive DNA polymerase on the same site of the repair patch.
...
PMID:DNA single stranded gaps formed during DNA repair synthesis induced by methyl methanesulfonate are filled by sequential action of aphidicolin- and dideoxythymidine sensitive DNA polymerases in HeLa cells. 190 89
We described previously the isolation of a Saccharomyces cerevisiae 3-methyladenine (3-MeAde) DNA glycosylase repair gene (MAG) by its expression in glycosylase-deficient Escherichia coli alkA tag mutant cells and its ability to rescue these cells from the toxic effects of alkylating agents. Here we extend this cross-species functional complementation approach to the isolation of a full-length human 3-MeAde DNA glycosylase cDNA that rescues alkA tag E. coli from killing by
methyl methanesulfonate
, and we have mapped the gene to human chromosome 16. The cloned cDNA, expressed from the pBR322 beta-lactamase promoter, contains an 894-base-pair open reading frame encoding a 32,894-Da protein able to release 3-MeAde, but not 7-methylguanine, from alkylated DNA. Surprisingly, the predicted human protein does not share significant amino acid sequence homology with the bacterial AlkA and Tag glycosylases or the yeast MAG glycosylase, but it does share extensive amino acid sequence homology with a rat 3-MeAde DNA glycosylase and significant DNA sequence homology with genes from several mammalian species. The cloning of a human 3-MeAde DNA glycosylase cDNA represents a key step in generating 3-MeAde repair-deficient cells and the determination of the in vivo role of this
DNA repair enzyme
in protecting against the toxic and carcinogenic effects of alkylating agents.
...
PMID:Cloning and characterization of a 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase cDNA from human cells whose gene maps to chromosome 16. 192 75
We purified a mouse
DNA repair enzyme
having apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease, DNA 3'-phosphatase, 3'-5'-exonuclease and DNA 3' repair diesterase activities, and designated the enzyme as APEX nuclease. A cDNA clone for the enzyme was isolated from a mouse spleen cDNA library using probes of degenerate oligonucleotides deduced from the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the enzyme. The complete nucleotide sequence of the cDNA (1.3 kilobases) was determined. Northern hybridization using this cDNA showed that the size of its mRNA is about 1.5 kilobases. The complete amino acid sequence for the enzyme predicted from the nucleotide sequence of the cDNA (APEX nuclease cDNA) indicates that the enzyme consists of 316 amino acids with a calculated molecular weight of 35,400. The predicted sequence contains the partial amino acid sequences determined by a protein sequencer from the purified enzyme. The coding sequence of APEX nuclease was cloned into pUC18 SmaI and HindIII sites in the control frame of the lacZ promoter. The construct was introduced into BW2001 (xth-11, nfo-2) strain cells of Escherichia coli. The transformed cells expressed a 36.4-kDa polypeptide (the 316 amino acid sequence of APEX nuclease headed by the N-terminal decapeptide of beta-galactosidase) and were less sensitive to
methyl methanesulfonate
than the parent cells. The fusion product showed priming activity for DNA polymerase on bleomycin-damaged DNA and acid-depurinated DNA. The deduced amino acid sequence of mouse APEX nuclease exhibits a significant homology to those of exonuclease III of E. coli and ExoA protein of Streptococcus pneumoniae and an intensive homology with that of bovine AP endonuclease 1.
...
PMID:cDNA and deduced amino acid sequence of a mouse DNA repair enzyme (APEX nuclease) with significant homology to Escherichia coli exonuclease III. 193 31
Procaryotic and eucaryotic cells possess mechanisms for arresting cell division in response to DNA damage. Eucaryotic cells arrest division in the G2 stage of the cell cycle, and various observations suggest that this arrest is necessary to ensure the completion of repair of damaged DNA before the entry of cells into mitosis. Here, we provide evidence that the Saccharomyces cerevisiae RAD9 gene, mutations of which confer sensitivity to DNA-damaging agents, is necessary for the cell cycle arrest phenomenon. Our studies with the rad9 delta mutation show that RAD9 plays a role in the cell cycle arrest of
methyl methanesulfonate
-treated cells and is absolutely required for the cell cycle arrest in the temperature-sensitive cdc9 mutant, which is defective in
DNA ligase
. At the restrictive temperature, cell cycle progression of cdc9 cells is blocked sometime after the DNA chain elongation step, whereas cdc9 rad9 delta cells do not arrest at this point and undergo one or two additional divisions. Upon transfer from the restrictive to the permissive temperature, a larger proportion of the cdc9 cells than of the cdc9 rad9 delta cells forms viable colonies, indicating that RAD9-mediated cell cycle arrest allows for proper ligation of DNA breaks before the entry of cells into mitosis. The rad9 delta mutation does not affect the frequency of spontaneous or UV-induced mutation and recombination, suggesting that RAD9 is not directly involved in mutagenic or recombinational repair processes. The RAD9 gene encodes a transcript of approximately 4.2 kilobases and a protein of 1,309 amino acids of Mr 148,412. We suggest that RAD9 may be involved in regulating the expression of genes required for the transition from G2 to mitosis.
...
PMID:Cloning and sequence analysis of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae RAD9 gene and further evidence that its product is required for cell cycle arrest induced by DNA damage. 266 61
UV-irradiation of stationary phase cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Schizosaccharomyces pombe leads to a 9-fold and 90-fold increase in transcript levels from the respective
DNA ligase
genes CDC9 and CDC17, whereas exponential cells show only 3-fold and 2-fold increases. Induction of CDC9 after
MMS
treatment and gamma-irradiation was also observed by using a CDC9-lacZ translational fusion and assaying for beta-galactosidase. Surprisingly, irradiation of S. cerevisiae induces only a 50% increase in
DNA ligase
itself, probably reflecting the extremely high in vivo stability of the enzyme. The UV-induction of ligase may be part of a "fail-safe" mechanism which, together with the enzyme stability, ensures adequate supplies of this essential enzyme.
...
PMID:Induction of yeast DNA ligase genes in exponential and stationary phase cultures in response to DNA damaging agents. 332 47
A series of mutations of Bacillus subtilis, conferring sensitivity to
methyl methanesulfonate
(
MMS
), were transferred by transformation to a suppressible his(-) stock. The introduction of certain sensitivity mutations prevented the ultraviolet- or
MMS
-induced, but not the spontaneous, reversion of his(-) to his(+). Not all sensitivity mutations led to this resistance to mutagenesis; a strain with altered deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) polymerase activity behaved almost normally with respect to its mutagen response, as did an excision-defective, ultraviolet-sensitive strain used as a control. One of the mutagen-stable strains responded to mutagenesis with nitrosomethylguanidine; another appeared stable even to this mutagen. All mutagen-stable strains had DNA polymerase and
DNA ligase
activity.
...
PMID:Mutagen stability of alkylation-sensitive mutants of Bacillus subtilis. 462 5
The Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) mutant strain EM9 was previously shown to be hypersensitive to killing by ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS) and
methyl methanesulfonate
(
MMS
), to have a 12-fold increased baseline incidence of sister-chromatid exchanges (SCE), and to be defective in rejoining DNA strand breaks after treatment with EMS,
MMS
, or X-rays. A study was performed to determine if the primary biochemical defect might be a
DNA ligase
. DNA-ligase activities were assayed and compared after separation of the multiple forms of ligase by AcA 34 gel-filtration chromatography of total cellular extracts. In EM9 cells the levels of the presumptive replicative forms,
DNA ligase
Ia (480 kd) and ligase Ib (240 kd) were about 50% and 60%, respectively, of those in the parental AA8 cells, whereas
DNA ligase
II (80 kd) was unaltered in EM9 . In a phenotypic revertant line ( 9R1 ) ligases Ia, Ib and II levels were 35%, 37% and 100%, respectively, of those in AA8 . The reduced levels of ligases Ia and Ib in EM9 and 9R1 cells are apparently not related directly to the mutant phenotype and may be attributable to the somewhat slower growth rates of these strains compared with those of AA8 . To determine if the repair defect in EM9 might reside in the ability to induce DNA-ligase activity after treatment with a DNA-damaging agent, AA8 and EM9 cells were treated with
MMS
at 30 micrograms/ml for 60 min before preparing fractions for ligase assays. Under these conditions the activities of ligases Ia and Ib decreases 70-80% in both cell lines, but ligase II increased 2.0- and 2.6-fold, respectively, in AA8 and EM9 . As a further test of defective ligase activities in EM9 , assays were performed in the presence of 0.1 M NaCl or after heating the fractions for 10 min at 50 degrees C. Although all 3 forms of ligase showed altered activity under both of these conditions, there were no significant differences between EM9 and AA8 cells. These data combined with the above results provide strong evidence that the site of the primary defect in EM9 is not in either of the DNA ligases .
...
PMID:DNA-ligase activities appear normal in the CHO mutant EM9. 673 65
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