Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:6.5.1.2 (DNA ligase)
2,749 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The mechanism of Col E 1 DNA replication was investigated in a plasmolysed cell system prepared from chloramphenicoltreated E. coli JC 411 (Col E 1). After pulse-labelling with (3)H-dTTP a considerable fraction of the newly synthesized DNA was recovered as single-stranded fragments. Upon alkali denaturation the pulse label was found in DNA chains sedimenting slower than unit length Col E 1 strands with a prominent peak at 5 S. During a chase with unlabeled precursors the label is transferred nearly completely into supercoiled Col E 1 DNA. DNA ligase appears to be required for the joining of the 5 S pieces since in the absence of NAD an accumulation of short fragments is observed.
...
PMID:Replication of colicinogenic factor E 1 DNA: evidence for a discontinuous replication mechanism. 461 25

Thermophilic and thermostable DNA ligase was purified to near homogeneity from the extract of Thermus thermophilus HB8. The purified enzyme has an isoelectric point at pH 6.6 and consists of a single polypeptide of about 79,000 in molecular weight on the bases of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis data and an equilibrium sedimentation method. The enzyme requires divalent cations, Mg2+ or Mn2+, and the optimum concentration of these ions being 5-9 X 10(-3) M and 3-6 X 10(-3) M, respectively. The enzyme also requires NAD as a cofactor. The apparent Km for NAD is 1.85 X 10(-8) M and that of (dT)10 is 1.4 X 10(-4) M. The pH optimum is 7.4-7.6 in Tris-HCl and 8.0 in collidine/HCl buffer. The joining reaction is activated by K+ and NH+4 at a concentration of 2-100 mM and inhibited by Na+ above 25 mM. The optimum temperatures of the joining of thymidylate oligomers in the presence of poly(dA) as a template are 27.5 degrees C for p(dT)s, 34.5 degrees C for p(dT)10, and 37 degrees C for p(dT)12-18 and that of cohesive-end DNA restriction fragments is 24-37 degrees C. The nick-closing activity of the enzyme was observed over a wide range of the temperature from 15 to 85 degrees C and the optimum temperature is 65-72 degrees C. The temperature dependency of ligation with HB8 DNA ligase for various substrates was found to shift to a region of 7-10 degrees C higher than that of T4 DNA ligase and the activity of HB8 DNA ligase decreased remarkably below 4 degrees C. The enzyme was stable for 1 week at 37 degrees C, its activity dropped by 50% within 2 days at 65 degrees C.
...
PMID:Thermophilic DNA ligase. Purification and properties of the enzyme from Thermus thermophilus HB8. 646 54

A cell-free extract from blue-green alga Anacystis nidulans contains enzymes which repair in vitro the transforming activity of gamma-irradiated Bacillus subtilis DNA. The level of restoration of the transforming activity depends on the protein concentration in the reaction mixture, the duration of incubation and on the dose of irradiation. The repair of gamma-induced lesions is most efficient in the presence of magnesium ions, NAD and ATP. The present data indicate that the repair of transforming DNA is performed with the participation of DNA polymerase and polynucleotide ligase which function in the cell-free extract of algae.
...
PMID:[In vitro repair of gamma-irradiated transforming Bacillus subtilis DNA by extracts of blue-green algae]. 680 46

A DNA ligase has been purified from a subnuclear soluble replication complex isolated from adenovirus type 2-infected human KB cells. DNA ligase activity could not be demonstrated using an exogenous template until the complex was dissociated, suggesting that the ligase activity may be a component of the complex. The purified enzyme was free of endonuclease, exonuclease, 5'-nucleotidase, and phosphatase activities, and had a molecular weight of 105 000, as estimated by sedimentation in a glycerol gradient. The ligase requires ATP and a divalent cation for activity. The optimum of the reaction is at pH 7.8 in 50--100 mM Tris-HCl buffer and 10--20 mM MgCl2. Monovalent salts greatly stimulate ligase activity and the optimum was found at 150 mM. The reaction is very sensitive to high temperature; maximum activity was observed at 25--30 degrees C. ATP is the sole required cofactor and NAD, dATP and GTP could not replace the requirement for ATP. The Km for ATP is 60 microM. The Km for DNA is 250 microgram/ml or 1.6 nmol of terminal phosphate/ml and thus the enzyme shows relatively weak affinity for exogenous DNA. The maximum conversion of 32P into a phosphatase-resistant form is approximately 1.3% of the total, whereas T4 ligase, under the same conditions, can convert more than 25% of phosphate into a resistant form.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of a DNA ligase from a soluble DNA replication complex. 735 2

The chromosome of Bacillus stearothermophilus was found to contain apurine regions which were repaired mainly by excisions. In the permeable cells of the thermophilic bacterium, the observed intensive degradation and resynthesis of DNA were regulated by active DNA ligase. In this case, NAD (the cofactor of ligase) sharply inhibited the ATP-dependent and independent synthesis of DNA. Apparently, DNA ligase may be involved in the regulation of degradation and resynthesis of DNA with thermal lesions in the cells of thermophilic organisms.
...
PMID:[Possibility of DNA-ligase participation in regulating the synthesis and degradation of heat-damaged DNA in permeable Bacillus stearothermophilus cells]. 744 67

The NAD or pyridine nucleotide cycle is the sequence of reactions involved in the breakdown of NAD to nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) and regeneration of NAD. This cycle is fivefold more active during aerobic growth of Salmonella typhimurium and under this condition breaks down half of the NAD pool every 90 min. DNA ligase is known to convert NAD to NMN but is only a minor contributor to the NAD cycle during aerobic growth. The dominant aerobic route of NMN formation is otherwise uncharacterized. Accumulated NMN generated by either of these routes is potentially dangerous in that it can inhibit the essential enzyme DNA ligase. The reactions which recycle NMN to NAD may serve to minimize the inhibition of ligase and other enzymes by accumulated NMN. The predominant recycling reaction in S. typhimurium appears to be NMN deamidase, which converts NMN directly to the biosynthetic intermediate nicotinic acid mononucleotide. Mutants defective in this recycling step were isolated and characterized. By starting with a ligase-deficient (lig mutant) parent strain that requires deamidase to assimilate exogenous NMN, two classes of mutants that are unable to grow on minimal NMN media were isolated. One class (pncC) maps at 83.7 min and shows only 2% of the wild-type levels of NMN deamidase. Under aerobic conditions, a lig+ allele allows a pncC mutant to grow on NMN and restores some deamidase activity. This growth ability and enzyme activity are not found in lig+ strains grown without oxygen. This suggests that the existence of a second NMN deamidase (pncL) dependent on ligase and stimulated during aerobic growth. The second class of mutants (pncD) gains a requirement for isoleucine plus valine with growth in the presence of exogenous NMN. We propose that pncD mutations reduce the activity of an ilv biosynthetic enzyme that is naturally sensitive to inhibition by NMN.
...
PMID:Isolation of NAD cycle mutants defective in nicotinamide mononucleotide deamidase in Salmonella typhimurium. 759 58

In this paper we describe the cloning and sequence analysis of a gene encoding DNA ligase (Lig; EC 6.5.1.2) from the thermophilic bacterium Rhodothermus marinus (Rm). We also describe the overexpression of the Lig-encoding genes of Rm and the thermophile, Thermus scotoductus (Ts), in Escherichia coli, and the purification and characterization of the overproduced Lig. The Rm lig gene encodes a protein of 712 amino acids (aa) with a calculated molecular mass of 79,487 Da. Comparison with published sequences of bacterial Lig revealed significant homology between the NAD(+)-utilizing Lig, and alignment of their aa sequences revealed several blocks of conserved residues. Both of the purified Lig exhibit nick-closing activity over a wide range of temperatures. Under our assay conditions the Rm Lig was active at 5-75 degrees C with apparent optimal activity above 55 degrees C. The Ts enzyme showed activity at 15-75 degrees C with optimal activity above 65 degrees C. The half-life of the Lig at 91 degrees C was estimated to be 7 min for the Rm Lig and 26 min for the Ts Lig.
...
PMID:Cloning and sequence analysis of the DNA ligase-encoding gene of Rhodothermus marinus, and overproduction, purification and characterization of two thermophilic DNA ligases. 764 20

Rejoining of DNA single-strand breaks generated by treatment of plasmids with gamma-rays, neocarzinostatin, or bleomycin was catalyzed inefficiently by human cell extracts. The reaction was strongly promoted by the addition of NAD+, which was employed for rapid and transient synthesis of poly(ADP-ribose). The DNA rejoining reaction was accompanied by DNA repair replication, apparently due to replacement of damaged residues at termini. Selective depletion of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase from cell extracts improved the repair of DNA exposed to a variety of DNA-damaging agents by removing the NAD+ dependence of the repair reaction. NAD(+)-promoted DNA repair by soluble cell extracts also occurred with alkylated DNA as substrate and was suppressed by 3-aminobenzamide. A similar stimulatory effect by NAD+ was observed for repair of ultraviolet-irradiated DNA, and this could be ascribed to the presence of pyrimidine hydrates as minor radiation-induced DNA lesions. No effect was observed on the sealing of gamma-irradiated DNA by supplementation of cell extracts with purified mammalian DNA ligase I or DNA ligase II. The results indicate that poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase interferes with base excision-repair processes because bound enzyme molecules block DNA strand interruptions. Release of bound poly-(ADP-ribose) polymerase following automodification, or physical removal of the protein from reaction mixtures, facilitates DNA repair.
...
PMID:NAD(+)-dependent repair of damaged DNA by human cell extracts. 768 Jun 46

By dideoxynucleotide sequencing of a genomic clone, we have determined the complete nucleotide sequence of the gene encoding NAD(+)-dependent DNA ligase (EC 6.5.1.2) of the thermophilic bacterium Thermus scotoductus. The gene encodes a 674-amino-acid thermostable enzyme highly similar to other bacterial DNA ligases and to parts of the deduced gene product of Escherichia coli ORF f562, 5' to the spoR gene encoding 5' guanosyl kinase.
...
PMID:Sequence of the DNA ligase-encoding gene from Thermus scotoductus and conserved motifs in DNA ligases. 782 70

Sindbis virus (SV) induces apoptosis in many vertebrate cells, but the mechanism is unknown. To gain insight into this mechanism, the nature and time course of intracellular changes related to programmed cell death were studied in SV-infected mouse neuroblastoma cells. New virus production began at 5 h after infection and reach a peak at 12 h. Hoechst 33342 staining of DNA analyzed by flow cytometry demonstrated changes in chromatin beginning 6 h after infection. These chromatin changes were cell cycle dependent, affecting cells in G0/G1 but not S phase. Apoptosis was not dependent on increases in intracellular Ca2+ and occurred more rapidly in the absence of extracellular Ca2+. Nuclear changes were accompanied by activation of the DNA repair enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), resulting in increased consumption of NAD which was apparent by 10 h after infection. SV-induced apoptosis also involved the proteolytic cleavage of PARP. This cleavage was detectable at 16 h after infection approximately the same time that DNA fragmentation was apparent by agarose gel electrophoresis. We conclude that SV-induced apoptosis of neuroblastoma cells is dependent on viral replication, is not dependent on a rise in intracellular Ca2+, and is accompanied by activation of PARP and of a protease that cleaves PARP.
...
PMID:Temporal changes in chromatin, intracellular calcium, and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase during Sindbis virus-induced apoptosis of neuroblastoma cells. 864 45


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>