Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
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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)
UvrA is the ATPase subunit of the
DNA repair enzyme
(A)BC excinuclease. The amino acid sequence of this protein has revealed, in addition to two zinc fingers, three pairs of nucleotide binding motifs each consisting of a
Walker
A and B sequence. We have conducted site-specific mutagenesis, ATPase kinetic analyses, and nucleotide binding equilibrium measurements to correlate these sequence motifs with activity. Replacement of the invariant Lys by Ala in the putative A sequences indicated that K37 and K646 but not K353 are involved in ATP hydrolysis. In contrast, substitution of the invariant Asp by Asn in the B sequences at positions D238, D513, or D857 had little effect on the in vivo activity of the protein. Nucleotide binding studies revealed a stoichiometry of 0.5 ADP/UvrA monomer while kinetic measurements on wild-type and mutant proteins showed that the active form of UvrA is a dimer with 2 catalytic sites which interact in a positive cooperative manner in the presence of ADP; mutagenesis of K37 but not of K646 attenuated this cooperativity. Loss of ATPase activity was about 75% in the K37A, 86% in the K646A mutant, and 95% in the K37A-K646A double mutant. These amino acid substitutions had only a marginal effect on the specific binding of UvrA to damaged DNA but drastically reduced its ability to deliver UvrB to the damage site. We find that the deficient UvrB loading activity of these mutant UvrA proteins results from their inability to associate with UvrB in the form of (UvrA)2(UvrB)1 complexes. We conclude that UvrA forms a dimer with two ATPase domains involving K37 and K646 and that the work performed by ATP hydrolysis is the delivery of UvrB to the damage site on DNA.
...
PMID:Site-specific mutagenesis of conserved residues within Walker A and B sequences of Escherichia coli UvrA protein. 182 50
The bacterial RecN protein is involved in the recombinational repair of DNA double-stranded breaks, and recN mutants are sensitive to DNA-damaging agents. Little is known about the biochemical function of RecN. Protein sequence analysis suggests that RecN is related to the SMC (structural maintenance of chromosomes) family of proteins, predicting globular N- and C-terminal domains connected by an extensive coil-coiled domain. The N- and C-domains contain the nucleotide-binding sequences
Walker
A and
Walker
B, respectively. We have purified the RecN protein from Deinococcus radiodurans and characterized its DNA-dependent and DNA-independent ATPase activity. The RecN protein hydrolyzes ATP with a k(cat) of 24 min(-1), and this rate is stimulated 4-fold by duplex DNA but not by single-stranded DNA. This DNA-dependent ATP turnover rate exhibits a dependence on the concentration of RecN protein, suggesting that RecN-RecN interactions are required for efficient ATP hydrolysis, and those interactions are stabilized only by duplex DNA. Finally, we show that RecN stimulates the intermolecular ligation of linear DNA molecules in the presence of
DNA ligase
. This DNA bridging activity is strikingly similar to that of the cohesin complex, an SMC family member, to which RecN is related.
...
PMID:RecN is a cohesin-like protein that stimulates intermolecular DNA interactions in vitro. 2036 8