Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
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)
We have developed a method to quantify (6-4) photoproducts in genes and other specific sequences within the genome. This approach utilizes the following two enzymes from Escherichia coli: ABC excinuclease, a versatile
DNA repair enzyme
which recognizes many types of lesions in DNA, and DNA photolyase, which reverts pyrimidine dimers. DNA is isolated from UV irradiated Chinese hamster ovary cells and digested with a restriction enzyme. Pyrimidine dimers, the major photoproduct produced at biological UV fluences, are then completely repaired by treatment with DNA photolyase. The photoreactivated DNA is treated with ABC excinuclease, electrophoresed in an alkaline agarose gel, transferred to a support membrane and probed for specific genomic sequences.
Net
incisions produced by ABC excinuclease following photoreactivation are largely due to the presence of (6-4) photoproducts. These adducts are quantitated by measuring the reduction of intensity of the full length fragments on the autoradiogram. Using this approach we have shown that (6-4) photoproducts are produced at equal frequency in the dihydrofolate reductase coding sequence and in its 3'-flanking, noncoding sequences and that the formation of (6-4) photoproducts is linear in both sequences up to a UV dose of 60 J/m2. The repair of (6-4) photoproducts in these DNA sequences was measured after a dose of 40 J/m2 over 4-, 8-, and 24-h time periods. The (6-4) photoproducts are repaired more efficiently than pyrimidine dimers in both sequences and there is preferential repair of (6-4) photoproducts in the dihydrofolate reductase gene compared with the downstream, noncoding sequences.
...
PMID:Preferential DNA repair of (6-4) photoproducts in the dihydrofolate reductase gene of Chinese hamster ovary cells. 280 61
Conversion of phi X174 viral, single-stranded circular DNA to the duplex replicative form (RF), previously observed with partially purified enzymes, has now been demonstrated with the participation of 12 nearly pure Escherichia coli proteins containing approximately 30 polypeptides. To complete the synthesis of a full length complementary strand, E. coli DNA polymerase I was needed to fill the short gap left by DNA polymerase III holoenzyme, and to remove the primer and replace it with DNA. Production of supercoiled RF required the further actions of E. coli
DNA ligase
and gyrase.
Net
synthesis of viral circles was obtained by coupling the formation of RF supercoils to the actions of the phi X174-encoded gene A protein and E. coli rep protein. Viral DNA circles produced from enzymatically synthesized supercoiled RF, serving as template-substrate, were indistinguishable from those produced from RF isolated from infected cells; synthetic RF and the viral circles generated from it by replication were as biologically active in transfection of spheroplasts as the forms obtained from infected cells and virions. The conversion of single-stranded circular DNA to RF is suggested here as a model for discontinuous synthesis of the lagging strand of the E. coli chromosome. The primosome, a complex of some of the replication proteins responsible for initiations of DNA chains, will be described elsewhere. Multiplication of RF supercoils, described in the succeeding paper, proceeds by a rolling-circle mechanism in which the synthesis of viral strands may have analogies to the continuous synthesis of the leading strand of the E. coli chromosome.
...
PMID:Replication of phi X174 dna with purified enzymes. I. Conversion of viral DNA to a supercoiled, biologically active duplex. 626 23