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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
630,302 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Oxidative damage to DNA has been documented in cells isolated from subjects with diabetes. Herein, we evaluate the mechanism(s) that regulate the expression of the DNA repair enzyme XPD. CHO cells transfected with the human insulin receptor (CHO/HIRc) showed a threefold increase in the level of XPD mRNA when compared to control CHO/neo cells (P < 0.01). The addition of insulin to serum-starved cells led to an increase in XPD mRNA levels in both CHO/neo and CHO/HIRc cells, in a time and dose dependent fashion. Insulin acted primarily by inducing XPD transcription. Moreover, inhibition of protein synthesis by cyclohexamide induced a marked degradation of XPD mRNA levels in insulin treated cells. Site-directed mutagenesis of the tyrosine-kinase domain of the insulin receptor abolished the increase in XPD mRNA resulting from the transfection with wild type insulin receptors (P < 0.001). Western blot analysis of cell extracts from CHO/neo and CHO/HIRc cells revealed an increase in XPD counterpart protein was also induced by transfecting cells with the human insulin receptor. Evaluation of DNA damage by means of internucleosomal fragmentation showed a dramatic decrease in DNA fragmentation in CHO cells transfected with wild-type insulin receptor compared to control CHO/neo cells. DNA fragmentation was further decreased by the addition of insulin in the culture medium. In summary, our data indicates that activation of the insulin receptor plays an important role in the cellular response leading to repair of damaged DNA.
Mol Cell Endocrinol 1999 Nov 25
PMID:Signalling via receptor tyrosine kinase modulates the expression of the DNA repair enzyme XPD in cultured cells. 1061 8

Phage T7 DNA ligase seals nicked DNA substrates and is a representative member of the ATP-dependent class of DNA ligases. Although the catalytic mechanism of DNA ligases has been delineated, little is known about the nature of nick recognition by these enzymes. Here, we show that T7 ligase discriminates, at the nick-binding step, between nicks containing either a 5'-phosphate or a 5'-OH. T7 ligase binds preferentially to phosphorylated nicks and catalyses the sealing reaction. We also show using DNA footprinting studies, that T7 ligase binds asymmetrically to nicks as a monomer, with the protein interface covering between 12 and 14 bp of DNA. Based on molecular modelling studies we propose a structural model of the ligase-DNA complex consistent with these and other data. Using photo-crosslinking and site-directed mutagenesis we have identified two residues, K238 and K240, critical for the transadenylation and nick-sealing reactions. Sequence conservation and structural analysis supports the premise that these two lysine residues are critical for both nucleotide binding and DNA nick recognition. The implications of these results on the ligation mechanism are discussed.
J Mol Biol 2000 Feb 11
PMID:Nick recognition by DNA ligases. 1065 17

We purified to near homogeneity a previously identified 100 kDa mammalian homologous DNA pairing protein. The purified 100 kDa protein also catalyzed high levels of cell-free homologous DNA recombination activity. This ATP-dependent activity was capable of forming conservative recombinant products between two circular, double-stranded DNA molecules. We were unable to detect any DNA polymerase, DNA ligase, or 5' or 3' exonuclease activity associated with this purified material. The purified 100 kDa protein bound silver nitrate as well as a monoclonal antibody specific for nucleolin. A recombinant protein comprised of the Escherichia coli maltos-ebinding protein fused to the carboxyl-terminal two-thirds of human nucleolin possessed homologous DNA pairing activity. These data indicate that the 100 kDa homologous DNA pairing protein is nucleolin. The observation that nucleolin can carry out homologous DNA strand pairing in vitro raises the prospect that it may function similarly in vivo.
Somat Cell Mol Genet 1998 Sep
PMID:Nucleolin promotes homologous DNA pairing in vitro. 1069 34

Gene amplification in eukaryotes plays an important role in drug resistance, tumorigenesis, and evolution. The Schizosaccharomyces pombe sod2 gene provides a useful model system to analyze this process. sod2 is near the telomere of chromosome I and encodes a plasma membrane Na(+)(Li(+))/H(+) antiporter. When sod2 is amplified, S. pombe survives otherwise lethal concentrations of LiCl, and >90% of the amplified sod2 genes are found in 180- and 225-kilobase (kb) linear amplicons. The sequence of the novel joint of the 180-kb amplicon indicates that it is formed by recombination between homologous regions near the telomeres of the long arm of chromosome I and the short arm of chromosome II. The 225-kb amplicon, isolated three times more frequently than the 180-kb amplicon, is a palindrome derived from a region near the telomere of chromosome I. The center of symmetry of this palindrome contains an inverted repeat consisting of two identical 134-base pair sequences separated by a 290-base pair spacer. LiCl-resistant mutants arise 200-600 times more frequently in strains deficient for topoisomerases or DNA ligase activity than in wild-type strains, but the mutant cells contain the same amplicons. These data suggest that amplicon formation may begin with DNA lesions such as breaks. In the case of the 225-kb amplicon, the breaks may lead to a hairpin structure, which is then replicated to form a double-stranded linear amplicon, or to a cruciform structure, which is then resolved to yield the same amplicon.
Mol Biol Cell 2000 Mar
PMID:Mechanisms of sod2 gene amplification in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. 1071 6

Agrobacterium tumefaciens, a gram-negative soil bacterium, transfers DNA to many plant species. In the plant cell, the transferred DNA (T-DNA) is integrated into the genome. An in vitro ligation-integration assay has been designed to investigate the mechanism of T-DNA ligation and the factors involved in this process. The VirD2 protein, which is produced in Agrobacterium and is covalently attached to T-DNA, did not, under our assay conditions, ligate T-DNA to a model target sequence in vitro. We tested whether plant extracts could ligate T-DNA to target oligonucleotides in our test system. The in vitro ligation-integration reaction did indeed take place in the presence of plant extracts. This reaction was inhibited by dTTP, indicating involvement of a plant DNA ligase. We found that prokaryotic DNA ligases could substitute for plant extracts in this reaction. Ligation of the VirD2-bound oligonucleotide to the target sequence mediated by T4 DNA ligase was less efficient than ligation of a free oligonucleotide to the target. T-DNA ligation mediated by a plant enzyme(s) or T4 DNA ligase requires ATP.
Mol Cell Biol 2000 Sep
PMID:Plant enzymes but not Agrobacterium VirD2 mediate T-DNA ligation in vitro. 1093 8

Continuous administration in the drinking water of hepatocarcinogen N-nitrosodiethylamine (NDEA) to male rats (200 mg/L) for 60 days resulted in DNA damage in the form of single strand breaks. The damage, which is measured as a shift in the sedimentation of DNA in alkaline sucrose density gradients, was found to be maximum at the fourth week of treatment, and the sedimentation pattern of DNA was found to return to near normal size by the seventh week of NDEA treatment. Simultaneously, there were perturbations in the nuclear enzymes involved in DNA replication and repair. Activities of DNA polymerase beta, DNA ligase, and topoisomerase were found to increase in as early as the first week of NDEA treatment and reached the maximum at the fourth week, and thereafter declined to normal level by the eighth week of treatment. Concomitantly, the activities of DNA polymerase alpha, DNA primase, and RNA polymerase which were unaltered in the initial period of carcinogen treatment recorded a marked increase after sixth week of NDEA treatment. Results suggest that administration of NDEA inflicts DNA damage, which is manifested as increase in DNA repair enzymes in the initial period and activated DNA replicative enzymes at a later period, indicating the active proliferation of transformed cells.
J Biochem Mol Toxicol 2000
PMID:Damage to DNA and activity of nuclear DNA repair and replicative enzymes following N-nitrosodiethylamine treatment to rats. 1096 99

7,8-Dihydro-8-oxoguanine (oh8Gua) endonuclease is a DNA repair enzyme in Escherichia coli to remove oh8Gua, a promutagenic DNA adduct. Due to the unique mode of enzyme action and substrate specificity, this DNA repair enzyme has been suggested to be identical to 2,6-diamino-4-hydroxyformamidopyrimidine (Fapy)-DNA glycosylase (Fpg). However, oh8Gua endonuclease had not been definitely identified because it had not been homogeneously purified. In this study, we attempted to purify and identify the enzyme. Through several purification procedures, we obtained two proteins (32 kD and 29 kD). The larger protein co-migrated with Fpg in 12% SDS-PAGE gel. Sequences of N-terminal amino acids of these two proteins were identical to that of Fpg; the smaller one is a degraded product of oh8Gua endonuclease during purification steps. These results indicate that oh8Gua endonuclease is identical to Fpg, implying that oh8Gua in oxidatively damaged DNA rather than Fapy is more physiologically relevant substrate for Fpg.
Exp Mol Med 2000 Sep 30
PMID:Identification of Escherichia coli 8-oxoguanine endonuclease. 1104 47

Chlorella virus DNA ligase is the smallest eukaryotic ATP-dependent ligase known; it has an intrinsic nick-sensing function and suffices for yeast cell growth. Here, we report the 2.0 A crystal structure of the covalent ligase-AMP reaction intermediate. The conformation of the adenosine nucleoside and contacts between the enzyme and the ribose sugar have undergone a significant change compared to complexes of T7 ligase with ATP or mRNA capping enzyme with GTP. The conformational switch allows the 3' OH of AMP to coordinate directly the 5' PO(4) of the nick. The structure explains why nick sensing is restricted to adenylated ligase and why the 5' phosphate is required for DNA binding. We identify a metal binding site on ligase-adenylate and propose a mechanism of nick recognition and catalysis supported by mutational data.
Mol Cell 2000 Nov
PMID:Crystal structure of eukaryotic DNA ligase-adenylate illuminates the mechanism of nick sensing and strand joining. 1110 56

The major human abasic endonuclease, Ape1, is an essential DNA repair enzyme that initiates the removal of apurinic/apyrimidinic sites from DNA, excises 3' replication-blocking moieties, and modulates the DNA binding activity of several transcriptional regulators. We have determined the X-ray structure of the full-length human Ape1 enzyme in two new crystal forms, one at neutral and one at acidic pH. The new structures are generally similar to the previously determined structure of a truncated Ape1 protein, but differ in the conformation of several loop regions and in spans of residues with weak electron density. While only one active-site metal ion is present in the structure determined at low pH, the structure determined from a crystal grown at the pH optimum of Ape1 nuclease activity, pH 7.5, has two metal ions bound 5 A apart in the active site. Enzyme kinetic data indicate that at least two metal-binding sites are functionally important, since Ca(2+) exhibits complex stimulatory and inhibitory effects on the Mg(2+)-dependent catalysis of Ape1, even though Ca(2+) itself does not serve as a cofactor. In conjunction, the structural and kinetic data suggest that Ape1 catalyzes hydrolysis of the DNA backbone through a two metal ion-mediated mechanism.
J Mol Biol 2001 Apr 06
PMID:Two divalent metal ions in the active site of a new crystal form of human apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease, Ape1: implications for the catalytic mechanism. 1128 53

Replication of kinetoplast DNA minicircles in Crithidia fasciculata occurs by a unidirectional mechanism involving continuous synthesis of one strand (L strand) and discontinuous synthesis of the complementary strand (H strand). L-strands are initiated by RNA priming at alternate origins (A and B) resulting in daughter molecules with a single nick or gap in the L strand at either ori A or ori B. Some of the gapped molecules contain ribonucleotides at the 5' side of the gap. We have investigated the ability of recombinant forms of kinetoplast replication proteins, DNA polymerase beta and structure specific endonuclease 1, to repair gaps in a model minicircle substrate. Structure specific endonuclease 1 was shown to efficiently remove all ribonucleotides from the 5' side of the model substrate by stepwise cleavage of the RNA primer. Polymerase beta was then able to extend the 3' terminus of the gap to yield a nicked molecule capable of covalent joining by a DNA ligase. These results demonstrate that the nuclease and polymerase enzymes present at antipodal protein complexes flanking the kinetoplast disk are capable of complete RNA primer removal and subsequent gap filling of newly synthesized minicircle L strands.
Mol Biochem Parasitol 2001 Jun
PMID:RNA primer removal and gap filling on a model minicircle replication intermediate. 1137 40


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