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1.
L F Liu  C C Liu  B M Alberts 《Cell》1980,19(3):697-707
The T4 DNA topoisomerase is a recently discovered multisubunit protein that appears to have an essential role in the initiation of T4 bacteriophage DND replication. Treatment of double-stranded circular DNA with large amounts of this topoisomerase in the absence of ATP yields new DNA species which are knotted topological isomers of the double-stranded DNA circle. These knotted DNA circles, whether covalently closed or nicked, are converted to unknotted circles by treatment with trace amounts of the T4 topoisomerase in the presence of ATP. Very similar ATP-dependent enzyme activities capable of unknotting DNA are present in extracts of Drosophila eggs. Xenopus laevis eggs and mammalian tissue culture cells. The procaryotic enzyme, DNA gyrase, is also capable of unknotting DNA. We propose that these unknotting enzymes constitute a new general class of DNA topoisomerases (type II DNA topoisomerases). These enzymes must act via mechanisms that involve the concerted cleavage and rejoining of two opposite DNA strands, such that the DNA double helix is transiently broken. The passage of a second double-stranded DNA segment through this reversible double-strand break results in a variety of DNA topoisomerization reactions, including relaxation:super-coiling; knotting:unknotting and catenation:decatenation. In support of this type of mechanism, we demonstrate that the T4 DNA topoisomerase changes the linking number of a covalently closed double-stranded circular DNA molecule only by multiples of two. We discuss the possible roles of such enzymes in a variety of biological functions, along with their probable molecular mechanisms.  相似文献   

2.
A novel DNA-topoisomerase from Trypanosoma cruzi was partially purified. The enzyme, without ATP addition, catalyzes decatenation of kinetoplast DNA, catenation of circular supercoiled DNAs and unknotting of P4 phage DNA. The presence of Mg++ is required as well as a suitable concentration of KCl. In stoichiometric conditions the trypanosome enzyme induces double-strand DNA cleavage. The reaction is highly stimulated by some chemicals. Such characteristics allow to include this enzyme into the type II class of DNA-topoisomerases.  相似文献   

3.
DNA supercoiling inhibits DNA knotting   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Despite the fact that in living cells DNA molecules are long and highly crowded, they are rarely knotted. DNA knotting interferes with the normal functioning of the DNA and, therefore, molecular mechanisms evolved that maintain the knotting and catenation level below that which would be achieved if the DNA segments could pass randomly through each other. Biochemical experiments with torsionally relaxed DNA demonstrated earlier that type II DNA topoisomerases that permit inter- and intramolecular passages between segments of DNA molecules use the energy of ATP hydrolysis to select passages that lead to unknotting rather than to the formation of knots. Using numerical simulations, we identify here another mechanism by which topoisomerases can keep the knotting level low. We observe that DNA supercoiling, such as found in bacterial cells, creates a situation where intramolecular passages leading to knotting are opposed by the free-energy change connected to transitions from unknotted to knotted circular DNA molecules.  相似文献   

4.
An enzyme from Leishmania donovani that catenates monomeric pBR322 into huge catenanes has been isolated and characterized. The enzyme also decatenates kinetoplast DNA networks into covalently closed monomeric circles and relaxes supercoiled pBR322. The catenation, decatenation and relaxation reactions do not require ATP. The formation of topological isomers of unique linking numbers suggest that the enzyme is a type II DNA topoisomerase.  相似文献   

5.
Extracts from X. laevis germinal vesicles interlock duplex DNA circles to form catenanes. The catenation activity requires Mg++ and ATP. Negatively supercoiled or relaxed DNA can be used as substrates for the catenation reaction. Homology between donor and acceptor DNA is not required, since catenanes are formed between DNA molecules with unrelated sequences. In the course of the isolation of the activity responsible for the catenation reaction, we discovered a new ATP-dependent topoisomerase. The fractions containing the novel topoisomerase catenate and decatenate DNA, the ionic strength dictating which of the two opposing reactions will occur.  相似文献   

6.
Ip SC  Bregu M  Barre FX  Sherratt DJ 《The EMBO journal》2003,22(23):6399-6407
DNA replication results in interlinked (catenated) sister duplex molecules as a consequence of the intertwined helices that comprise duplex DNA. DNA topoisomerases play key roles in decatenation. We demonstrate a novel, efficient and directional decatenation process in vitro, which uses the combination of the Escherichia coli XerCD site-specific recombination system and a protein, FtsK, which facilitates simple synapsis of dif recombination sites during its translocation along DNA. We propose that the FtsK-XerCD recombination machinery, which converts chromosomal dimers to monomers, may also function in vivo in removing the final catenation links remaining upon completion of DNA replication.  相似文献   

7.
Newly replicated duplex DNA minicircles of trypanosomal kinetoplast DNA are nicked in both their monomeric and catenated topological states, whereas mature ones are covalently sealed. The possibility that nicking may play a role during kinetoplast DNA replication by affecting the topological interconversions of monomeric DNA minicircles and catenane networks was studied here in vitro using Crithidia fasciculata DNA topoisomerase. An enzyme that catalyzes the nicking of duplex DNA circles has been purified to apparent homogeneity from C. fasciculata cell extracts. The native enzyme has a sedimentation coefficient of 6.8 S and was found to be a dimer with a protomer Mr = 60,000. Nicking of kinetoplast DNA networks by the purified enzyme inhibits their decatenation by the Crithidia DNA topoisomerase but has no effect on the catenation of monomeric DNA minicircles into networks. This differential effect on decatenation versus catenation is specific to the purified nicking enzyme. Random nicking of interlocked DNA minicircles has no detectable effect on the reversibility of the topological reaction. The potential role of Crithidia nicking enzyme in the replication of kinetoplast DNA networks in trypanosomatids is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
9.
We systematically varied conditions of two-dimensional (2D) agarose gel electrophoresis to optimize separation of DNA topoisomers that differ either by the extent of knotting, the extent of catenation or the extent of supercoiling. To this aim we compared electrophoretic behavior of three different families of DNA topoisomers: (i) supercoiled DNA molecules, where supercoiling covered the range extending from covalently closed relaxed up to naturally supercoiled DNA molecules; (ii) postreplicative catenanes with catenation number increasing from 1 to ∼15, where both catenated rings were nicked; (iii) knotted but nicked DNA molecules with a naturally arising spectrum of knots. For better comparison, we studied topoisomer families where each member had the same total molecular mass. For knotted and supercoiled molecules, we analyzed dimeric plasmids whereas catenanes were composed of monomeric forms of the same plasmid. We observed that catenated, knotted and supercoiled families of topoisomers showed different reactions to changes of agarose concentration and voltage during electrophoresis. These differences permitted us to optimize conditions for their separation and shed light on physical characteristics of these different types of DNA topoisomers during electrophoresis.  相似文献   

10.
Due to the helical structure of DNA the process of DNA replication is topologically complex. Freshly replicated DNA molecules are catenated with each other and are frequently knotted. For proper functioning of DNA it is necessary to remove all of these entanglements. This is done by DNA topoisomerases that pass DNA segments through each other. However, it has been a riddle how DNA topoisomerases select the sites of their action. In highly crowded DNA in living cells random passages between contacting segments would only increase the extent of entanglement. Using molecular dynamics simulations we observed that in actively supercoiled DNA molecules the entanglements resulting from DNA knotting or catenation spontaneously approach sites of nicks and gaps in the DNA. Type I topoisomerases, that preferentially act at sites of nick and gaps, are thus naturally provided with DNA–DNA juxtapositions where a passage results in an error-free DNA unknotting or DNA decatenation.  相似文献   

11.
Energy coupling in type II topoisomerases: why do they hydrolyze ATP?   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Bates AD  Maxwell A 《Biochemistry》2007,46(27):7929-7941
Type II topoisomerases are essential enzymes in all cells. They help to solve the topological problems of DNA by passing one double helix through a transient break in another, in a reaction coupled to the hydrolysis of ATP. Members of one class of the enzymes, DNA gyrases, are configured to carry out an intramolecular reaction, removing positive supercoiling and introducing negative supercoiling into circular DNA using free energy derived from ATP hydrolysis. The nonsupercoiling class, including bacterial topoisomerase IV and eukaryotic topoisomerase II enzymes, can carry out both intra- and intermolecular reactions, and their primary role is the unlinking (decatenation) of daughter replicons before partition. In these enzymes, ATP hydrolysis is coupled to a reduction in DNA complexity (catenation, supercoiling, and knotting) below the level expected at equilibrium. This review discusses our current understanding of the mechanisms behind the coupling of the energy of ATP hydrolysis to topological changes catalyzed by both of these classes of enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
An activity from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, initially noted for its catalysis of aggregation of covalently closed double-stranded DNA rings in the presence of ATP, has been identified as a type II DNA topoisomerase and is designated yeast DNA topoisomerase II. The formation of the DNA aggregate, which has been shown to be a network of DNA rings that are topologically interlocked, requires the presence of a yeast DNA-binding protein in addition to the topoisomerase. In the absence of the binding protein, yeast DNA topoisomerase II catalyzes decatenation and unknotting of duplex DNA rings and the relaxation of negatively or positively supercoiled DNA. All reactions are ATP-dependent and require Mg(II). Similar to other eukaryotic and phage T4-type II DNA topoisomerases, the yeast enzyme does not catalyze DNA supercoiling under the assay conditions employed. The activity is not sensitive to the gyrase inhibitor nalidixic acid, oxolinic acid, or novobiocin. Coumermycin inhibits the activity, however, at a concentration as low as 5 microgram/ml.  相似文献   

13.
The contribution of DNA catenation to sister chromatid cohesion is unclear partly because it has never been observed directly within mitotic chromosomes. Differential sedimentation-velocity and gel electrophoresis reveal that sisters of 26 kb circular minichromosomes are held together by catenation as well as by cohesin. The finding that chemical crosslinking of cohesin's three subunit interfaces entraps sister DNAs of circular but not linear minichromosomes implies that cohesin functions using a topological principle. Importantly, cohesin holds both catenated and uncatenated DNAs together in this manner. In the vicinity of centromeres, catenanes are resolved by spindle forces, but linkages mediated directly by cohesin resist these forces even after complete decatenation. Crucially, persistence of catenation after S phase depends on cohesin. We conclude that by retarding Topo II-driven decatenation, cohesin mediates sister chromatid cohesion by an indirect mechanism as well as one involving entrapment of sister DNAs inside its tripartite ring.  相似文献   

14.
We report here a mammalian cell-free system that can support chromatin assembly. Effective nucleosome assembly in HeLa cell extracts occurred at 125 to 200 mM KCl or potassium glutamate. At this physiological K+ ion concentration, two types of chromatin assembly were observed. The first was interfered with by Mg2+. Other cations such as Mn2+, Ca2+, Fe3+, and spermidine also inhibited this type of nucleosome assembly. The second type of assembly occurred in the presence of Mg2+ and at least equimolar ATP. However, even in the presence of ATP, excess Mg2+ inhibited assembly and promoted catenation of DNA; these effects could be circumvented by excess ATP, GTP, EDTA, or polyglutamic acid. The critical DNA concentration for optimum assembly in both pathways suggested a stoichiometric association of histones with DNA. The spacing of nucleosomes formed by both types of assembly on linear and circular DNA was reasonably regular, but chromatin assembled in the presence of ATP and Mg2+ was more stable.  相似文献   

15.
Extracts of Drosophila embryos contain an enzymatic activity that converts circular DNAs into huge networks of catenated rings in an ATP-dependent fashion. The catenation activity is resolved into two protein components during purification. One component is a novel DNA topoisomerase that requires the presence of ATP in order to relax supercoiled DNA. We have shown that the ATP-dependent DNA topoisomerase relaxes DNA by a mechanism distinct from that of nicking-closing enzymes. The Drosophila ATP-dependent topoisomerase allows one segment of a circular DNA to pass through transient breaks in both strands at another site on the DNA circle without any relative rotation between the ends at the transient break. This mechanism can convert negative supertwists to positive twists and vice versa until a relaxed equilibrium state is reached. The formation of catenated rings is mediated by an analogous bimolecular reaction which can occur between two nonhomologous DNA circles. The catenation reaction is fully reversible: in the presence of the second protein component, circular DNA is converted quantitatively into catenated forms; in its absence, the ATP-dependent topoisomerase resolves catenated networks back into monomer circles. The Drosophila ATP-dependent topoisomerase appears to be closely related to E. coli DNA gyrase in that both use a similar mechanism to change the topology of DNA, both require ATP and both are inhibited by the antibiotic novobiocin. The presence of an enzyme that allows one DNA helix to pass freely through another could not only be useful in relaxation of topological constraints, but also may be involved in the folding and unfolding of eucaryotic chromosomes.  相似文献   

16.
We studied the formation of linked circular DNA molecules promoted by the combined action of rec 1 protein and type I topoisomerase of Ustilago maydis. When ATP was added as cofactor to reactions containing rec 1 protein, pairs of homologous circular DNA molecules became linked after addition of topoisomerase. Closed circular duplex molecules could be joined at homologous sites with circular single-stranded molecules or with other circular duplex molecules, provided that homologous single-stranded DNA fragments or RNA polymerase and nucleoside triphosphates were also added. Complexes formed were topologically linked through regions of heteroduplex DNA. When the analog adenylyl-imidodiphosphate was substituted for ATP, nonhomologous pairs of circular DNA molecules became linked.  相似文献   

17.
E. coil RecA protein and topolsomerase I, acting on superhelical DNA and circular single strands in the presence of ATP and Mg2+, topologically link single-stranded molecules to one another, and single-stranded molecules to duplex DNA. When super-helical DNA is relaxed by prior incubation with topoisomerase, it is a poor substrate for catenation. Extensive homology stimulates the catenation of circular single-stranded DNA and superhelical DNA, whereas little reaction occurs between these forms of the closely related DNAs of phages φX174 and G4, indicating that, in conjunction with topoisomerase I, RecA protein can discriminate perfect or nearly perfect homology from a high degree of relatedness. Circular single-stranded G4 DNA reacts with superhelical DNA of a chimeric phage, M13Goril, to form catenanes, at least half of which survive heating at 80°C following restriction cleavage in the M13 region, but few of which survive following restriction cleavage in the G4 region. Electron microscopic examination of catenated molecules cleaved in the M13 region reveals that in most cases the single-stranded G4 DNA is joined to the linear duplex M13(G4) DNA in the homologous G4 region. The junction frequently has the appearance of a D loop, with an extent equivalent to 100 or more bp. We conclude that a significant fraction of catenanes were hemicatenanes, in which the single-stranded circle was topologically linked, probably by multiple turns, to its complementary strand in the duplex DNA. These observations support the previous conclusion that RecA protein can pair a single strand with its complementary strand in duplex DNA in a side-by-side fashion without a free end in any of the three strands.  相似文献   

18.
In vivo catenation and decatenation of DNA.   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
We have noted previously that when circular, but not linear, DNA or chromatin was injected into Xenopus laevis oocytes, much of it went through an intermediate form in which it did not readily enter an agarose gel; after a few hours, it reappeared as monomer DNA that had acquired its full complement of nucleosomes (T. J. Miller and J. E. Mertz, Mol. Cell. Biol. 2:1581-1593, 1982). We determined, using electron microscopy and a variety of biochemical techniques, the structure of this aggregated material. Most of it was oligomeric and multimeric catenanes of the injected sample. In addition, injection of DNA that had been catenated in vitro with DNA gyrase resulted in the conversion of most of it back to monomer circles. These findings demonstrate directly that both catenation and decatenation of DNA occur in vivo under physiological conditions. Whether these reactions play a crucial role in nucleosome formation, as well as in DNA replication and recombination, remains to be determined.  相似文献   

19.
Type II topoisomerases change DNA topology by passage of one DNA duplex (the transfer, T-segment) through a transient double-stranded break in another (the gate, G-segment). Here we monitor the passage between short double-stranded DNA segments within long single-stranded DNA circles that leads to catenation of the circles. To facilitate catenation, the circles were brought into close proximity using a tethering oligonucleotide, which was removed after the reaction was complete. We varied the length and the composition of the reacting DNA segments. The minimal DNA duplex length at which we detected catenation was 50-60 bp for DNA gyrase and 40 bp for topoisomerase IV (Topo IV). For Topo IV, catenation was observed when one, but not both, of the DNA-DNA duplexes was replaced by a DNA-RNA duplex. Topo IV cleaved the DNA-DNA duplex, but not the DNA-RNA duplex implying that the DNA-RNA duplex can be a T-segment but not a G-segment.  相似文献   

20.
Escherichia coli topoisomerases I and III (Topo I and Topo III) relax negatively supercoiled DNA and also catenate/decatenate DNA molecules containing single-stranded DNA regions. Although these enzymes share the same mechanism of action and have similar structures, they participate in different cellular processes. In bulk experiments Topo I is more efficient at DNA relaxation, whereas Topo III is more efficient at catenation/decatenation, probably reflecting their differing cellular roles. To examine the differences in the mechanism of these two related type IA topoisomerases, single-molecule relaxation studies were conducted on several DNA substrates: negatively supercoiled DNA, positively supercoiled DNA with a mismatch and positively supercoiled DNA with a bulge. The experiments show differences in the way the two proteins work at the single-molecule level, while also recovering observations from the bulk experiments. Overall, Topo III relaxes DNA efficiently in fast processive runs, but with long pauses before relaxation runs, whereas Topo I relaxes DNA in slow processive runs but with short pauses before runs. The combination of these properties results in Topo I having an overall faster total relaxation rate, even though the relaxation rate during a run for Topo III is much faster.  相似文献   

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