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1.
A unique reaction for type II DNA topoisomerase is its cleavage of a pair of DNA strands in concert. We show however, that in a reaction mixture containing a molar excess of EDTA over Mg2+, or when Mg2+ is substituted by Ca2+, Mn2+, or Co2+, the enzyme cleaves only one rather than both strands. These results suggest that the divalent cations may play an important role in coordinating the two subunits of DNA topoisomerase II during the strand cleavage reaction. The single strand and the double strand cleavage reactions are similar in the following aspects: both require the addition of a protein denaturant, can be reversed by low temperature or high salt, and a topoisomerase II molecule is attached covalently to the 5' phosphoryl end of each broken DNA strand. Furthermore, the single strand cleavage sites share a similar sequence preference with double strand cleavage sites. There is, however, a strand bias for the single strand cleavage reaction. We show also that under single strand cleavage conditions, topoisomerase II still possesses a low level of double strand passage activity: it can introduce topological knots into both covalently closed or nicked DNA rings, and change the linking number of a plasmid DNA by steps of two. The implication of this observation on the sequential cleavage of the two strands of the DNA duplex during the normal DNA double strand passage process catalyzed by type II DNA topoisomerases is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
DNA topoisomerase VI from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus shibatae is the prototype of a novel family of type II DNA topoisomerases that share little sequence similarity with other type II enzymes, including bacterial and eukaryal type II DNA topoisomerases and archaeal DNA gyrases. DNA topoisomerase VI relaxes both negatively and positively supercoiled DNA in the presence of ATP and has no DNA supercoiling activity. The native enzyme is a heterotetramer composed of two subunits, A and B, with apparent molecular masses of 47 and 60 kDa, respectively. Here wereport the overexpression in Escherichia coli and the purification of each subunit. The A subunit exhibits clusters of arginines encoded by rare codons in E.coli . The expression of this protein thus requires the co-expression of the minor E.coli arginyl tRNA which reads AGG and AGA codons. The A subunit expressed in E.coli was obtained from inclusion bodies after denaturation and renaturation. The B subunit was overexpressed in E.coli and purified in soluble form. When purified B subunit was added to the renatured A subunit, ATP-dependent relaxation and decatenation activities of the hyperthermophilic DNA topoisomerase were reconstituted. The reconstituted recombinant enzyme exhibits a specific activity similar to the enzyme purified from S.shibatae . It catalyzes transient double-strand cleavage of DNA and becomes covalently attached to the ends of the cleaved DNA. This cleavage is detected only in the presence of both subunits and in the presence of ATP or its non-hydrolyzable analog AMPPNP.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
DNA intercalating agents such as 4'-(9-acridinylamino)methanesulfon-m-anisidide (m-AMSA) have previously been found to induce in mammalian cells the formation of protein-associated DNA single- and double-strand breaks. In the current work, an activity characterized by the production of DNA-protein links associated with DNA strand breaks and by stimulation by m-AMSA was isolated from L1210 cell nuclei and was shown to be due to topoisomerase II. Nuclei were extracted with 0.35 M NaCl, and the extract was fractionated by gel filtration, DNA-cellulose chromatography, and glycerol gradient centrifugation. A rapid filter binding assay was devised to monitor the fractionation procedure on the basis of DNA-protein linking activity. The active DNA-cellulose fraction contained both topoisomerase I and topoisomerase II whereas the glycerol gradient purified material contained only topoisomerase II activity. The properties of the active material were studied at both stages of purification. m-AMSA enhanced the formation of complexes between purified topoisomerase II and SV40 DNA in which the DNA sustained a single- or double-strand cut and the enzyme was covalently linked to the 5' terminus of the DNA. This action was further enhanced by ATP, as well as by nonhydrolyzable ATP analogues. m-AMSA inhibited the topoisomerization and catenation reactions of topoisomerase II, probably because of trapping of the enzyme-DNA complexes. The activity showed a dependence on the type of DNA intercalators used, analogous to what was previously observed in intact cells. m-AMSA had no effect on topoisomerase I.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Stoichiometric amounts of pure reverse gyrase, a type I topoisomerase from the archaebacterium Sulfolobus acidocaldarius were incubated at 75 degrees C with circular DNA containing a single-chain scission. After covalent closure by a thermophilic ligase and removal of bound protein molecules, negatively supercoiled DNA was produced. This finding, obtained in the absence of ATP, contrasts with the ATP-dependent positive supercoiling catalyzed by reverse gyrase and is interpreted as the result of enzyme binding to DNA at high temperature. Another consequence of reverse gyrase stoichiometric binding to DNA is the formation of a cleavable complex which results in the production of single-strand breaks in the presence of detergent. Like eubacterial type I topoisomerase (protein omega), reverse gyrase is tightly attached to the 5' termini of the cleaved DNA. In the light of these results, a comparison is tentatively made between reverse gyrase and the eubacterial type I (omega) and type II (gyrase) topoisomerases.  相似文献   

6.
Eukaryotic topoisomerase II is a dimeric nuclear enzyme essential for DNA metabolism and chromosome dynamics. Central to the activities of the enzyme is its ability to introduce transient double-stranded breaks in the DNA helix, where the two subunits of the enzyme become covalently attached to the generated 5'-ends through phosphotyrosine linkages. Here, we demonstrate that human topoisomerases IIalpha and IIbeta are able to cleave ribonucleotide-containing substrates. With suicide substrates, which are partially double-stranded molecules containing a 5'-recessed strand, cleavage of both strands was stimulated approximately 8-fold when a ribonucleotide rather than a deoxyribonucleotide was present at the scissile phosphodiester of the recessed strand. The existence of a ribonucleotide at the same position in a normal duplex substrate also enhanced topoisomerase II-mediated cleavage, although to a lesser extent. The enzyme covalently linked to the 5'-ribonucleotide in the cleavage complex efficiently performed ligation, and ligation occurred equally well to acceptor molecules terminated by either a 3'-ribo- or deoxyribonucleotide. Besides the enhanced topoisomerase II-mediated cleavage of ribonucleotide-containing substrates, cleavage of such substrates could be further stimulated by ATP or antitumor drugs. In conclusion, the observed in vitro activities of the human topoisomerase II isoforms indicate that the enzymes can operate on RNA or RNA-containing substrates and thus might possess an intrinsic RNA topoisomerase activity, as has previously been demonstrated for Escherichia coli topoisomerase III.  相似文献   

7.
Chlorella virus PBCV-1 topoisomerase II is the only functional type II enzyme known to be encoded by a virus that infects eukaryotic cells. However, it has not been established whether the protein is expressed following viral infection or whether the enzyme has any catalytic features that distinguish it from cellular type II topoisomerases. Therefore, the present study characterized the physiological expression of PBCV-1 topoisomerase II and individual reaction steps catalyzed by the enzyme. Results indicate that the topoisomerase II gene is widely distributed among Chlorella viruses and that the protein is expressed 60-90 min after viral infection of algal cells. Furthermore, the enzyme has an extremely high DNA cleavage activity that sets it apart from all known eukaryotic type II topoisomerases. Levels of DNA scission generated by the viral enzyme are approximately 30 times greater than those observed with human topoisomerase IIalpha. The high levels of cleavage are not due to inordinately tight enzyme-DNA binding or to impaired DNA religation. Thus, they most likely reflect an elevated forward rate of scission. The robust DNA cleavage activity of PBCV-1 topoisomerase II provides a unique tool for studying the catalytic functions of type II topoisomerases.  相似文献   

8.
The topoprofile of 1.7 kb plasmids from the archaebacterium Halobacterium GRB was analysed from cells growing with or without VP16 (etoposide). This drug interferes with the breakage-reunion reaction of eukaryotic DNA topoisomerase II by inhibiting the ligase activity of this enzyme. Addition of VP16 to the culture medium of Halobacterium GRB cells results in the introduction of single- and double-strand DNA breaks in part of the plasmid population, with proteins covalently associated at their 5' ends. While some of the remaining covalently closed circular DNA molecules are relaxed, VP16 treatment also gives rise to the production of positively supercoiled 1.7 kb plasmids. In contrast to adriamycin, VP16 does not intercalate into the 1.7 kb plasmid DNA in vivo. These results suggest that the VP16 target in halobacteria is a DNA topoisomerase II. Three major cleavage sites were detected on the 1.7 kb plasmid after VP16 treatment in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
Several classes of antitumor drugs are known to stabilize topoisomerase complexes in which the enzyme is covalently bound to a terminus of a DNA strand break. The DNA cleavage sites generally are different for each class of drugs. We have determined the DNA sequence locations of a large number of drug-stimulated cleavage sites of topoisomerase II, and find that the results provide a clue to the possible structure of the complexes and the origin of the drug-specific differences. Cleavage enhancements by VM-26 and amsacrine (m-AMSA), which are representative of different classes of topoisomerase II inhibitors, have strong dependence on bases directly at the sites of cleavage. The preferred bases were C at the 3' terminus for VM-26 and A at the 5' terminus for m-AMSA. Also, a region of dyad symmetry of 12 to 16 base pairs was detected about the enzyme cleavage positions. These results are consistent with those obtained with doxorubicin, although in the case of doxorubicin, cleavage requires the presence of an A at the 3' terminus of at least one the pair of breaks that constitute a double-strand cleavage (Capranico et al., Nucleic Acids Res., 1990, 18: 6611). These findings suggest that topoisomerase II inhibitors may stack with one or the other base pair flanking the enzyme cleavage sites.  相似文献   

10.
The DNA cleavage reaction of topoisomerase II is central to the catalytic activity of the enzyme and is the target for a number of important anticancer drugs. Unfortunately, efforts to characterize this fundamental reaction have been limited by the low levels of DNA breaks normally generated by the enzyme. Recently, however, a type II topoisomerase with an extraordinarily high intrinsic DNA cleavage activity was isolated from Chlorella virus PBCV-1. To further our understanding of this enzyme, the present study characterized the site-specific DNA cleavage reaction of PBCV-1 topoisomerase II. Results indicate that the viral enzyme cleaves DNA at a limited number of sites. The DNA cleavage site utilization of PBCV-1 topoisomerase II is remarkably similar to that of human topoisomerase IIalpha, but the viral enzyme cleaves these sites to a far greater extent. Finally, PBCV-1 topoisomerase II displays a modest sensitivity to anticancer drugs and DNA damage in a site-specific manner. These findings suggest that PBCV-1 topoisomerase II represents a unique model with which to dissect the DNA cleavage reaction of eukaryotic type II topoisomerases.  相似文献   

11.
Topoisomerase I cleavage complexes can be induced by a variety of DNA damages and by the anticancer drug camptothecin. We have developed a ligation-mediated PCR (LM-PCR) assay to analyze replication-mediated DNA double-strand breaks induced by topoisomerase I cleavage complexes in human colon carcinoma HT29 cells at the nucleotide level. We found that conversion of topoisomerase I cleavage complexes into replication-mediated DNA double-strand breaks was only detectable on the leading strand for DNA synthesis, which suggests an asymmetry in the way that topoisomerase I cleavage complexes are metabolized on the two arms of a replication fork. Extension by Taq DNA polymerase was not required for ligation to the LM-PCR primer, indicating that the 3' DNA ends are extended by DNA polymerase in vivo closely to the 5' ends of the topoisomerase I cleavage complexes. These findings suggest that the replication-mediated DNA double-strand breaks generated at topoisomerase I cleavage sites are produced by replication runoff. We also found that the 5' ends of these DNA double-strand breaks are phosphorylated in vivo, which suggests that a DNA 5' kinase activity acts on the double-strand ends generated by replication runoff. The replication-mediated DNA double-strand breaks were rapidly reversible after cessation of the topoisomerase I cleavage complexes, suggesting the existence of efficient repair pathways for removal of topoisomerase I-DNA covalent adducts in ribosomal DNA.  相似文献   

12.
Topoisomerase II cleavage in chromatin   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
We have examined the effect of the anti-tumor drug VM-26 on purified Drosophila topoisomerase II, and used this drug to map (putative) topoisomerase II cleavage sites in chromatin. These studies indicate that VM-26 interferes with the strand breakage-rejoining catalytic cycle. VM-26 appears to stabilize the topoisomerase-II-cleavable complex and markedly enhances the formation of double-strand breaks in naked DNA. VM-26 also stimulates the formation of double-strand breaks in isolated Drosophila nuclei. Analysis of the parameters of the VM-26-stimulated cleavage reaction in nuclei strongly suggests that the double-strand scissions are generated by endogenous topoisomerase II. Finally, we have examined the distribution of (putative) cleavage sites for endogenous topoisomerase II in the chromatin of the 87A7 heat shock locus and the histone repeat unit. We have found that there are prominent VM-26-induced cleavage products from the 5' ends of the 87A7, the two heat shock protein 70 genes, and in the intergenic spacer separating these genes. Moreover, the pattern of VM-26-induced cleavage products is altered in nuclei prepared from heat-shocked cells. In the case of the histone repeat unit, only minor VM-26-induced cleavage products are observed in nuclei (in spite of the fact that experiments on naked DNA indicate that the histone repeat contains many major cleavage sites for purified topoisomerase II). These findings suggest that the nucleoprotein organization of different DNA segments may be important in determining whether specific sites are accessible to endogenous topoisomerase II in nuclei.  相似文献   

13.
The nucleotide preferences of calf thymus topoisomerases I and II for recognition of supercoiled DNA have been assessed by the relaxation and cleavage of DNA containing base-specific phosphorothioate substitutions in one strand. The type I enzyme is inhibited to varying degrees by all modified DNAs, but most effectively (by approximately 60%) if deoxyguanosine 5'-O-(1-thiomonophosphate) (dGMP alpha S) is incorporated into negatively supercoiled DNA. A DNA in which all internucleotide linkages of one strand are phosphorothionate is relaxed, most probably via the unsubstituted strand. The type II enzyme is inhibited when deoxyadenosine 5'-O-(1-thiomonophosphate) (dAMP alpha S) or deoxyribosylthymine 5'-O-(1-thiomonophosphate) is incorporated into the DNA substrate, and the course of the relaxation reaction changes from a distributive mode to a predominantly processive mode. A fully substituted DNA is very poorly relaxed by the type II enzyme, illustrating the strict commitment of the enzyme to relaxation via double-strand cleavage. The sense of supercoiling does not affect the inhibition profile of either enzyme. DNA strand breaks introduced by type II topoisomerase in a normal control DNA or deoxycytidine 5'-O-(1-thiomonophosphate)-substituted DNA on treatment with sodium dodecyl sulfate at low ionic strength are prevented by pretreatment with 0.2 M NaCl. In contrast, breaks in DNA having either dAMP alpha S or all four phosphorothioate nucleotides incorporated in one strand are prevented only with higher NaCl concentrations. Thus indicating activity at the phosphorothioate linkage 5' to dA but not 5' to dC. We conclude that topoisomerase II activity occurs preferentially at sites possessing dAMP or dTMP, and that dGMP is involved in DNA recognition by topoisomerase I.  相似文献   

14.
Eukaryotic DNA topoisomerase I introduces transient single-stranded breaks on double-stranded DNA and spontaneously breaks down single-stranded DNA. The cleavage sites on both single and double-stranded SV40 DNA have been determined by DNA sequencing. Consistent with other reports, the eukaryotic enzymes, in contrast to prokaryotic type I topoisomerases, links to the 3'-end of the cleaved DNA and generates a free 5'-hydroxyl end on the other half of the broken DNA strand. Both human and calf enzymes cleave SV40 DNA at the identical and specific sites. From 827 nucleotides sequenced, 68 cleavage sites were mapped. The majority of the cleavage sites were present on both double and single-stranded DNA at exactly the same nucleotide positions, suggesting that the DNA sequence is essential for enzyme recognition. By analyzing all the cleavage sequences, certain nucleotides are found to be less favored at the cleavage sites. There is a high probability to exclude G from positions -4, -2, -1 and +1, T from position -3, and A from position -1. These five positions (-4 to +1 oriented in the 5' to 3' direction) around the cleavage sites must interact intimately with topo I and thus are essential for enzyme recognition. One topo I cleavage site which shows atypical cleavage sequence maps in the middle of a palindromic sequence near the origin of SV40 DNA replication. It occurs only on single-stranded SV40 DNA, suggesting that the DNA hairpin can alter the cleavage specificity. The strongest cleavage site maps near the origin of SV40 DNA replication at nucleotide 31-32 and has a pentanucleotide sequence of 5'-TGACT-3'.  相似文献   

15.
In order to study the double-strand DNA passage reaction of eukaryotic type II topoisomerases, a quantitative assay to monitor the enzymic conversion of supercoiled circular DNA to relaxed circular DNA was developed. Under conditions of maximal activity, relaxation catalyzed by the Drosophila melanogaster topoisomerase II was processive and the energy of activation was 14.3 kcal . mol-1. Removal of supercoils was accompanied by the hydrolysis of either ATP or dATP to inorganic phosphate and the corresponding nucleoside diphosphate. Apparent Km values were 200 microM for pBR322 plasmid DNA, 140 microM for SV40 viral DNA, 280 microM for ATP, and 630 microM for dATP. The turnover number for the Drosophila enzyme was at least 200 supercoils of DNA relaxed/min/molecule of topoisomerase II. The enzyme interacts preferentially with negatively supercoiled DNA over relaxed molecules, is capable of removing positive superhelical twists, and was found to be strongly inhibited by single-stranded DNA. Kinetic and inhibition studies indicated that the beta and gamma phosphate groups, the 2'-OH of the ribose sugar, and the C6-NH2 of the adenine ring are important for the interaction of ATP with the enzyme. While the binding of ATP to Drosophila topoisomerase II was sufficient to induce a DNA strand passage event, hydrolysis was required for enzyme turnover. The ATPase activity of the topoisomerase was stimulated 17-fold by the presence of negatively supercoiled DNA and approximately 4 molecules of ATP were hydrolyzed/supercoil removed. Finally, a kinetic model describing the switch from a processive to a distributive relaxation reaction is presented.  相似文献   

16.
The strand specificity of topoisomerase II mediated DNA cleavage was analyzed at the nucleotide level by characterizing the enzyme's interaction with a strong DNA recognition site. This site was isolated from the promoter region of the extrachromosomal rRNA genes of Tetrahymena thermophila and was recognized by type II topoisomerases from a variety of phylogenetically diverse eukaryotic organisms, including Drosophila, Tetrahymena, and calf thymus. When incubated with this site, topoisomerase II was found to introduce single-stranded breaks (i.e., nicks) in addition to double-stranded breaks in the nucleic acid backbone. Although the nucleotide position of cleavage on both the noncoding and coding strands of the rDNA remained unchanged, the relative ratios of single- and double-stranded DNA breaks could be varied by altering reaction conditions. Under all conditions which promoted topoisomerase II mediated DNA nicking, the enzyme displayed a 3-10-fold specificity for cleavage at the noncoding strand of its recognition site. To determine whether this specificity of topoisomerase II was due to a faster forward rate of cleavage of the noncoding strand or a slower rate of its religation, a DNA religation assay was performed. Results indicated that both the noncoding and coding strands were religated by the enzyme at approximately the same rate. Therefore, the DNA strand preference of topoisomerase II appears to be embodied in the enzyme's forward cleavage reaction.  相似文献   

17.
HMG17 protein is shown to greatly facilitate the catention of double-stranded DNA rings catalyzed by DNA topoisomerases. Even at low DNA concentrations such that catenanes are not observable in the absence of HMG17, the addition of the protein promotes the catenation of greater than 95% of the input DNA into networks that do not enter the gel upon electrophoresis. Electron microscopy and restriction enzyme cleavage experiments indicate that these networks are large structures containing many catenated DNA rings. The HMG17-promoted DNA network formation has been observed with calf thymus type II DNA topoisomerase and the type I topoisomerases of Escherichia coli, Micrococcus luteus, and calf thymus.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The ability of a eukaryotic DNA topoisomerase I to catalyze DNA rearrangements was examined in vitro using defined substrates and purified enzyme. Site-specific DNA strand cleavage by vaccinia topoisomerase I across from a nick generated double-strand breaks that could be religated to a heterologous blunt-ended duplex DNA regardless of the sequence of the acceptor molecule. Topoisomerase bound covalently at internal positions could religate the bound strand to an incoming acceptor provided that DNA molecule had sequence homology to the region 3' of the scissile bond. These end-joining reactions suggest two potential modes of topoisomerase-mediated recombination that differ in their requirements for DNA homology.  相似文献   

20.
Type II DNA topoisomerases are ATP-dependent enzymes that catalyze alterations in DNA topology. These enzymes are important targets of a variety of anti-bacterial and anti-cancer agents. We identified a mutation in human topoisomerase II alpha, changing aspartic acid 48 to asparagine, that has the unique property of failing to transform yeast cells deficient in recombinational repair. In repair-proficient yeast strains, the Asp-48 --> Asn mutant can be expressed and complements a temperature-sensitive top2 mutation. Purified Asp-48 --> Asn Top2alpha has relaxation and decatenation activity similar to the wild type enzyme, but the purified protein exhibits several biochemical alterations compared with the wild type enzyme. The mutant enzyme binds both covalently closed and linear DNA with greater avidity than the wild type enzyme. hTop2alpha(Asp-48 --> Asn) also exhibited elevated levels of drug-independent cleavage compared with the wild type enzyme. The enzyme did not show altered sensitivity to bisdioxopiperazines nor did it form stable closed clamps in the absence of ATP, although the enzyme did form elevated levels of closed clamps in the presence of a non-hydrolyzable ATP analog compared with the wild type enzyme. We suggest that the lethality exhibited by the mutant is likely because of its enhanced drug-independent cleavage, and we propose that alterations in the ATP binding domain of the enzyme are capable of altering the interactions of the enzyme with DNA. This mutant enzyme also serves as a new model for understanding the action of drugs targeting topoisomerase II.  相似文献   

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