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Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) inhibits DNA polymerase activity of the intact multifunctional DNA polymerase alpha complex by binding at either of two sites which can be distinguished on the basis of differential substrate protection. One site (PLP site 1) corresponds to an important nucleotide-binding site which is distinct from the DNA polymerase active site and which appears to correspond to the DNA primase active site while the second site (PLP site 2) corresponds to the dNTP binding domain of the DNA polymerase active site. A method for the enzymatic synthesis of high specific activity [32P]PLP is described and this labeled PLP was used to identify the binding sites described above. PLP inhibition of DNA polymerase alpha activity was shown to involve the binding of only a few (one to two) molecules of PLP/molecule of DNA polymerase alpha, and this label is primarily found on the 148- and 46-kDa subunits although the 63-, 58-, and 49-kDa subunits are labeled to a lesser extent. Labeling of the 46-kDa subunit by [32P]PLP is the only labeling on the enzyme which is blocked or even diminished in the presence of nucleotide alone, and, therefore, this 46-kDa subunit contains PLP site 1. Labeling of the 148-kDa subunit is enhanced in the presence of template-primer, suggesting that this subunit undergoes a conformational change upon binding template-primer. Furthermore, labeling of the 148-kDa subunit is the only labeling on the enzyme which can be specifically blocked only by the binding of both template-primer and the correct dNTP in a stable ternary complex. Therefore, the 148-kDa subunit contains PLP site 2, which corresponds to the dNTP binding domain of the DNA polymerase active site.  相似文献   

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Rate-limiting steps in the DNA polymerase I reaction pathway   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The initial rates of incorporation of dTTP and thymidine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (dTTP alpha S) into poly(dA) X oligo(dT) during template-directed synthesis by the large fragment of DNA polymerase I have been measured by using a rapid-quench technique. The rates were initially equal, indicating a nonrate-limiting chemical step. However, the rate of thionucleotide incorporation steadily diminished to 10% of its initial value as the number of consecutive dTMP alpha S residues in the primer strand increased. This anomalous behavior can be attributed to the helix instability inherent in phosphorothioate-containing duplexes. Positional isotope exchange experiments employing the labeled substrate [alpha-18O2]dATP have revealed negligible alpha, beta-bridging----beta-nonbridging isotope exchange in template-directed reactions of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I (Pol I) both in the presence and in the absence of added inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi), suggesting rapid PPi release following the chemical step. These observations are consistent with a rate-limiting step that is tentatively assigned to a conformational change of the E X DNA X dNTP complex immediately preceding the chemical step. In addition, the substrate analogue (Sp)-dATP alpha S has been employed to examine the mechanism of the PPi exchange reaction catalyzed by Pol I. The net retention of configuration at the alpha-P is interpreted in terms of two consecutive inversion reactions, namely, 3'-hydroxyl attack, followed by PPi attack on the newly formed primer terminus. Kinetic analysis has revealed that while alpha-phosphorothioate substitution has no effect upon the initial rate of polymerization, it does attenuate the PPi exchange reaction by a factor of 15-18 fold.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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A novel factor that stimulates DNA polymerase alpha activity on poly(dA) X oligo(dT) has been identified and partially purified from mouse FM3A cells. The assay system for the factor contained poly(ethylene glycol) 6000. The activities of DNA polymerase alpha on poly(dA) X oligo(dT) in the presence and absence of the stimulating factor were increased greatly by the addition of poly(ethylene glycol). Stimulation by the factor was observed at all the primer to template ratios tested from 0.01 to 0.3. The highest activity was observed at the ratio of 0.05, corresponding to about 3.3 primers on one template in the presence of the factor. The concentration of DNA polymerase alpha used in the assay affected the stimulation by the factor, and the stimulation became more prominent at concentrations of the enzyme lower than 0.04 unit per assay. The stimulating factor lowered the Km value of DNA polymerase alpha for the template-primer, though they had no effect on the Km value for dTTP substrate. The results of product analysis suggested that the stimulation by the factor is mainly due to the increase in the initiation frequency of DNA synthesis from the primers. The stimulating factor specifically stimulated DNA polymerase alpha but not DNA polymerases beta and gamma. Furthermore, the factor formed a complex with DNA polymerase alpha under a certain condition.  相似文献   

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ATP (or dATP) stimulates DNA synthesis by DNA polymerase III holoenzyme (holoenzyme) on the synthetic template-primer poly(dA).oligo(dT)12. Nonhydrolyzable ATP analogs and other natural (deoxy)ribonucleoside triphosphates are inactive. Because the nonhydrolyzable analog 5'-deoxyadenylylimidodiphosphate is efficiently used by holoenzyme for incorporation, the ATP (or dATP) requirement for activation of replication of natural DNA could be determined. Analysis of lag times in DNA synthesis and isolation of intermediates showed that ATP (or dATP) is required in the formation of an initiation complex between holoenzyme and primed DNA template, but not for subsequent DNA synthesis. ATP is bound to holoenzyme in the absence of DNA with a KD value of 0.8 microM; 2 to 3 molecules of ATP per molecule of holoenzyme are bound without apparent cooperativity. Binding of ATP to DNA polymerase III (holoenzyme minus beta subunit) is weak (KD greater than 5 microM) and binding to the beta subunit alone is not observed. However, holoenzyme reconstituted by mixing DNA polymerase III with beta subunit binds ATP as tightly (KD = 0.6 microM) as the original holoenzyme.  相似文献   

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DNA polymerase alpha from Drosophila melanogaster embryos is a multisubunit enzyme complex which can exhibit DNA polymerase, 3'----5' exonuclease, and DNA primase activities. Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) inhibition of DNA polymerase activity in this complex is time dependent and exhibits saturation kinetics. Inhibition can be reversed by incubation with an excess of a primary amine unless the PLP-enzyme conjugate is first reduced with NaBH4. These results indicate that PLP inhibition occurs via imine formation at a specific site(s) on the enzyme. Results from substrate protection experiments are most consistent with inhibition of DNA polymerase activity by PLP binding to either one of two sites. One site (PLP site 1) can be protected from PLP inhibition by any nucleoside triphosphate in the absence or presence of template-primer, suggesting that PLP site 1 defines a nucleotide-binding site which is important for DNA polymerase activity but which is distinct from the DNA polymerase active site. PLP also inhibits DNA primase activity of the DNA polymerase alpha complex, and primase activity can be protected from PLP inhibition by nucleotide alone, arguing that PLP site 1 lies within the DNA primase active site. The second inhibitory PLP-binding site (PLP site 2) is only protected from PLP inhibition when the enzyme is bound to both template-primer and correct dNTP in a stable ternary complex. Since binding of PLP at site 2 is mutually exclusive with template-directed dNTP binding at the DNA polymerase active site, PLP site 2 appears to define the dNTP binding domain of the active site. Results from initial velocity analysis of PLP inhibition argue that there is a rate-limiting step in the polymerization cycle during product release and/or translocation.  相似文献   

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In exponentially growing 3T6 cells, the synthesis of deoxythymidine triphosphate (dTTP) is balanced by its utilization for DNA replication, with a turnover of the dTTP pool of around 5 min. We now investigate the effects of two inhibitors of DNA synthesis (aphidicolin and hydroxyurea) on the synthesis and degradation of pyrimidine deoxynucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs). Complete inhibition of DNA replication with aphidicolin did not decrease the turnover of pyrimidine dNTP pools labeled from the corresponding [3H]deoxynucleosides, only partially inhibited the in situ activity of thymidylate synthetase and resulted in excretion into the medium of thymidine derived from breakdown of dTTP synthesized de novo. These data demonstrate continued synthesis of dTTP in the absence of DNA replication. In contrast, hydroxyurea decreased the turnover of pyrimidine dNTP pools 5-50-fold. Hydroxyurea is an inhibitor of ribonucleotide reductase and stops DNA synthesis by depleting cells of purine dNTPs but not pyrimidine dNTPs. Our results suggest that degradation of dNTPs is turned off by an unknown mechanism when de novo synthesis is blocked.  相似文献   

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A Basu  P Kedar  S H Wilson  M J Modak 《Biochemistry》1989,28(15):6305-6309
Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate is a potent inhibitor of the DNA polymerase activity of recombinant rat DNA polymerase beta. Kinetic studies indicate that the mechanism of PLP inhibition is complex. In a lower range of PLP concentration, inhibition is competitive with respect to substrate dNTP, whereas at higher levels of PLP several forms of enzyme combine with PLP and are involved in the overall inhibition, and a possible model for these interactions during the catalytic process is suggested. Reduction of the PLP-treated enzyme with sodium [3H]borohydride results in covalent incorporation of about 4 mol of PLP/mol of enzyme, and the modified enzyme is not capable of DNA polymerase activity. The presence of dNTP during the modification reaction blocks incorporation of 1 mol of PLP/mol of enzyme, and the enzyme so modified is almost fully active. This protective effect is not observed in the absence of template-primer. Tryptic peptide mapping of the PLP-modified enzyme reveals four major sites of modification. Of these four sites, only one is protected by dNTP from pyridoxylation. Sequence analysis of the tryptic peptide corresponding to the protected site reveals that it spans residues 68-80 in the amino acid sequence of the enzyme, with Lys 71 as the site of pyridoxylation. These results indicate that Lys 71 is at or near the binding pocket for the dNTP substrate.  相似文献   

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Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) is an inhibitor of DNA polymerase activity of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I large fragment. Kinetic studies indicated that overall PLP inhibition was noncompetitive with respect to dNTP, and Hill plot analysis revealed that two molecules of PLP were involved in the inhibition. Reduction of the PLP-treated enzyme with sodium [3H]borohydride resulted in covalent incorporation of 3 mol of PLP/mol of enzyme. This incorporation was at lysine residues exclusively, and the PLP-modified enzyme was not capable of DNA polymerase activity. The presence of dNTP during the modification reaction blocked the incorporation of 1 mol of PLP/mol of enzyme. Similar results were obtained in the presence or absence of template-primer. These data indicate that a PLP target lysine is in or around a dNTP binding site that is essential for polymerase activity and that this binding site is functional in the absence of template-primer. The enzyme modified in the presence of dNTP, containing 2 mol of PLP/mol of enzyme, was capable of DNA polymerase activity but was unable to conduct elongation of product molecules beyond a short oligonucleotide length.  相似文献   

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A model RNA template-primer system is described for the study of RNA-directed double-stranded DNA synthesis by purified avian myeloblastosis virus DNA polymerase and its associated RNase H. In the presence of complementary RNA primer, oligo(rI), and the deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates dGTP, dTTP, and dATP, 3'-(rC)30-40-poly(rA) directs the sequential synthesis of poly(dT) and poly(dA) from a specific site at the 3' end of the RNA template. With this model RNA template-primer, optimal conditions for double-stranded DNA synthesis are described. Analysis of the kinetics of DNA synthesis shows that initially there is rapid synthesis of poly(dT). After a brief time lag, poly(dA) synthesis and the DNA polymerase-associated RNase H activity are initiated. While poly(rA) is directing the synthesis of poly(dT), the requirements for DNA synthesis indicate that the newly synthesized poly(dT) is acting as template for poly(dA) synthesis. Furthermore, selective inhibitor studies using NaF show that activation of RNase H is not just a time-related event, but is required for synthesis of the anti-complementary strand of DNA. To determine the specific role of RNase H in this synthetic sequence, the primer for poly(dA) synthesis was investigated. By use of formamide--poly-acrylamide slab gel electrophoresis, it is shown that poly(dT) is not acting as both template and primer for poly(dA) synthesis since no poly(dT)-poly(dA) covalent linkages are observed in radioactive poly(dA) product. Identification of 2',3'-[32P]AMP on paper chromatograms of alkali-treated poly(dA) product synthesized with [alpha-32P]dATP as substrate demonstrates the presence of rAMP-dAMP phosphodiester linkages in the poly(dA) product. Therefore, a new functional role of RNase H is demonstrated in the RNA-directed synthesis of double-stranded DNA. Not only is RNase H responsible for the degradation of poly(rA) following formation of a poly(rA)-poly(dT) hybrid but also the poly(rA)fragments generated are serving as primers for initiation of synthesis of the second strand of the double-stranded DNA.  相似文献   

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