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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   

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A ParE-ParC fusion protein is a functional topoisomerase.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
L S Lavasani  H Hiasa 《Biochemistry》2001,40(29):8438-8443
Type II topoisomerases are responsible for DNA unlinking during DNA replication and chromosome segregation. Although eukaryotic enzymes are homodimers and prokaryotic enzymes are heterotetramers, both prokaryotic and eukaryotic type II topoisomerases belong to a single protein family. The amino- and carboxyl-terminal domains of eukaryotic enzymes are homologous to the ATP-binding and catalytic subunits of prokaryotic enzymes, respectively. Topoisomerase IV, a prokaryotic type II topoisomerase, consists of the ATP-binding subunit, ParE, and the catalytic subunit, ParC. We have joined the coding regions of parE and parC in frame and constructed a fusion protein of the two subunits of topoisomerase IV. This fusion protein, ParEC, can catalyze both decatenation and relaxation reactions. The ParEC protein is also capable of decatenating replicating daughter DNA molecules during oriC DNA replication in vitro. Furthermore, the fusion gene, parEC, complements the temperature-sensitive growth of both parC and parE strains, indicating that the ParEC protein can substitute for topoisomerase IV in vivo. These results demonstrate that a fusion protein of the two subunits of topoisomerase IV is a functional topoisomerase. Thus, a heterotetrameric type II topoisomerase can be converted into a homodimeric type II topoisomerase by gene fusion.  相似文献   

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Fluoroquinolones, represented by ciproxacin and norfloxacin, are well-known clinical antimicrobial agents, and their phenyl ring expanded quinophenoxazines are reported as possible antitumor active compounds. These quinophenoxazines are known to inhibit DNA topoisomerase II essential for cell replication cycle. But there were no reports for topoisomerase I inhibition study for these compounds. In this report, we have prepared a few quinophenoxazine analogues and tested their topoisomerases I and II inhibitory activities and cytotoxicity. From the result, we found that quinophenoxazine analogues possessed strong topoisomerase I inhibitory capacity as well as topoisomerase II inhibition. Among the compounds prepared, A-62176 analogues showed strong topoisomerases I and II inhibitory activities. Interestingly, compound 8 missing the 3-aminopyrrolidine moiety at C2 position has similar potent inhibitory capacity against topoisomerases I and II at higher concentrations (20 and 10 microM, respectively). But compound 8 inhibited topoisomerase I function more selectively at lower concentration, 2 microM. Our observation might strongly implicate that fluoroquinophenoxazines can be developed as efficient topoisomerase I inhibitor with the elaborate modification.  相似文献   

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Eukaryotic topoisomerases I and II efficiently remove helical tension in naked DNA molecules. However, this activity has not been examined in nucleosomal DNA, their natural substrate. Here, we obtained yeast minichromosomes holding DNA under (+) helical tension, and incubated them with topoisomerases. We show that DNA supercoiling density can rise above +0.04 without displacement of the histones and that the typical nucleosome topology is restored upon DNA relaxation. However, in contrast to what is observed in naked DNA, topoisomerase II relaxes nucleosomal DNA much faster than topoisomerase I. The same effect occurs in cell extracts containing physiological dosages of topoisomeraseI and II. Apparently, the DNA strand-rotation mechanism of topoisomerase I does not efficiently relax chromatin, which imposes barriers for DNA twist diffusion. Conversely, the DNA cross-inversion mechanism of topoisomerase II is facilitated in chromatin, which favor the juxtaposition of DNA segments. We conclude that topoisomerase II is the main modulator of DNA topology in chromatin fibers. The nonessential topoisomerase I then assists DNA relaxation where chromatin structure impairs DNA juxtaposition but allows twist diffusion.  相似文献   

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DNA topoisomerases I and II are the two major nuclear enzymes capable of relieving torsional strain in DNA. Of these enzymes, topoisomerase I plays the dominant role in relieving torsional strain during chromatin assembly in cell extracts from oocytes, eggs, and early embryos. We tested if the topoisomerases are used differentially during chromatin assembly in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by a combined biochemical and pharmacological approach. As measured by plasmid supercoiling, nucleosome deposition is severely impaired in assembly extracts from a yeast mutant with no topoisomerase I and a temperature-sensitive form of topoisomerase II (strain top1-top2). Expression of wild-type topoisomerase II in strain top1-top2 fully restored assembly-driven supercoiling, and assembly was equally efficient in extracts from strains expressing either topoisomerase I or II alone. Supercoiling in top1-top2 extract was rescued by adding back either purified topoisomerase I or II. Using the topoisomerase II poison VP-16, we show that topoisomerase II activity during chromatin assembly is the same in the presence and absence of topoisomerase I. We conclude that both topoisomerases I and II can provide the DNA relaxation activity required for efficient chromatin assembly in mitotically cycling yeast cells.  相似文献   

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A considerable number of agents with chemotherapeutic potentials reported over the past years were shown to interfere with the reactions of DNA topoisomerases, the essential enzymes that regulate conformational changes in DNA topology. Gossypol, a naturally occurring bioactive phytochemical is a chemopreventive agent against various types of cancer cell growth with a reported activity on mammalian topoisomerase II. The compounds targeting topoisomerases vary in their mode of action; class I compounds act by stabilizing covalent topoisomerase-DNA complexes resulting in DNA strand breaks while class II compounds interfere with the catalytic function of topoisomerases without generating strand breaks. In this study, we report Gossypol as the interfering agent with type I topoisomerases as well. We also carried out an extensive set of assays to analyze the type of interference manifested by Gossypol on DNA topoisomerases. Our results strongly suggest that Gossypol is a potential class II inhibitor as it blocked DNA topoisomerase reactions with no consequently formed strand breaks.  相似文献   

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In the last years the attractive hypothesis of a possible involvement of mammalian topoisomerases in DNA repair has been proposed, given their molecular mechanism of action. So far, using asynchronous cultures a lot of controversial results have been reported, without taking into account the frequently dramatic fluctuations of topoisomerase activities depending upon the cell cycle stage and proliferation rate (mainly for topoisomerase II). We have addressed this question making use of G1 synchronous cultures of the Chinese hamster radiosensitive mutants xrs 5 (defective in DNA double strand breaks rejoining) and irs 2 (which shows radioresistant DNA synthesis), as well as their parental lines CHO K1 and V79 respectively, which show a normal radiosensitivity. Cells were irradiated with 5 Gy of X-rays and the activities of topoisomerases I and II in nuclear extracts were studied for comparison with non-irradiated controls in both the mutants and parental cell lines. Our results clearly show a modulation of the topoisomerase activities after irradiation, that varies depending upon the mutation that the different lines bear. While this hypothesis needs further testing, an interesting idea is that DNA topoisomerases might be involved in the cellular response to radiation damage, either through a direct participation in the repair mechanisms or in a preparative step to allow repair to proceed.  相似文献   

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Topoisomerases are essential ubiquitous enzymes, falling into two distinct classes. A number of eubacteria including Escherichia coli, typically contain four topoisomerases, two type I topoisomerases and two type II topoisomerases viz. DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV. In contrast several other bacterial genomes including mycobacteria, encode for one type I topoisomerase and a DNA gyrase. Here we describe a new type II topoisomerase from Mycobacterium smegmatis which is different from DNA gyrase or topoisomerase IV in its characteristics and origin. The topoisomerase is distinct with respect to domain organization, properties and drug sensitivity. The enzyme catalyses relaxation of negatively supercoiled DNA in an ATP-dependent manner and also introduces positive supercoils to both relaxed and negatively supercoiled substrates. The genes for this additional topoisomerase are not found in other sequenced mycobacterial genomes and may represent a distant lineage.  相似文献   

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Y Yamashita  S Kawada  N Fujii  H Nakano 《Biochemistry》1991,30(24):5838-5845
Saintopin is an antitumor antibiotic recently discovered in mechanistically oriented screening using purified calf thymus DNA topoisomerases. Saintopin induced topoisomerase I mediated DNA cleavage comparable to that of camptothecin, and topoisomerase II mediated DNA cleavage equipotent to those of 4'-(9-acridinylamino)methanesulfon-m-anisidide (m-AMSA) or 4'-demethylepipodophyllotoxin 9-(4,6-O-ethylidene-beta-D-glucopyranoside) (VP-16). Treatment of a reaction mixture containing saintopin and topoisomerase I or II with either elevated temperature (65 degrees C) or higher salt concentration (0.5 M NaCl) resulted in a substantial reduction in DNA cleavage, suggesting that the topoisomerase I and II mediated DNA cleavage induced by saintopin is through the mechanism of stabilizing the reversible enzyme-DNA "cleavable complex". Consistent with the cleavable complex formation with both topoisomerases, saintopin inhibited catalytic activities of both topoisomerase I and topoisomerase II. The DNA cleavage intensity pattern induced by saintopin with topoisomerase I was different from that by camptothecin. A difference in cleavage pattern was also detected between saintopin and m-AMSA or VP-16 in topoisomerase II mediated DNA cleavage. DNA unwinding assay using T4 DNA ligase showed that saintopin is a weak DNA intercalator like m-AMSA. Thus, saintopin represents a new class of antitumor agent that can induce both mammalian DNA topoisomerase I and mammalian DNA topisomerase II mediated DNA cleavage.  相似文献   

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Type II DNA topoisomerases mediate the passage of one DNA duplex through a transient break in another, an event essential for chromosome segregation and cell viability. The active sites of the type II topoisomerase dimer associate covalently with the DNA break-points and must separate by at least the width of the second DNA duplex to accommodate transport. A new structure of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae topoisomerase II DNA-binding and cleavage core suggests that in addition to conformational changes in the DNA-opening platform, a dramatic reorganization of accessory domains may occur during catalysis. These conformational differences have implications for both the DNA-breaking and duplex-transport events in the topo II reaction mechanism, suggest a mechanism by which two distinct drug-resistance loci interact, and illustrate the scope of structural changes in the cycling of molecular machines.  相似文献   

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Type IA topoisomerase activities are essential for resolving DNA topological barriers via an enzyme-mediated transient single strand DNA break. Accumulation of topoisomerase DNA cleavage product can lead to cell death or genomic rearrangement. Many antibacterial and anticancer drugs act as topoisomerase poison inhibitors that form stabilized ternary complexes with the topoisomerase covalent intermediate, so it is desirable to identify such inhibitors for type IA topoisomerases. Here we report that organomercury compounds were identified during a fluorescence based screening of the NIH diversity set of small molecules for topoisomerase inhibitors that can increase the DNA cleavage product of Yersinia pestis topoisomerase I. Inhibition of relaxation activity and accumulation of DNA cleavage product were confirmed for these organomercury compounds in gel based assays of Escherichia coli topoisomerase I. Hg(II), but not As(III), could also target the cysteines that form the multiple Zn(II) binding tetra-cysteine motifs found in the C-terminal domains of these bacterial topoisomerase I for relaxation activity inhibition. Mycobacterium tuberculosis topoisomerase I activity is not sensitive to Hg(II) or the organomercury compounds due to the absence of the Zn(II) binding cysteines. It is significant that the type IA topoisomerases with Zn(II) binding domains can still cleave DNA when interfered by Hg(II) or organomercury compounds. The Zn(II) binding domains found in human Top3α and Top3β may be potential targets of toxic metals and organometallic complexes, with potential consequence on genomic stability and development.  相似文献   

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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   

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