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1.
The effects of calcium ions on interactions between Drosophila melanogaster topoisomerase II and DNA were assessed. Although the divalent cation could not support DNA strand passage, it was able to promote high levels of enzyme-mediated DNA cleavage. Moreover, sites of cleavage on plasmid pBR322 generated in calcium-promoted reactions were similar to those obtained in the presence of magnesium. When calcium-containing enzyme-DNA mixtures were treated with ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid, cleaved nucleic acids could be generated in the absence of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) or other denaturing detergents. The product of this SDS-independent calcium-promoted reaction was a covalent topoisomerase II-DNA complex. Enzyme molecules trapped in such complexes were found to be kinetically competent. Therefore, calcium should be a valuable tool for studying the enzymology of topoisomerase II mediated DNA cleavage.  相似文献   

2.
K C Gale  N Osheroff 《Biochemistry》1990,29(41):9538-9545
Following its cleavage of double-stranded DNA, topoisomerase II is covalently bound to the 5'-termini of both nucleic acid strands. However, in order to isolate this enzyme-cleaved DNA complex in the presence of magnesium (the enzyme's physiological divalent cation), reactions must be terminated by the addition of a strong protein denaturant such as sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). Because of the requirement for a protein denaturant, it is unclear whether DNA cleavage in this in vitro system takes place prior to or is induced by the addition of SDS. To distinguish between these two possibilities, experiments were carried out to determine whether topoisomerase II bound DNA contains 3'-OH termini prior to denaturation. This was accomplished by using circular single-stranded phi X174 DNA as a model substrate for the enzyme. As found previously for topoisomerase II mediated cleavage of double-stranded DNA, the enzyme was covalently linked to the 5'-termini of cleaved phi X174 molecules. Moreover, optimal reaction pH as well as optimal salt and magnesium concentrations was similar for the two substrates. In contrast to results with double-stranded molecules, single-stranded DNA cleavage increased with time, was not salt reversible, and did not require the presence of SDS. Furthermore, cleavage products generated in the absence of protein denaturant could be labeled at their 3'-OH DNA termini by incubation with terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase and [alpha-32P]ddATP. Finally, cleaved phi X174 molecules could be joined to a radioactively labeled double-stranded oligonucleotide by a topoisomerase II mediated intermolecular ligation reaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The DNA cleavage reaction of human topoisomerase IIα is critical to all of the physiological and pharmacological functions of the protein. While it has long been known that the type II enzyme requires a divalent metal ion in order to cleave DNA, the role of the cation in this process is not known. To resolve this fundamental issue, the present study utilized a series of divalent metal ions with varying thiophilicities in conjunction with DNA cleavage substrates that replaced the 3′-bridging oxygen of the scissile bond with a sulfur atom (i.e. 3′-bridging phosphorothiolates). Rates and levels of DNA scission were greatly enhanced when thiophilic metal ions were included in reactions that utilized sulfur-containing substrates. Based on these results and those of reactions that employed divalent cation mixtures, we propose that topoisomerase IIα mediates DNA cleavage via a two-metal-ion mechanism. In this model, one of the metal ions makes a critical interaction with the 3′-bridging atom of the scissile phosphate. This interaction greatly accelerates rates of enzyme-mediated DNA cleavage, and most likely is needed to stabilize the leaving 3′-oxygen.  相似文献   

4.
DNA topoisomerases II are nuclear enzymes that have been identified recently as targets for some of the most active anticancer drugs. Antitumor topoisomerase II inhibitors such as teniposide (VM-26) produce enzyme-induced DNA cleavage and inhibition of enzyme activity. By adding to such reactions distamycin, a compound whose effects on DNA have been extensively characterized, we investigated the effects of drug binding upon topoisomerase II-mediated DNA cleavage induced by VM-26. We have found a correspondence between distamycin binding (determined by footprinting analysis) and topoisomerase II-mediated cleavage of SV40 DNA (determined by sequencing gel analysis). Distamycin binding potentiated the cleavage of specific sites in the near proximity of distamycin-binding sites (within at least 25 base pairs), which indicates that DNA secondary structure is involved in topoisomerase II-DNA interactions. That distamycin potentiated cleavage only at sites that were recognized in the absence of distamycin and suppressed cleavage directly at distamycin-binding sites indicates that topoisomerase II recognizes DNA on the basis of primary sequence. In addition, distamycin stimulated topoisomerase II-mediated DNA relaxation and antagonized the inhibitory effect of VM-26. These results show that the DNA sequence-specific binding of distamycin produces local and propagated effects in the DNA which markedly affect topoisomerase II activity.  相似文献   

5.
DNA topoisomerase II is an ATP-operated clamp that effects topological changes by capturing a double-stranded DNA segment and transporting it through another duplex. Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) was used to characterize interactions of human topoisomerase II alpha with different topological forms of DNA. Using a linear fragment of pUC18 DNA, the equilibrium binding constant of topoisomerase II alpha was determined to be 0.16 nM. The affinity was not affected by the absence of ATP or the presence of the bisdioxopiperazine catalytic inhibitor ICRF-187. Besides, similar affinities were found for several bisdioxopiperazine-resistant mutant enzymes. These results suggest that the mechanism of topoisomerase II alpha inhibition by ICRF-187 and its resistance does not directly involve the interaction of DNA with the enzyme. SPR was also adapted to measure levels of the closed clamp form of topoisomerase II present on DNA. As expected, a stable closed clamp form of the enzyme was detectable on circular DNA but not on linear DNA. Detection of the closed clamp required the presence of ATP and a bisdioxopiperazine, or a non-hydrolyzable analogue of ATP. In the presence of ATP and ICRF-187, several bisdioxopiperazine-resistant mutant enzymes failed to form detectable levels of stable closed clamp. Interestingly, a mutant of human topoisomerase II alpha with an altered active site tyrosine showed lower levels of closed clamp formation. In conclusion, SPR is able to (1) determine the kinetics of topoisomerase II with its DNA substrate and (2) quantify the enzyme's closed clamp formation under varying circumstances.  相似文献   

6.
Specific DNA cleavage and binding by vaccinia virus DNA topoisomerase I   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Cleavage of a defined linear duplex DNA by vaccinia virus DNA topoisomerase I was found to occur nonrandomly and infrequently. Approximately 12 sites of strand scission were detected within the 5372 nucleotides of pUC19 DNA. These sites could be classified as having higher or lower affinity for topoisomerase based on the following criteria. Higher affinity sites were cleaved at low enzyme concentration, were less sensitive to competition, and were most refractory to religation promoted by salt, divalent cations, and elevated temperature. Cleavage at lower affinity sites required higher enzyme concentration and was more sensitive to competition and induced religation. Cleavage site selection correlated with a pentameric sequence motif (C/T)CCTT immediately preceding the site of strand scission. Noncovalent DNA binding by topoisomerase predominated over covalent adduct formation, as revealed by nitrocellulose filter-binding studies. The noncovalent binding affinity of vaccinia topoisomerase for particular subsegments of pUC19 DNA correlated with the strength and/or the number of DNA cleavage sites contained therein. Thus, cleavage site selection is likely to be dictated by specific noncovalent DNA-protein interactions. This was supported by the demonstration that a mutant vaccinia topoisomerase (containing a Tyr----Phe substitution at the active site) that was catalytically inert and did not form the covalent intermediate, nevertheless bound DNA with similar affinity and site selectivity as the wild-type enzyme. Noncovalent binding is therefore independent of competence in transesterification. It is construed that the vaccinia topoisomerase is considerably more stringent in its cleavage and binding specificity for duplex DNA than are the cellular type I enzymes.  相似文献   

7.
Methods of uncoupling the DNA binding, cleavage and religation reactions of topoisomerase II were employed to investigate the influence of topoisomerase II-directed drugs on the individual steps in the enzyme's catalytic cycle. A special DNA substrate containing a major topoisomerase II interaction site, which can be cleaved by the enzyme in the absence of any concomitant religation, was used to examine the effect of topoisomerase II-directed agents upon the DNA cleavage reaction. The experiment demonstrated that the topoisomerase II targeting agent Ro 15-0216 stimulates the DNA cleavage reaction extensively, whereas the traditional topoisomerase II inhibitor, mAMSA, has only a minor effect on this reaction. Topoisomerase II trapped in the cleavage complexes can religate to the 3' hydroxyl end of another DNA strand. Using this religation assay, it was demonstrated that the major effect of mAMSA is an inhibition of the enzyme's religation reaction, whereas Ro 15-0216 has no effect on this reaction. Recently, considerable attention has been given to drugs preventing topoisomerase II from introducing DNA cleavages. In the present paper the initial non-covalent DNA binding reaction of topoisomerase II was investigated under conditions excluding enzyme-mediated DNA cleavage. This demonstrated that the anthracycline, aclarubicin, prevents topoisomerase II from performing its initial non-covalent DNA binding reaction and thereby abolishes the DNA cleavage reaction of the enzyme. The results presented here demonstrate that profound differences exist in the mode of action of different agents targeting topoisomerase II, and that the enzyme can be affected by such agents at both its DNA binding, cleavage and religation subreactions.  相似文献   

8.
Eukaryotic topoisomerase II. Characterization of enzyme turnover   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
While the binding of adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (App(NH)p) to Drosophila melanogaster topoisomerase II induces a double-stranded DNA passage reaction, its nonhydrolyzable beta,gamma-imidodiphosphate bond prevents enzyme turnover (Osheroff, N., Shelton, E. R., and Brutlag, D. L. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 9536-9543). Therefore, this ATP analog was used to characterize the interactions between Drosophila topoisomerase II and DNA which occur after DNA strand passage but before enzyme turnover. In the presence of App(NH)p, a stable post-strand passage topoisomerase II-nucleic acid complex is formed when circular DNA substrates are employed. Although noncovalent in nature, these complexes are resistant to increases in ionic strength and show less than 5% dissociation under salt concentrations (greater than 500 mM) that disrupt 95% of the enzyme-DNA interactions formed in the absence of App(NH)p or under a variety of other conditions that do not support DNA strand passage. These results strongly suggest that the process of enzyme turnover not only regenerates the active conformation of topoisomerase II but also confers upon the enzyme the ability to disengage from its nucleic acid product. Experiments with linear DNA molecules indicate that after strand passage has taken place, topoisomerase II may be able to travel along its DNA substrate by a linear diffusion process that is independent of enzyme turnover. Further studies demonstrate that the regeneration of the enzyme's catalytic center does not require enzyme turnover, since topoisomerase II can cleave double-stranded DNA substrates after strand passage has taken place. Finally, while the 2'-OH and 3'-OH of ATP are important for its interaction with Drosophila topoisomerase II, neither are required for turnover.  相似文献   

9.
Wright E  Serpersu EH 《Biochemistry》2005,44(34):11581-11591
Aminoglycoside nucleotidyltransferase(2')-Ia is one of the most often detected enzymes in aminoglycoside-resistant bacteria. Despite its prevalence, little biochemical and biophysical work has been reported for this enzyme. In the current study, substrate specificity and temperature dependence of k(cat) are determined by kinetic assays. Dissociation constants and thermodynamic properties of enzyme-substrate complexes are determined by isothermal titration calorimetry, electron paramagnetic resonance, and fluorescence spectroscopy. Kinetic studies show that aminoglycosides with 2'-NH(2) are better substrates (higher k(cat)/K(m)) than ones with 2'-OH when magnesium(II) is used as the catalytically required divalent cation. The activity is reduced 10-fold for substrates with 2'-NH(2) when manganese(II) replaces magnesium as the required metal. However, kanamycin A, which has a 2'-OH, shows a much smaller decrease in activity when manganese substitutes for magnesium as the divalent cation. Temperature dependence studies show the activation energy of catalysis to be 19.2 kcal/mol and the temperature optimum between 30 and 32 degrees C. The binding of the aminoglycoside substrate tobramycin to the enzyme occurs with a favorable enthalpy which compensates for a large entropic penalty to yield a negative DeltaG value for the complex formation. Enthalpy of binding is less exothermic in the presence of metal-nucleotide. However, due to the more favorable entropy, a more favorable DeltaG is observed for the formation of the enzyme-metal-nucleotide:aminoglycoside complex. Tobramycin binds to ANT(2' ') with a dissociation constant of 0.6 microM, which is further reduced by 3-fold when metal-nucleotide is present. Binding of ATP to the enzyme is determined to be very weak in the absence of a divalent cation, and becomes 2 orders of magnitude tighter when magnesium or manganese is present. Binding studies also show that, in addition to binding to the enzyme in the form of metal-nucleotide complex, a second catalytically required metal binds to an additional site on the enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
Although cobalt is an essential trace element for humans, the metal is genotoxic and mutagenic at higher concentrations. Treatment of cells with cobalt generates DNA strand breaks and covalent protein-DNA complexes. However, the basis for these effects is not well understood. Since the toxic events induced by cobalt resemble those of topoisomerase II poisons, the effect of the metal on human topoisomerase IIalpha was examined. The level of enzyme-mediated DNA scission increased 6-13-fold when cobalt(II) replaced magnesium(II) in cleavage reactions. Cobalt(II) stimulated cleavage at all DNA sites observed in the presence of magnesium(II), and the enzyme cut DNA at several "cobalt-specific" sites. The increased level of DNA cleavage in the presence of cobalt(II) was partially due to a decrease in the rate of enzyme-mediated religation. Topoisomerase IIalpha retained many of its catalytic properties in reactions that included cobalt(II), including sensitivity to the anticancer drug etoposide and the ability to relax and decatenate DNA. Finally, cobalt(II) stimulated topoisomerase IIalpha-mediated DNA cleavage in the presence of magnesium(II) in purified systems and in human MCF-7 cells. These findings demonstrate that cobalt(II) is a topoisomerase II poison in vitro and in cultured cells and suggest that at least some of the genotoxic effects of the metal are mediated through topoisomerase IIalpha.  相似文献   

11.
A new technique for uncoupling the cleavage and religation half-reactions of topoisomerase I at a specific site has been developed. The technique takes advantage of a suicidal DNA substrate to attain enzyme-mediated cleavage without concomitant religation. Efficient religation can be achieved, subsequently, by addition of an oligonucleotide capable of hybridising to the non-cleaved strand of the suicide DNA substrate. The technique was used to study the effect of different compounds on the half-reactions of topoisomerase I. It was shown that topoisomerase I-mediated cleavage was inhibited by NaCl concentrations higher than 200 mM, while the religation reaction seemed unaffected by concentrations as high as 3 M-NaCl. The divalent cations Mg2+, Ca2+ and Mn2+ were found to enhance the cleavage but not the religation reaction of topoisomerase I, whereas Cu2+ and Zn2+ inhibited both reactions. Furthermore, the effect of the anti-neoplastic agent, camptothecin, on the half-reactions of topoisomerase I was investigated. It was found that the drug did not affect the cleavage reaction of topoisomerase I at the studied site, while the religation reaction of the enzyme was inhibited. Camptothecin was found to stabilise the enzyme-DNA cleavage complex even when the drug was added after complex formation.  相似文献   

12.
The ATP-independent type I and the ATP-dependent type II DNA topoisomerase of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae have been purified to near homogeneity, and the purification procedures are reported. Both purified topoisomerases are single subunit enzymes with monomer weights of Mr = 90,000 and 150,000 for the type I and type II enzyme, respectively. Sedimentation and gel filtration data suggest that the type I enzyme is monomeric and the type II enzyme is dimeric. Similar to other purified eukaryotic topoisomerases, the yeast type I enzyme does not require a divalent cation for activity, but is stimulated 10-20-fold in the presence of 7-10 mM Mg(II) or Ca(II). Mn(II) is about 25% as efficient as Mg(II) in this stimulation but Co(II) is inhibitory. The yeast type II topoisomerase has an absolute requirement for a divalent cation: Mg(II) is the most effective, whereas Mn(II), Ca(II), or Co(II) supports the reaction to a lesser extent. The type II enzyme also requires ATP or dATP; the nonhydrolyzable ATP analogues adenylyl imidodiphosphate and adenylyl (beta,gamma-methylene)diphosphonate are potent inhibitors. Both yeast topoisomerases are completely inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide at 0.5 mM. In addition, the type II enzyme, but not the type I enzyme, is inhibited to various extents by coumermycin, ethidium, and berenil. Both topoisomerases are nuclear enzymes; no topoisomerase specific to mitochondria has been detected.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of divalent cations on the near ultraviolet circular dichroism (CD) spectrum of yeast enolase showed that calcium, magnesium, and nickel ions produced identical changes. This was interpreted as indicating that the cations bound to the same sites on the enzyme and produced identical changes in tertiary structure. There was no effect of magnesium ion on the far ultraviolet spectrum. Evidently magnesium ion has no effect on the secondary structure. Substrate bound to the enzyme when the above cations were present although calcium permits no enzymatic activity. The CD spectral difference produced by the substrate was nearly the reverse of that produced by the metal ions. Glycolic acid phosphate, a competitive inhibitor lacking carbon-3, produced no effect, indicating carbon-3 was necessary for the CD spectral changes. The CD and visible absorption spectra of nickel and cobalt bound to various sites on the enzyme showed that the binding sites were octahedral or distorted octahedral in coordination and that the ligands appeared to be oxyligands: water molecules, hydroxyl or carboxyl groups. Examination of the effects of substrate and two compounds thought to be "transition state analogues" showed that these perturbed the "conformational" sites of the enzyme. The "catalytic" and "inhibitory" sites did not appear to be very CD active.  相似文献   

14.
A topoisomerase, able to relax negatively supercoiled DNA, has been isolated from the archaebacterium Sulfolobus acidocaldarius. Relaxation was fully efficient in vitro between 70 degrees C and 80 degrees C and was dependent on the presence of ATP and magnesium ions. The enzyme did not exhibit gyrase-like activity and was poorly sensitive to gyrase inhibitors. These properties are reminiscent of eukaryotic type II topoisomerases. However, the enzyme was unable to relax positively supercoiled DNA. This thermophilic enzyme may be used in a variety of ways to study the structure and stability of DNA at high temperature.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of different divalent metal ions on the hydrolysis of DNA by DNase I was studied with an assay which distinguishes between cleavage of one or both strands of the DNA substrate during initial encounters between enzyme and DNA. Using covalently closed superhelical SV40(I) DNA as substrate, initial reaction products consisting of relaxed circles or unit-length linears are resolved by electrophoresis of radioactively labeled DNA in agarose gels. Only in the presence of a transition metal ion, such as Mn2+ or Co2+, and only under certain reaction conditions, is DNase I able to cut both DNA strands at or near the same point, generating unit-length linears. This ability to cut both DNA strands is inhibited by such factors as temperature decrease, the addition of a monovalent ion or another divalent cation which is not a transition metal ion, or a reduction in the number of superhelical turns in the DNA substrate. All of these factors lead to a winding of the duplex helix and antagonize the unwinding of the duplex promoted by transition metal ion binding. Transition metal ions may thus convert the DNA substrate locally to a form in which DNase I can introduce breaks into both strands. In the presence of Mg2+, DNase I introduces single strand nicks into SV40(I), generating exclusively the covalently open, relaxed circular SV40(II) as the initial product of the reaction. In the presence of Mn2+, DNase I generates as initial products a mixture of SV40(II) and unit-length SV40 linear DNA molecules, formed by two nicks in opposite strands at or near the same point in the duplex. These circular SV40(II) molecules consist of two types. A minority class is indistinguishable from the nicked SV40(II) produced by DNase I in the presence of Mg2+. The majority class consists of molecules containing a gap in one of the two strands, the mean length of the gap being 11 nucleotides. The SV40(L) molecules produced in the presence of Mn2+ appear to have single strand extensions at one or both ends.  相似文献   

16.
The DNA cleavage reaction of eukaryotic topoisomerase II produces nicked DNA along with linear nucleic acid products. Therefore, relationships between the enzyme's DNA nicking and double-stranded cleavage reactions were determined. This was accomplished by altering the pH at which assays were performed. At pH 5.0 Drosophila melanogaster topoisomerase II generated predominantly (greater than 90%) single-stranded breaks in duplex DNA. With increasing pH, less single-stranded and more double-stranded cleavage was observed, regardless of the buffer or the divalent cation employed. As has been shown for double-stranded DNA cleavage, topoisomerase II was covalently bound to nicked DNA products, and enzyme-mediated single-stranded cleavage was salt reversible. Moreover, sites of single-stranded DNA breaks were identical with those mapped for double-stranded breaks. To further characterize the enzyme's cleavage mechanism, electron microscopy studies were performed. These experiments revealed that separate polypeptide chains were complexed with both ends of linear DNA molecules generated during cleavage reactions. Finally, by use of a novel religation assay [Osheroff, N., & Zechiedrich, E. L. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 4303-4309], it was shown that nicked DNA is an obligatory kinetic intermediate in the topoisomerase II mediated reunion of double-stranded breaks. Under the conditions employed, the apparent first-order rate constant for the religation of the first break was approximately 6-fold faster than that for the religation of the second break. The above results indicate that topoisomerase II carries out double-stranded DNA cleavage/religation by making two sequential single-stranded breaks in the nucleic acid backbone, each of which is mediated by a separate subunit of the homodimeric enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
The integration of a DNA copy of the viral genome into the genome of the host cell is an essential step in the replication of all retroviruses. Integration requires two discrete biochemical reactions; specific processing of each viral long terminal repeat terminus or donor substrate, and a DNA strand transfer step wherein the processed donor substrate is joined to a nonspecific target DNA. Both reactions are catalyzed by a virally encoded enzyme, integrase. A microtiter assay for the strand transfer activity of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integrase which uses an immobilized oligonucleotide as the donor substrate was previously published (D. J. Hazuda, J. C. Hastings, A. L. Wolfe, and E. A. Emini, Nucleic Acids Res. 22;1121-1122, 1994). We now describe a series of modifications to the method which facilitate study of both the nature and the dynamics of the interaction between integrase and the donor DNA. The enzyme which binds to the immobilized donor is shown to be sufficient to catalyze strand transfer with target DNA substrates added subsequent to assembly; in the absence of the target substrate, the complex was retained on the donor in an enzymatically competent state. Assembly required high concentrations of divalent cation, with optimal activity achieved at 25 mM MnCl2. In contrast, preassembled complexes catalyzed strand transfer equally efficiently in either 1 or 25 mM MnCl2, indicating mechanistically distinct functions for the divalent cation in assembly and catalysis, respectively. Prior incubation of the enzyme in 25 mM MnCl2 was shown to promote the multimerization of integrase in the absence of a DNA substrate and alleviate the requirement for high concentrations of divalent cation during assembly. The superphysiological requirement for MnCl2 may, therefore, reflect an insufficiency for functional self-assembly in vitro. Subunits were observed to exchange during the assembly reaction, suggesting that multimerization can occur either before or coincident with but not after donor binding. These studies both validate and illustrate the utility of this novel methodology and suggest that the approach may be generally useful in characterizing other details of this biochemical reaction.  相似文献   

18.
Quinolones are the most active oral antibacterials in clinical use and act by increasing DNA cleavage mediated by prokaryotic type II topoisomerases. Although topoisomerase IV appears to be the primary cytotoxic target for most quinolones in Gram-positive bacteria, interactions between the enzyme and these drugs are poorly understood. Therefore, the effects of ciprofloxacin on the DNA cleavage and religation reactions of Staphylococcus aureus topoisomerase IV were characterized. Ciprofloxacin doubled DNA scission at 150 nM drug and increased cleavage approximately 9-fold at 5 microM. Furthermore, it dramatically inhibited rates of DNA religation mediated by S. aureus topoisomerase IV. This inhibition of religation is in marked contrast to the effects of antineoplastic quinolones on eukaryotic topoisomerase II, and suggests that the mechanistic basis for quinolone action against type II topoisomerases has not been maintained across evolutionary boundaries. The apparent change in quinolone mechanism was not caused by an overt difference in the drug interaction domain on topoisomerase IV. Therefore, we propose that the mechanistic basis for quinolone action is regulated by subtle changes in drug orientation within the enzyme.drug.DNA ternary complex rather than gross differences in the site of drug binding.  相似文献   

19.
Gilroy KL  Austin CA 《PloS one》2011,6(2):e14693

Background

Type II DNA topoisomerases are essential, ubiquitous enzymes that act to relieve topological problems arising in DNA from normal cellular activity. Their mechanism of action involves the ATP-dependent transport of one DNA duplex through a transient break in a second DNA duplex; metal ions are essential for strand passage. Humans have two isoforms, topoisomerase IIα and topoisomerase IIβ, that have distinct roles in the cell. The C-terminal domain has been linked to isoform specific differences in activity and DNA interaction.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We have investigated the role of the C-terminal domain in the binding of human topoisomerase IIα and topoisomerase IIβ to DNA in fluorescence anisotropy assays using full length and C-terminally truncated enzymes. We find that the C-terminal domain of topoisomerase IIβ but not topoisomerase IIα affects the binding of the enzyme to the DNA. The presence of metal ions has no effect on DNA binding. Additionally, we have examined strand passage of the full length and truncated enzymes in the presence of a number of supporting metal ions and find that there is no difference in relative decatenation between isoforms. We find that calcium and manganese, in addition to magnesium, can support strand passage by the human topoisomerase II enzymes.

Conclusions/Significance

The C-terminal domain of topoisomerase IIβ, but not that of topoisomerase IIα, alters the enzyme''s KD for DNA binding. This is consistent with previous data and may be related to the differential modes of action of the two isoforms in vivo. We also show strand passage with different supporting metal ions for human topoisomerase IIα or topoisomerase IIβ, either full length or C-terminally truncated. They all show the same preferences, whereby Mg > Ca > Mn.  相似文献   

20.
Despite the importance of topoisomerase II-mediated DNA ligation to the essential physiological functions of the enzyme, the mechanistic details of this important reaction are poorly understood. Because topoisomerase II normally does not release cleaved DNA molecules prior to ligation, it is not known whether all of the nucleic acid specificity of its cleavage/ligation cycle is embodied in DNA cleavage or whether ligation also contributes specificity to the enzyme. All currently available ligation assays require that topoisomerase II cleave the initial DNA substrate before rejoining can be monitored. Consequently, it has been impossible to examine the specificity of DNA ligation separately from that of scission. To address this issue, a cleavage-independent topoisomerase II DNA ligation assay was developed. This assay utilizes a nicked oligonucleotide whose 5'-phosphate terminus at the nick has been activated by covalent attachment to the tyrosine mimic, p-nitrophenol. Human topoisomerase IIalpha and enzymes with active-site mutations that abrogated cleavage activity ligated the activated nick by catalyzing the direct attack of the terminal 3'-OH on the activated 5'-phosphate. Results with different DNA sequences indicate that human topoisomerase IIalpha possesses an intrinsic nucleic acid specificity for ligation that parallels its specificity for DNA cleavage.  相似文献   

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