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1.
Polymers of ADP-ribose bind chromatosomal histones in solution and may play a role in chromatin accessibility in vivo. We have enzymatically synthesized a poly(ADP-ribose) affinity resin to further characterize binding of nuclear proteins to ADP-ribose polymers. NAD+- and (ADP-ribose)-derivatized agarose beads were recognized as polymer acceptors by the nuclear enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase. This polymerase elongated the existing ligands by successive addition of exogenously available ADP-ribose residues to form polymers covalently linked to the agarose beads. Poly(ADP-ribose) formation on the beads was dependent on incubation time and the mode of ligand attachment to the agarose. The resulting poly(ADP-ribose)-derivatized agarose beads possessed polymers which closely resembled those modifying the ADP-ribose polymerase by the automodification reaction. Fractionation of rat liver nuclear lysate over the poly(ADP-ribose) resin revealed a strong affinity of H1 for ADP-ribose polymers, thereby supporting a role for poly(ADP-ribose) in chromatin functions. Poly(ADP-ribose)-agarose beads are extremely stable and will be useful not only for affinity studies, but also for mechanistic studies involving polymer elongation and catabolism.  相似文献   

2.
Poly(ADP-ribose) has a branched structure in vivo   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We have searched for the presence of branching in the chromosomal polymer poly(ADP-ribose) as it occurs in vivo. Treatment of the polymer with phosphodiesterase asnd phosphomonoesterase results in the conversion of internal residues to the nucleoside ribosyladenosine and the conversion of points of branching to diribosyladenosine. We have detected diribosyladenosine in digests of the polymer derived from carcinogen-treated SV40 virus-formed 3T3 cells and in normal rat liver, kidney, and spleen. The frequency of residues involved in branching varied from 0.8 to 1.6 mole % over a 50-fold range of total levels of poly(ADP-ribose). Thus, branching seems to be a general feature of poly(ADP-ribose) as it occurs in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Poly(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase was purified approximately 74,000-fold to apparent homogeneity from calf thymus with a yield of 3.2%. The enzyme was a monomeric protein of Mr = 59,000, as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The action of glycohydrolase on poly(ADP-ribose) was exoglycosidic in the direction of adenosine terminus----ribose terminus; radioactive ADP-ribose monomers were immediately produced from evenly labeled poly(ADP-ribose), but not from the polymer labeled selectively at the ribose terminus. The enzymatic degradation of large poly(ADP-ribose) (greater than 20 ADP-ribose residues) proceeded in a biphasic as well as bimodal manner. In the early and rapid phase, the enzyme degraded part of large polymers successively, leaving the remainder completely intact, and accumulated ADP-ribose monomers and small polymers of the size less than half of original polymers, indicating that the enzyme action was processive up to a certain extent. In the late and 20-fold slower phase, by contrast, the enzyme degraded the accumulated small polymers gradually and evenly, i.e. in a nonprocessive manner. The Km for large polymers was approximately 100-fold lower than that for small polymers. Similar rates and processivities were observed with large and small polymers bound to various proteins. These results suggested that the glycohydrolase may regulate differentially the levels of large and small poly(ADP-ribose) in the cell.  相似文献   

4.
The nuclear enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (EC 2.4.2.30) participates in DNA excision repair by post-translational selfmodification ("automodification") and the modification of other chromatin proteins ("heteromodification") with ADP-ribose polymers. We have studied the molecular mechanism of these reactions in a reconstituted in vitro system. After activation by DNA, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase produces polymers with a distinct size pattern. These polymers are attached to a small subfraction of enzyme molecules. As the reaction progresses, more enzyme molecules are recruited for modification with an identical polymer size pattern. Likewise, the auto- and heteromodification reaction in nucleosomal core particles involves the consecutive addition of a highly conserved polymer size pattern to the acceptor proteins. Thus, a highly conserved polymer size pattern may constitute the molecular signal priming chromatin proteins for a role in DNA excision repair in vivo. The priming reaction is processive.  相似文献   

5.
This paper describes the effect of an in-vitro poly(ADP-ribose) turnover system on the poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation of chromatin. Both poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase and poly(ADP-ribose)glycohydrolase were highly purified and used in 4 different turnover systems: non-turnover, slow, medium and fast turnover. These turnover systems were designed to reflect possible turnover conditions in intact cells. The major protein acceptors for poly(ADP-ribose) are histones and the polymerase itself, a process referred to as automodification. The level of poly(ADP-ribose) modification of polymerase, histone H1 and core histones has been measured. The size of the polymer for each of the 3 groups of acceptor proteins has been determined by gel electrophoresis. After many turnover cycles at medium and fast turnover, the histones (H1 and core) become the main poly(ADP-ribose) acceptor proteins. The rate at which steady-state polymer levels are reached and the total accumulation of polymer in a given turnover system are both inversely proportional to the amount of glycohydrolase present. Furthermore, increasing amounts of glycohydrolase in the turnover systems reduces average polymer size. The polymer synthesized in the medium and fast turnover systems is degraded by glycohydrolase in a biphasic fashion and in these systems the half-life of polymer agreed with results found in intact cells. Our results show that the relative levels of polymerase and glycohydrolase activities can regulate the proportional poly(ADP-ribose) distribution on chromatin-associated acceptor proteins during steady-state turnover conditions. The patterns of modification of polymerase and histones under turnover conditions agree with in vivo observations.  相似文献   

6.
Poly(ADP-ribose) binds to specific domains in DNA damage checkpoint proteins   总被引:30,自引:0,他引:30  
Poly(ADP-ribose) is formed in possibly all multicellular organisms by a familiy of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerases (PARPs). PARP-1, the best understood and until recently the only known member of this family, is a DNA damage signal protein catalyzing its automodification with multiple, variably sized ADP-ribose polymers that may contain up to 200 residues and several branching points. Through these polymers, PARP-1 can interact noncovalently with other proteins and alter their functions. Here we report the discovery of a poly(ADP-ribose)-binding sequence motif in several important DNA damage checkpoint proteins. The 20-amino acid motif contains two conserved regions: (i) a cluster rich in basic amino acids and (ii) a pattern of hydrophobic amino acids interspersed with basic residues. Using a combination of alanine scanning, polymer blot analysis, and photoaffinity labeling, we have identified poly(ADP-ribose)-binding sites in the following proteins: p53, p21(CIP1/WAF1), xeroderma pigmentosum group A complementing protein, MSH6, DNA ligase III, XRCC1, DNA polymerase epsilon, DNA-PK(CS), Ku70, NF-kappaB, inducible nitric-oxide synthase, caspase-activated DNase, and telomerase. The poly(ADP-ribose)-binding motif was found to overlap with five important functional domains responsible for (i) protein-protein interactions, (ii) DNA binding, (iii) nuclear localization, (iv) nuclear export, and (v) protein degradation. Thus, PARPs may target specific signal network proteins via poly(ADP-ribose) and regulate their domain functions.  相似文献   

7.
Two-dimensional thin-layer chromatography on cellulose plates has been used for separating and quantifying the three adenosine derivatives: AMP, phosphoribosyl AMP (PRAMP), and (PR)2AMP obtained by venom phosphodiesterase digestion of poly(ADP-ribose). In vitro synthesized polymer, up to 300 derivatives in length were studied. Some parameters of the complexity of poly(ADP-ribose) could be deduced from our results: (i) The first branching point appears in fragments of approximately 21 derivatives in length. (ii) The branching points are located at regular distances of approximately 41 derivatives from each other.  相似文献   

8.
A procedure has been developed for the quantitation of poly(ADP-ribose) in intact tissues. It is based on the dilution of added [3H]poly(ADP-ribose) by the endogenous polymer. 5 - 6 nanomoles protein-bound ADP-ribose per mg DNA were found in adult and neonatal rat liver, while Zajdela hepatoma cells had significantly lower values. A comparison with mono(ADP-ribose) residues in adult rat liver revealed similar levels of monomeric and polymeric ADP-ribose residues. This means that far more proteins (or acceptor sites on proteins) must be occupied by single ADP-ribose residues than by oligo or poly(ADP-ribose) chains. While the poly(ADP-ribose) levels of the different tissues do not correlate with the corresponding proliferation rates, the amount of mono(ADP-ribose) does show a certain Correlation, being low in rapidly growing tissues.  相似文献   

9.
Here, we describe the latest developments on the mechanistic characterization of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) [EC 2.4.2.30], a DNA-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the synthesis of protein-bound ADP-ribose polymers in eucaryotic chromatin. A detailed kinetic analysis of the automodification reaction of PARP in the presence of nicked dsDNA indicates that protein-poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation probably occurs via a sequential mechanism since enzyme-bound ADP-ribose chains are not reaction intermediates. The multiple enzymatic activities catalyzed by PARP (initiation, elongation, branching and self-modification) are the subject of a very complex regulatory mechanism that may involve allosterism. For instance, while the NAD+ concentration determines the average ADP-ribose polymer size (polymerization reaction), the frequency of DNA strand breaks determines the total number of ADP-ribose chains synthesized (initiation reaction). A general discussion of some of the mechanisms that regulate these multiple catalytic activities of PARP is presented below.  相似文献   

10.
Methods are described for the radiolabeling and determination of NAD+, poly(ADP-ribose), and protein-bound monomers of ADP-ribose in cultured mammalian cells. The adenine nucleotide pools of confluent monolayer cell cultures are radiolabeled using high-specific-activity [3H]adenine. Following any desired experimental manipulation, cultures are treated with trichloroacetic acid. Radiolabel in NAD+ can be rapidly determined from the acid-soluble fraction using dihydroxyboronyl Sepharose (DHB-Sepharose). The acid-insoluble material can be analyzed for radiolabeled polymers of ADP-ribose and protein-bound monomers of ADP-ribose. Polymers are separated from interfering material using dihydroxyboronyl-Bio-Rex 70 (DHB-Bio-Rex). Protein-bound monomers are separated from noncovalently bound ADP-ribose and different classes of (ADP-ribosyl) protein linkages are released by specific chemical treatments. The released ADP-ribose is then separated from interfering materials using DHB-Bio-Rex and DHB-Sepharose. Control experiments have demonstrated the sensitivity, selectivity, and precision of the methods. Major advantages of the methods are that they allow many simultaneous determinations and all components can be determined from material derived from a single dish of cultured cells. The methods should prove useful for detailed studies of the metabolism of both protein-bound monomers and polymers of ADP-ribose in cultured mammalian cells.  相似文献   

11.
DNA damage inflicted by the alkylating agent N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine, or by UV254nm, stimulated the catabolism of protein-bound poly(ADP-ribose) in the chromatin of cultured hepatocytes. The stimulation was highest at the largest doses of DNA-damaging treatment. As a consequence, the half-life of ADP-ribosyl polymers may drop to less than 41 s. This rapid turnover contrasts with the slow catabolism of a constitutive fraction of polymers exhibiting a half-life of 7.7 h. Our data suggest that post-incisional stimulation of poly(ADP-ribose) biosynthesis in DNA-excision repair is coupled with an adaptation of poly(ADP-ribose) catabolism in mammalian cells.  相似文献   

12.
The possible involvement of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase [PARP; E.C. 2.4.2.30] in the adaptive response to low-g conditions was studied in cultured adult rat hepatocytes exposed to simulated microgravity produced by the random positioning machine (RPM-3D-clinostat). Four different poly(ADP-ribose) polymerases (PARPs) have been identified recently. The best-studied member of this family is PARP-1, a highly conserved, multimodular 113 kDa protein. In multicellular organisms PARPs catalyze poly(ADP-ribose) synthesis from NAD+ to a number of structural and catalytic proteins. Moreover, PARP-1 can control its protein and DNA interactions by catalyzing its automodification with poly(ADP-ribose) molecules that can include up to 200 ADP-ribose residues and several branching points; by these polymers, PARP-1 may nocovalently interact with other proteins and alter their functions. PARP-1 binds to DNA and is activated by free ends interacting with several other DNA damage checkpoint proteins. Thus, PARPs may target specific signal network proteins via poly(ADP-ribose) and regulate their domain functions. Poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation plays a central role in genome stability and is involved in DNA replication and repair, gene expression, cell differentiation and transformation. We have shown that a loss of PARP-1 activity is a critical event in the early molecular steps of the hepatocarcinogenesis process. Moreover, a prompt increase in this enzymatic activity is linked not only to the presence of DNA free ends but is linked also to the start of DNA synthesis. More recently, we have reported that PARP-1 is involved in hormone-mediated gene expression in vitro and in vivo during rat liver regeneration.  相似文献   

13.
The post-translational poly ADP-ribosylation of proteins by the nuclear enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (EC 2.4.2.30) involves a complex pattern of ADP-ribose polymers. We have determined how this enzyme produces the various polymer size patterns responsible for altered protein function. The results show that histone H1 and core histones are potent regulators of both the numbers and sizes of ADP-ribose polymers. Each histone induced the polymerase to synthesize a specific polymer size pattern. Various other basic and/or DNA binding proteins as well as other known stimulators of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (spermine, MgCl2, nicked DNA) were ineffective as polymer size modulators. Testing specific proteolytic fragments of histone H1, the polymer number and polymer size modulating activity could be mapped to specific polypeptide domains. The results suggest that histones specifically regulate the polymer termination reaction of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase.  相似文献   

14.
Methodology for the routine and simultaneous determination of the linear and branched residues of poly(ADP-ribose) is described. The main features of the procedure consist of the isolation of poly(ADP-ribose) by affinity chromatography; enzymatic digestion of the polymer to the unique nucleosides ribosyladenosine and diribosyladenosine which are derived from linear and branched residues, respectively; formation of fluorescent derivatives of ribosyladenosine and diribosyladenosine; and identification and quantification of these compounds by high-pressure liquid chromatography coupled with fluorescence detection. A variation on the methodology which allows the detection and quantification of ribosyladenosine and diribosyladenosine without formation of their fluorescent derivatives is also presented. Analyses of several cell lines for their capacity to synthesize poly(ADP-ribose) with a branched structure showed that the proportion of branched sites was constant (0.7-0.8%) in each of the cell lines.  相似文献   

15.
Poly(ADP-ribose) (pADPr) is a large, structurally complex polymer of repeating ADP-ribose units. It is biosynthesized from NAD(+) by poly(ADP-ribose) polymerases (PARPs) and degraded to ADP-ribose by poly(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase. pADPr is involved in many cellular processes and exerts biological function through covalent modification and noncovalent binding to specific proteins. Very little is known about molecular recognition and structure-activity relationships for noncovalent interaction between pADPr and its binding proteins, in part because of lack of access to the polymer on a large scale and to units of defined lengths. We prepared polydisperse pADPr from PARP1 and tankyrase 1 at the hundreds of milligram scale by optimizing enzymatic synthesis and scaling up chromatographic purification methods. We developed and calibrated an anion exchange chromatography method to assign pADPr size and scaled it up to purify defined length polymers on the milligram scale. Furthermore, we present a pADPr profiling method to characterize the polydispersity of pADPr produced by PARPs under different reaction conditions and find that substrate proteins affect the pADPr size distribution. These methods will facilitate structural and biochemical studies of pADPr and its binding proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Poly(ADP-ribose) is synthesized and degraded by poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase and glycohydrolase, respectively. We have reconstituted in vitro two turnover systems containing these two enzymes. We have measured the kinetics of NAD consumption and polymer accumulation during turnover. The combined action of the two enzymes (i.e., turnover) generates a steady state of polymer quantity. The glycohydrolase determines the time and the level at which this steady state of total polymer is reached. A major observation is that the size and calculated density of polymer bound to the total polymerase molecules is tightly regulated by the rate of polymer turnover. On the polymerase, an increase in the rate of polymer turnover does not affect the mean polymer size, but reduces the polymer density on the enzyme (i.e., the number of polymer chains per polymerase molecule). In the absence of glycohydrolase and at low histone H1 concentration (less than 1.5 micrograms/ml), poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase preferentially automodifies itself instead of modifying histone H1. In contrast, under turnover conditions, oligomer accumulation on histone H1 was greatly increased, with almost 40% of all the polymer present on H1 after 5 min of turnover. Although turnover conditions were necessary for histone H1 labelling, there was no difference between the fast and the slow turnover systems as concerns the proportion of histone H1 labelling, although the mean polymer size on histone H1 was decreased with increasing turnover rate. Due to its small size, polymer is not degraded by the glycohydrolase and accumulates on histone H1 during turnover. These data suggest that the glycohydrolase modulates the level of poly(ADP-ribosyl)action of different proteins in two ways; by degrading shorter polymers at a slower rate and probably by competing with the polymerase for polymer.  相似文献   

17.
Endogenous polymers of ADP-ribose are associated with the nuclear matrix   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The metabolism of nuclear polymers of ADP-ribose has been implicated in several chromatin-associated processes. However, the distribution of endogenous ADP-ribose polymers in the nucleus or within different fractions of chromatin has not been studied. Using a procedure which allowed the radiolabeling and detection of endogenous polymers of ADP-ribose, we have analyzed the nuclear distribution of these polymers in untreated cells and in cells subjected to hyperthermia, N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine, or both. When isolated nuclei from cells subjected to any of these conditions were digested with micrococcal nuclease such that 80% of the DNA was released, 90% of the total poly(ADP-ribose) remained with the micrococcal nuclease resistant chromatin fraction. When nuclear matrix fractions were prepared by exhaustive DNase I digestion in combination with three different salt extraction procedures (2 M NaCl, 300 mM (NH4)2SO4 or 25 mM lithium diiodosalicylate), the matrices contained less than 1% of the total nuclear DNA but 50 to 70% of the total poly(ADP-ribose). These data suggest that the nuclear matrix may be a major site of poly(ADP-ribose) metabolism.  相似文献   

18.
We have developed a novel enzyme assay that allows the simultaneous determination of noncovalent interactions of poly(ADP-ribose) with nuclear proteins as well as poly(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase (PARG) activity by high resolution polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. ADP-ribose chains between 2 and 70 residues in size were enzymatically synthesized with pure poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) and were purified by affinity chromatography on a boronate resin following alkaline release from protein. This preparation of polymers of ADP-ribose was used as the enzyme substrate for purified PARG. We also obtained the nuclear matrix fraction from rat liver nuclei and measured the enzyme activity of purified PARG in the presence or absence of either histone proteins or nuclear matrix proteins. Both resulted in a marked inhibition of PARG activity as determined by the decrease in the formation of monomeric ADP-ribose. The inhibition of PARG was presumably due to the non-covalent interactions of these proteins with free ADP-ribose polymers. Thus, the presence of histone and nuclear matrix proteins should be taken into consideration when measuring PARG activity.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Covalent linkage of ADP-ribose polymers to proteins is generally considered essential for the posttranslational modification of protein function by poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation. Here we demonstrate an alternative way by which ADP-ribose polymers may modify protein function. Using a highly stringent binding assay in combination with DNA sequencing gels, we found that ADP-ribose polymers bind noncovalently to a specific group of chromatin proteins, i.e., histones H1, H2A, H2B, H3, and H4 and protamine. This binding resisted strong acids, chaotropes, detergents, and high salt concentrations but was readily reversible by DNA. When the interactions of variously sized linear and branched polymer molecules with individual histone species were tested, the hierarchies of binding were branched polymers greater than long, linear polymers greater than short, linear polymers and H1 greater than H2A greater than H2B = H3 greater than H4. For histone H1, the target of polymer binding was the carboxy-terminal domain, which is also the domain most effective in inducing higher order structure of chromatin. Thus, noncovalent interactions may be involved in the modification of histone functions in chromatin.  相似文献   

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