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Single-strand DNA cleavages by eukaryotic topoisomerase II 总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7
M T Muller J R Spitzner J A DiDonato V B Mehta K Tsutsui K Tsutsui 《Biochemistry》1988,27(22):8369-8379
A new purification method for eukaryotic type II DNA topoisomerase (EC 5.99.1.3) is described, and the avian enzyme has been purified and characterized. An analysis of the cleavage reaction has revealed that topoisomerase II can be trapped as a DNA-enzyme covalent complex containing DNA with double-stranded and single-stranded breaks. The data indicate that DNA cleavage by topoisomerase II proceeds by two asymmetric single-stranded cleavage and resealing steps on opposite strands (separated by 4 bp) with independent probabilities of being trapped upon addition of a protein denaturant. Single-strand cleavages were directly demonstrated at both strong and weak topoisomerase II sites. Thus, a match to the vertebrate topoisomerase II consensus sequence (sequence; see text) (N is any base, and cleavage occurs between -1 and +1) [Spitzner, J.R., & Muller, M.T. (1988) Nucleic Acids Res. 16, 5533-5556)] does not predict whether a cleavage site will be single stranded or double stranded; however, sites cleaved by topoisomerase II that contain two conserved consensus bases (G residue at +2 and T at +4) generally yield double-strand cleavage whereas recognition sites lacking these two consensus elements yield single-strand cleavages. Finally, single-strand cleavages with topoisomerase II do not appear to be an artifact caused by damaged enzyme molecules since topoisomerase II in freshly prepared, crude extracts also shows the property of single-strand cleavages. 相似文献
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Regulation of the Escherichia coli DNA topoisomerase I gene by DNA supercoiling. 总被引:24,自引:4,他引:24 下载免费PDF全文
Y C Tse-Dinh 《Nucleic acids research》1985,13(13):4751-4763
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DNA supercoiling and eukaryotic transcription--cause and effect 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
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We have developed a procedure for the simultaneous purification of DNA topoisomerase I and II from calf thymus. Both enzymes were first extracted from isolated nucleoprotein complexes. After batchwise chromatography on hydroxylapatite the two enzyme activities were separated on a FPLC phenylsuperose column. The enzymes were further purified by a second chromatography on phenylsepharose (topo I) or FPLC Mono Q (topo II). The purification can be finished within three days, yielding 0.5-1.0 mg quantities of homogeneous, enzymatic active preparations of the two proteins from 200 g of starting material. 相似文献
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A H Corbett E L Zechiedrich R S Lloyd N Osheroff 《The Journal of biological chemistry》1991,266(29):19666-19671
The effects of short wave ultraviolet (UV)-induced DNA lesions on the catalytic activity of Drosophila melanogaster topoisomerase II were investigated. The presence of these photoproducts impaired the enzyme's ability to relax negatively supercoiled pBR322 plasmid molecules. As determined by DNA photolyase-catalyzed photoreactivation experiments, enzyme inhibition was due to the presence of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in the DNA. When 10-20 cyclobutane dimers were present per plasmid, the initial velocity of topoisomerase II-catalyzed DNA relaxation was inhibited approximately 50%. Decreased relaxation activity correlated with an inhibition of the DNA strand passage step of the enzyme's catalytic cycle. In contrast, UV-induced photoproducts did not alter the prestrand passage DNA cleavage/religation equilibrium of topoisomerase II either in the absence or presence of antineoplastic agents. Results of the present study demonstrate that the repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers is important for the efficient catalytic function of topoisomerase II. 相似文献
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Drosophila melanogaster topoisomerase II is capable of joining phi X174 (+) strand DNA that it has cleaved to duplex oligonucleotide acceptor molecules by an intermolecular ligation reaction (Gale, K. C. and Osheroff, N. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 9538-9545). In order to investigate potential mechanisms for topoisomerase II-mediated DNA recombination, this intrinsic enzyme activity was further characterized. Intermolecular DNA ligation proceeded in a time-dependent fashion and was concentration-dependent with respect to oligonucleotide. The covalent linkage between phi X174 (+) strand DNA and acceptor molecules was confirmed by Southern analysis and alkaline gel electrophoresis. Topoisomerase II-mediated intermolecular DNA ligation required the oligonucleotide to contain a 3'-OH terminus. Moreover, the reaction was dependent on the presence of a divalent cation, was inhibited by salt, and was not affected by the presence of ATP. The enzyme was capable of ligating phi X174 (+) strand DNA to double-stranded oligonucleotides that contained 5'-overhang, 3'-overhand, or blunt ends. Single-stranded, nicked, or gapped oligonucleotides also could be used as acceptor molecules. These results demonstrate that the type II enzyme has an intrinsic ability to mediate illegitimate DNA recombination in vitro and suggests possible roles for topoisomerase II in nucleic acid recombination in vivo. 相似文献
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Archaeal histones have significant sequence and structural similarity to their eukaryal counterparts. However, whereas DNA is wrapped in negatively constrained supercoils in eukaryal nucleosomes, it has been reported that DNA is positively supercoiled by archaeal nucleosomes. This was inferred from experiments performed at low temperature and low salt concentrations, conditions markedly different from those expected for many archaea in vivo. Here, we report that the archaeal histones HMf and HTz wrap DNA in negatively constrained supercoils in buffers containing potassium glutamate (K-Glu) above 300 mM, either at 37 degrees C or at 70 degrees C. This suggests that high salt concentrations allow an alternate archaeal nucleosome topology: a left-handed tetramer rather than the right-handed tetramer seen in low salt conditions. In contrast, the archaeal histone MkaH produces DNA negative supercoiling at all salt concentrations, suggesting that this duality of structure is not possible for this atypical protein, which is formed by the association of two histone folds in a single polypeptide. These results extend the already remarkable similarity between archaeal and eukaryal nucleosomes, as it has been recently shown that DNA can be wrapped into either positive or negative supercoils around the H3/H4 tetramer. Negative supercoiling could correspond to the predominant physiological mode of DNA supercoiling in archaeal nucleosomes. 相似文献
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Histone H1 inhibits the catalytic activity of topoisomerase I in vitro. The relaxation activity of the enzyme is partially inhibited at a molar ratio of one histone H1 molecule per 40 base pairs (bp) of DNA and completely inhibited at a molar ratio of one histone H1 molecule per 10 base pairs of DNA. Increasing the amount of enzyme at a constant histone H1 to DNA ratio antagonizes the inhibition. This indicates that topoisomerase I and histone H1 compete for binding sites on the substrate DNA molecules. Consistent with this we show on the sequence level that histone H1 inhibits the cleavage reaction of topoisomerase I on linear DNA fragments. 相似文献
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Cleavage of DNA by mammalian DNA topoisomerase II 总被引:46,自引:0,他引:46
L F Liu T C Rowe L Yang K M Tewey G L Chen 《The Journal of biological chemistry》1983,258(24):15365-15370
Using the P4 unknotting assay, DNA topoisomerase II has been purified from several mammalian cells. Similar to prokaryotic DNA gyrase, mammalian DNA topoisomerase II can cleave double-stranded DNA and be trapped as a covalent protein-DNA complex. This cleavage reaction requires protein denaturant treatment of the topoisomerase II-DNA complex and is reversible with respect to salt and temperature. The product after reversal of the cleavage reaction remains supertwisted, suggesting that the two ends of the putatively broken DNA are held tightly by the topoisomerase. Alternatively, the enzyme-DNA interaction is noncovalent, and the covalent linking of topoisomerase to DNA is induced by the protein denaturant. Detailed characterization of the cleavage products has revealed that topoisomerase II cuts DNA with a four-base stagger and is covalently linked to the protruding 5'-phosphoryl ends of each broken DNA strand. Calf thymus DNA topoisomerase II cuts SV40 DNA at multiple and specific sites. However, no sequence homology has been found among the cleavage sites as determined by direct nucleotide-sequencing studies. 相似文献
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The basis for camptothecin enhancement of DNA breakage by eukaryotic topoisomerase I. 总被引:13,自引:3,他引:10 下载免费PDF全文
The eukaryotic topoisomerase I (topo I) is the target of the cytotoxic alkaloid camptothecin (CTT). In vitro, CTT enhances the breakage of DNA by topo I when the reaction is stopped with detergent. Although breakage at some sites is enhanced to a great extent while breakage at others is enhanced only minimally, CTT does not significantly change the breakage specificity of topo I in vitro. It has been suggested that CTT acts by slowing the reclosure step of the nicking-closing reaction. To test this hypothesis, we have measured the rate of reclosure for different break sites in the presence of CTT after adding 0.5 M NaCl to a standard low salt reaction. In support of the hypothesis, we find that topo I-mediated DNA breakage is enhanced the greatest at those sites where closure of the break is the slowest. These results suggest a mechanism for the toxicity of CTT in vivo. 相似文献
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Inhibitors of eubacterial and eukaryotic DNA topoisomerases type II exhibited different effects on chloroplasts of the flagellateEuglena gracilis. Antibacterial agents (cinoxacin, nalidixic and oxolinic acids, ciprofloxacin, enoxacin, norfloxacin and ofloxacin) from the group of quinolones and coumarins (coumermycin A1, clorobiocin and novobiocin) — all inhibitors of prokaryotic DNA topoisomerase II — were very potent eliminators of chloroplasts fromE. gracilis. In contrast, antitumor drugs (adriamycin, etoposide, teniposide and mitoxantrone) — antagonists of the eukaryotic counterpart — did not affect these semiautonomous photosynthetic organelles. These findings point out again the close evolutionary relationships between eubacteria and chloroplasts and are in agreement with the hypothesis of an endosymbiotic origin of chloroplasts. 相似文献
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Nuclease protection by Drosophila DNA topoisomerase II. Enzyme/DNA contacts at the strong topoisomerase II cleavage sites 总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13
A DNA consensus sequence for topoisomerase II cleavage sites was derived previously based on a statistical analysis of the nucleotide sequences around 16 sites that can be efficiently cleaved by Drosophila topoisomerase II (Sander, M., and Hsieh, T. (1985) Nucleic Acids Res. 13, 1057-1072). A synthetic 21-mer DNA sequence containing this cleavage consensus sequence was cloned into a plasmid vector, and DNA topoisomerase II can cleave this sequence at the position predicted by the cleavage consensus sequence. DNase I footprint analysis showed that topoisomerase II can protect a region of approximately 25 nucleotides in both strands of the duplex DNA, with the cleavage site located near the center of the protected region. Similar correlation between the DNase I footprints and strong topoisomerase II cleavage sites has been observed in the intergenic region of the divergent HSP70 genes. This analysis therefore suggests that the strong DNA cleavage sites of Drosophila topoisomerase II likely correspond to specific DNA-binding sites of this enzyme. Furthermore, the extent of DNA contacts made by this enzyme suggests that eucaryotic topoisomerase II, in contrast to bacterial DNA bacterial DNA gyrase, cannot form a complex with extensive DNA wrapping around the enzyme. The absence of DNA wrapping is probably the mechanistic basis for the lack of DNA supercoiling action for eucaryotic topoisomerase II. 相似文献
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L M Fisher C A Austin R Hopewell E E Margerrison M Oram S Patel K Plummer J H Sng S Sreedharan 《Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences》1992,336(1276):83-91
Bacterial DNA gyrase and the eukaryotic type II DNA topoisomerases are ATPases that catalyse the introduction or removal of DNA supercoils and the formation and resolution of DNA knots and catenanes. Gyrase is unique in using ATP to drive the energetically unfavourable negative supercoiling of DNA, an example of mechanochemical coupling: in contrast, eukaryotic topoisomerase II relaxes DNA in an ATP-requiring reaction. In each case, the enzyme-DNA complex acts as a 'gate' mediating the passage of a DNA segment through a transient enzyme-bridged double-strand DNA break. We are using a variety of genetic and enzymic approaches to probe the nature of these complexes and their mechanism of action. Recent studies will be described focusing on the role of DNA wrapping on the A2B2 gyrase complex, subunit activities uncovered by using ATP analogues and the coumarin and quinolone inhibitors, and the identification and functions of discrete subunit domains. Homology between gyrase subunits and the A2 homodimer of eukaryotic topo II suggests functional conservation between these proteins. The role of ATP hydrolysis by these topoisomerases will be discussed in regard to other energy coupling systems. 相似文献