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1.
We have constructed a series of clones encoding N-terminal fragments of human DNA topoisomerase IIalpha. All fragments exhibit DNA-dependent ATPase activity. Fragment 1-420 shows hyperbolic dependence of ATPase on DNA concentration, whereas fragment 1-453 shows hyperstimulation at low ratios of DNA to enzyme, a phenomenon found previously with the full-length enzyme. The minimum length of DNA found to stimulate the ATPase activity was approximately 10 bp; fragments >or=32 bp manifest the hyperstimulation phenomenon. Molecular mass studies show that fragment 1-453 is a monomer in the absence of nucleotides and a dimer in the presence of nucleotide triphosphate. The results are consistent with the role of the N-terminal domain of topoisomerase II as an ATP-operated clamp that dimerises in the presence of ATP. The hyperstimulation effect can be interpreted in terms of a "piggy-back binding" model for protein-DNA interaction.  相似文献   

2.
Epipodophyllotoxins are effective antitumour drugs that trap eukaryotic DNA topoisomerase II in a covalent complex with DNA. Based on DNA cleavage assays, the mode of interaction of these drugs was proposed to involve amino acid residues of the catalytic site. An in vitro binding study, however, revealed two potential binding sites for etoposide within human DNA topoisomerase IIα (htopoIIα), one in the catalytic core of the enzyme and one in the ATP-binding N-terminal domain. Here we have tested how N-terminal mutations that reduce the affinity of the site for etoposide or ATP affect the sensitivity of yeast cells to etoposide. Surprisingly, when introduced into full-length enzymes, mutations that lower the drug binding capacity of the N-terminal domain in vitro render yeast more sensitive to epipodophyllotoxins. Consistently, when the htopoIIα N-terminal domain alone is overexpressed in the presence of yeast topoII, cells become more resistant to etoposide. Point mutations that weaken etoposide binding eliminate this resistance phenotype. We argue that the N-terminal ATP-binding pocket competes with the active site of the holoenzyme for binding etoposide both in cis and in trans with different outcomes, suggesting that each topoisomerase II monomer has two non-equivalent drug-binding sites.  相似文献   

3.
DNA topoisomerase II is an essential enzyme that releases a topological strain in DNA by introduction of transient breaks in one DNA helix through which another helix is passed. While changing DNA topology, ATP is required to drive the enzyme through a series of conformational changes dependent on interdomain communication. We have characterized a human topoisomerase IIalpha enzyme with a two-amino acid insertion at position 351 in the transducer domain. The mutation specifically abolishes the DNA strand passage event of the enzyme, probably because of a sterical hindrance of T-segment transport. Thus, the enzyme fails to decatenate and relax DNA, even though it is fully capable of ATP hydrolysis, closure of the N-terminal clamp, and DNA cleavage. The cleavage activity is increased, suggesting that the transducer domain has a role in regulating DNA cleavage. Furthermore, the enzyme has retained a tendency to increase DNA cleavage upon nucleotide binding and also responds to DNA with elevated ATP hydrolysis. However, the DNA-mediated increase in ATP hydrolysis is lower than that obtained with the wild-type enzyme but similar to that of a cleavage-deficient topoisomerase IIalpha enzyme. Our results strongly suggest that the strand passage event is required for efficient DNA stimulation of topoisomerase II-mediated ATP hydrolysis, whereas the stimulation occurs independent of the DNA cleavage reaction per se. A comparison of the strand passage deficient-enzyme described here and the cleavage-deficient enzyme may have applications in other studies where a clear distinction between strand passage and topoisomerase II-mediated DNA cleavage is desirable.  相似文献   

4.
DNA topoisomerase IIα (TopoIIα) is an essential chromosome-associated enzyme with activity implicated in the resolution of tangled DNA at centromeres before anaphase onset. However, the regulatory mechanism of TopoIIα activity is not understood. Here, we show that PIASy-mediated small ubiquitin-like modifier 2/3 (SUMO2/3) modification of TopoIIα strongly inhibits TopoIIα decatenation activity. Using mass spectrometry and biochemical analysis, we demonstrate that TopoIIα is SUMOylated at lysine 660 (Lys660), a residue located in the DNA gate domain, where both DNA cleavage and religation take place. Remarkably, loss of SUMOylation on Lys660 eliminates SUMOylation-dependent inhibition of TopoIIα, which indicates that Lys660 SUMOylation is critical for PIASy-mediated inhibition of TopoIIα activity. Together, our findings provide evidence for the regulation of TopoIIα activity on mitotic chromosomes by SUMOylation. Therefore, we propose a novel mechanism for regulation of centromeric DNA catenation during mitosis by PIASy-mediated SUMOylation of TopoIIα.  相似文献   

5.
Dickey JS  Osheroff N 《Biochemistry》2005,44(34):11546-11554
The enzymatic function of the C-terminal domain of eukaryotic topoisomerase II is not well defined. This region of the enzyme is highly variable and hydrophilic and contains nuclear localization signals and phosphorylation sites. In contrast to eukaryotic topoisomerase II, type II enzymes from chlorella virus completely lack the C-terminal domain. These viral enzymes are characterized by a robust DNA cleavage activity, high coordination between their two active site tyrosyl residues, and reduced sensitivity to anticancer drugs. As a first step toward characterizing the contribution of the C-terminal domain of human topoisomerase IIalpha to enzyme function, the protein was truncated at amino acid 1175, which corresponds to the C-terminal residue of Paramecium bursaria chlorella virus-1 topoisomerase II as determined by BLAST sequence alignment. Although the overall catalytic activity of the resulting enzyme, hTop2alphaDelta1175, was lower than that of full-length topoisomerase IIalpha, the mutant protein displayed a double-stranded DNA cleavage activity that was approximately 2-3-fold higher. While the DNA breaks created by hTop2alphaDelta1175 were primarily double stranded, cuts generated by topoisomerase IIalpha were primarily single stranded. Thus, the enhanced cleavage observed for hTop2alphaDelta1175 appears to be due, at least in part, to an increase in active site coordination. Finally, hTop2alphaDelta1175 displayed a distinctly lower susceptibility to anticancer agents than did topoisomerase IIalpha, despite the fact that it showed a similar binding affinity for etoposide. Therefore, the C-terminal domain of human topoisomerase IIalpha appears to play significant roles in modulating the DNA cleavage/ligation reaction of the enzyme and its response to anticancer agents.  相似文献   

6.
It is known that topoisomerase IIalpha is phosphorylated by several kinases. To elucidate the role of phosphorylation of topoisomerase IIalpha in the cell cycle, we have examined the cell cycle behavior of phosphorylated topoisomerase IIalpha in HeLa cells using antibodies against several phospho-oligopeptides of this enzyme. Here we demonstrate that serine1212 in topoisomerase IIalpha is phosphorylated only in the mitotic phase. Using an antibody against an oligopeptide containing phosphoserine-1212 in topoisomerase IIalpha (PS1212), subcellular localization of topoisomerase IIalpha phosphorylated at serine1212 was examined by indirect immunofluorescence staining, and compared with that of overall topoisomerase IIalpha. Serine1212-phosphorylated topoisomerase IIalpha was localized specifically on mitotic chromosomes, but not on interphase chromosomes; this result contrasts with overall topoisomerase IIalpha which was observed on chomosomes in both interphase and mitosis. Serine1212-phosphorylated topoisomerase lIalpha first appeared on chromosome arms in prophase, became concentrated on the centromeres in metaphase, and disappeared in early telophase. In addition, ICRF-193, a catalytic inhibitor of topoisomerase II, prevented accumulation of serine1212-phosphorylated topoisomerase IIalpha at the centromeres. These results indicate that serine1212 of topoisomerase IIalpha is phosphorylated specifically during mitosis, and suggest that the serine1212-phosphorylated topoisomerase IIalpha acts on resolving topological constraint progressively from the chromosome arm to the centromere during metaphase chromosome condensation.  相似文献   

7.
Recently, we reported that the monoclonal antibody specific for human DNA topoisomerase IIalpha, Ki-S1, stains not only the nuclei of human A431 cells but also extranuclear structures suggestive of centrosomes (Meyer, K. N., Kjeldsen, E., Straub, T., Knudsen, B. K., Kikuchi, A., Hickson, I. D., Kreipe, H., and Boege, F. (1997) J. Cell Biol. 136, 775-788). Here, we confirm colocalization of Ki-S1 with the centrosomal marker gamma-tubulin. In addition, we show labeling of centrosomes by peptide antibodies against the N and C termini of human topoisomerase IIalpha. Probing Western blots of isolated centrosomes with topoisomerase IIalpha antibodies, we demonstrate a protein band of 170 kDa. Moreover, isolated centrosomes exhibited DNA decatenation and relaxation activity correlated to the amount of topoisomerase IIalpha protein in the same way as seen in the pure recombinant enzyme. Topoisomerase IIalpha epitopes could not be removed from centrosomes by salt extraction, DNase treatment, or RNase treatment, procedures that completely removed the enzyme from nuclei. Taken together, these observations suggest that active topoisomerase IIalpha is bound tightly to the centrosome in a DNA-independent manner. Because such centrosomal topoisomerase IIalpha was also present in quiescent lymphocytes devoid of topoisomerase IIalpha in the nuclei, we assume that it might be a long-lived storage form.  相似文献   

8.
In this study we have investigated the role of topoisomerase (topo) IIalpha trafficking in cellular drug resistance. To accomplish this, it was necessary to separate the influence of cell cycle, drug uptake, topo protein levels, and enzyme trafficking on drug sensitivity. Thus, we developed a cell model (called accelerated plateau) using human myeloma H929 cells that reproducibly translocates topo IIalpha to the cytoplasm. Compared to log-phase cells, the cytoplasmic redistribution of topo IIalpha in plateau-phase cells correlated with a 10-fold resistance to VP-16 and a 40-60% reduction in the number of drug-induced double-strand DNA breaks. In addition, 7-fold more VP-16 was necessary to achieve 50% topo IIalpha band depletion, suggesting that there are fewer drug-induced topo-DNA complexes formed in quiescent cells than in log-phase cells. The total cellular amount of topo IIalpha and topo IIbeta protein in log- and plateau-phase cells was similar as determined by Western blot analysis. There was a 25% reduction in S-phase cell number in plateau cells (determined by bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation), while there was no significant difference in the equilibrium concentrations of [(3)H]-VP-16 when log cells were compared with plateau cells. Furthermore, the nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio of topo IIalpha is increased 58-fold in accelerated-plateau H929 cells treated with leptomycin B (LMB) when compared to untreated cells. It appears that the nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling of topo IIalpha, which decreases the amount of nuclear target enzyme, is a major mechanism of drug resistance to topo II inhibitors in plateau-phase myeloma cells.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
DNA topoisomerase (topo) IIalpha, an essential enzyme for cell proliferation, is targeted to a proteasome-dependent degradation pathway when human tumor cells are glucose-starved. Here we show that the topo IIalpha destabilization depends on the newly identified domain, GRDD (glucose-regulated destruction domain), which was mapped to the N-terminal 70-170 amino acid sequence. Indeed, the deletion of GRDD conferred a stable feature on topo IIalpha, whereas the fusion of GRDD rendered green fluorescent protein unstable under glucose starvation conditions. Nuclear localization was a prerequisite for GRDD function, because the inhibition of nuclear translocation resulted in the suppression of GRDD-mediated topo IIalpha degradation. Further, GRDD was identified as an interactive domain for Jab1/CSN5, which promoted the degradation of topo IIalpha in a manner dependent on the MPN (Mpr1p/Prd1p N terminus) domain. Depleting Jab1/CSN5 by antisense oligonucleotide and treating cells with the CSN-associated kinase inhibitor, curcumin, inhibited topo IIalpha degradation induced by glucose starvation. These findings demonstrate that GRDD can act as a stress-activated degron for regulating topo IIalpha stability, possibly through interaction with the MPN domain of Jab1/CSN5.  相似文献   

11.
Bromberg KD  Burgin AB  Osheroff N 《Biochemistry》2003,42(12):3393-3398
Several important antineoplastic drugs kill cells by increasing levels of topoisomerase II-mediated DNA breaks. These compounds act by two distinct mechanisms. Agents such as etoposide inhibit the ability of topoisomerase II to ligate enzyme-linked DNA breaks. Conversely, compounds such as quinolones have little effect on ligation and are believed to stimulate the forward rate of topoisomerase II-mediated DNA cleavage. The fact that there are two scissile bonds per double-stranded DNA break implies that there are two sites for drug action in every enzyme-DNA cleavage complex. However, since agents in the latter group are believed to act by locally perturbing DNA structure, it is possible that quinolone interactions at a single scissile bond are sufficient to distort both strands of the double helix and generate an enzyme-mediated double-stranded DNA break. Therefore, an oligonucleotide system was established to further define the actions of topoisomerase II-targeted drugs that stimulate the forward rate of DNA cleavage. Results indicate that the presence of the quinolone CP-115,953 at one scissile bond increased the extent of enzyme-mediated scission at the opposite scissile bond and was sufficient to stimulate the formation of a double-stranded DNA break by human topoisomerase IIalpha. These findings stand in marked contrast to those for etoposide, which must be present at both scissile bonds to stabilize a double-stranded DNA break [Bromberg, K. D., et al. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 7406-7412]. Moreover, they underscore important mechanistic differences between drugs that enhance DNA cleavage and those that inhibit ligation.  相似文献   

12.
DNA topoisomerase (topo) II is an essential nuclear enzyme that plays an important role in DNA metabolism and chromosome organization. In the present study, we expressed human topo IIalpha in mammalian cells by fusion to an enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP). Decatenation assays indicated that the EGFP-topo IIalpha is catalytically active in vitro. Assays for band depletion, growth inhibition, and cytotoxicity by topo II inhibitors suggested that the fusion protein is also functional in vivo. By following its subcellular localization throughout the cell cycle in living cells, we found that the fusion protein is localized to the nucleus and nucleolus at interphase, and it is bound to chromosomal DNA at every stage of mitosis. Of importance, a mutant EGFP-topo IIalpha, in which the active Tyr 805 is replaced by Phe (Y805F) and is catalytically inactive, still binds to chromosomal DNA throughout the cell cycle like the wild-type enzyme. Together, our results suggest that the ability of topo IIalpha to bind to chromosomal DNA in the cell, a presumed requirement for its structural role, can be separated from its catalytic activity.  相似文献   

13.
The widely used anticancer drug etoposide kills cells by increasing levels of topoisomerase II-mediated DNA breaks. While it is known that the drug acts by inhibiting the ability of topoisomerase II to ligate cleaved DNA molecules, the precise mechanism by which it accomplishes this action is not well understood. Because there are two scissile bonds per enzyme-mediated double-stranded DNA break, it has been assumed that there are two sites for etoposide in every cleavage complex. However, it is not known whether the action of etoposide at only one scissile bond is sufficient to stabilize a double-stranded DNA break or whether both drug sites need to be occupied. An oligonucleotide system was utilized to address this important issue. Results of DNA cleavage and ligation assays support a two-drug model for the action of etoposide against human topoisomerase IIalpha. This model postulates that drug interactions at both scissile bonds are required in order to increase enzyme-mediated double-stranded DNA breaks. Etoposide actions at either of the two scissile bonds appear to be independent of one another, with each individual drug molecule stabilizing a strand-specific nick rather than a double-stranded DNA break. This finding suggests (at least in the presence of drug) that there is little or no communication between the two promoter active sites of topoisomerase II. The two-drug model has implications for cancer chemotherapy, the cellular processing of etoposide-stabilized enzyme-DNA cleavage complexes, and the catalytic mechanism of eukaryotic topoisomerase II.  相似文献   

14.
The presence of DNA topoisomerase IIalpha was investigated in interphase and metaphase mouse erythroleukemia (MEL) Friend-S cells, and in extracted with 25 mM lithium diiodosalicylate buffer (Lis) nuclei using indirect immunofluorescence. The results showed that DNA topoisomerase IIalpha is localised in the nuclei. In the metaphase cells, we found high concentrations of this enzyme in the mitotic chromosomes. Our results support the idea of the accumulation of DNA topoisomerase IIalpha at the end of the cell cycle. The extractions of nuclei with 25 mM Lis led to the complete depletion of DNA topoisomerase IIalpha from the residual nuclear matrix. Using a high dilution of the first antibody, we established that the high level of heterochromatin compactisation in the interphase nuclei is caused by the high concentration of DNA topoisomerase IIalpha.  相似文献   

15.
We introduced a series of Pro substitutions within and near the α4 helix, a part of the breakage/rejoining region, in human DNA topoisomerase IIα, and analyzed if this region is involved in determination of anti-cancer drug sensitivity in a temperature- sensitive yeast strain (top2-4 allele). Among the 19 mutants generated, H759P and N770P showed resistance to etoposide and doxorubicin at the non-permissive temperature, where cell growth depends on activity of the human enzyme. For these residues, mutants with an Ala substitution were further created, in which H759A also showed resistance to etoposide. H759P, H759A and N770P were expressed, purified and subjected to in vitro measurement of drug sensitivity. They generated lower amounts of the etoposide-induced cleavable complexes, and were also found to have lower decatenation activity than the wild-type. In the crystal structure, the yeast equivalent of His759 is found in the vicinity of the Arg713, a putative anchoring residue of the 3′-side of cleaved DNA strands. These results suggest that His759 and the other α4 helix residues are involved in the enzymatic activity and drug sensitivity of human DNA topoisomerase IIα, via interaction with cleaved DNA.  相似文献   

16.
An expression library for active site mutants of human topoisomerase IIalpha (TOP2alpha) was constructed by replacing the sequence encoding residues 793-808 with a randomized oligonucleotide cassette. This plasmid library was transformed into a temperature-sensitive yeast strain (top2-1), and viable transformants were selected at the restrictive temperature. Among the active TOP2alpha mutants, no substitution was allowed at Tyr(805), the 5' anchor of the cleaved DNA, and only conservative substitutions were allowed at Leu(794), Asp(797), Ala(801), and Arg(804). Thus, these 5 residues are critical for human TOP2alpha activity, and the remaining mutagenized residues are less critical for function. Using the x-ray crystal structure of yeast TOP2 as a structural model, it can be deduced that these 5 functionally important residues lie in a plane. One of the possible functions of this plane may be that it interacts with the DNA substrate upon catalysis. The side chains of Ser(803) and Lys(798), which confer drug resistance, lie adjacent to this plane.  相似文献   

17.
Topoisomerase IIbeta binding to DNA has been analysed by surface plasmon resonance for the first time. Three DNA substrates with different secondary structures were studied, a 40 bp oligonucleotide, a four way junction and a 189 bp bent DNA fragment. We also compared the DNA binding kinetics of both human topoisomerase isoforms under identical conditions. Both alpha and beta isoforms exhibited similar binding kinetics, with average equilibrium dissociation constants ranging between 1.4 and 2.9 nM. We therefore conclude that neither isoform has any preference for a specific DNA substrate under the conditions used in these experiments.  相似文献   

18.
Although centromere function has been conserved through evolution, apparently no interspecies consensus DNA sequence exists. Instead, centromere DNA may be interconnected through the formation of certain DNA structures creating topological binding sites for centromeric proteins. DNA topoisomerase II is a protein, which is located at centromeres, and enzymatic topoisomerase II activity correlates with centromere activity in human cells. It is therefore possible that topoisomerase II recognizes and interacts with the alpha satellite DNA of human centromeres through an interaction with potential DNA structures formed solely at active centromeres. In the present study, human topoisomerase IIα-mediated cleavage at centromeric DNA sequences was examined in vitro. The investigation has revealed that the enzyme recognizes and cleaves a specific hairpin structure formed by alpha satellite DNA. The topoisomerase introduces a single-stranded break at the hairpin loop in a reaction, where DNA ligation is partly uncoupled from the cleavage reaction. A mutational analysis has revealed, which features of the hairpin are required for topoisomerease IIα-mediated cleavage. Based on this a model is discussed, where topoisomerase II interacts with two hairpins as a mediator of centromere cohesion.  相似文献   

19.
Topoisomerase II (topo II) is a dyadic enzyme found in all eukaryotic cells. Topo II is involved in a number of cellular processes related to DNA metabolism, including DNA replication, recombination and the maintenance of genomic stability. We discovered a correlation between the development of postnatal testis and increased binding of topo IIalpha to the chromatin fraction. We used this observation to characterize DNA-binding specificity and catalytic properties of purified testis topo IIalpha. The results indicate that topo IIalpha binds a substrate containing the preferred site with greater affinity and, consequently, catalyzes the conversion of form I to form IV DNA more efficiently in contrast to substrates lacking such a site. Interestingly, topo IIalpha displayed high-affinity and cooperativity in binding to the scaffold associated region. In contrast to the preferred site, however, high-affinity binding of topo IIalpha to the scaffold-associated region failed to result in enhanced catalytic activity. Intriguingly, competition assays involving scaffold-associated region revealed an additional DNA-binding site within the dyadic topo IIalpha. These results implicate a dual role for topo IIalpha in vivo consistent with the notion that its sequestration to the chromatin might play a role in chromosome condensation and decondensation during spermatogenesis.  相似文献   

20.
Apoptotic execution is characterized by dramatic changes in nuclear structure accompanied by cleavage of nuclear proteins by caspases (reviewed in [1]). Cell-free extracts have proved useful for the identification and functional characterization of activities involved in apoptotic execution [2-4] and for the identification of proteins cleaved by caspases [5]. More recent studies have suggested that nuclear disassembly is driven largely by factors activated downstream of caspases [6]. One such factor, the caspase-activated DNase, CAD/CPAN/DFF40 [4,7,8] (CAD) can induce apoptotic chromatin condensation in isolated HeLa cell nuclei in the absence of other cytosolic factors [6,8]. As chromatin condensation occurs even when CAD activity is inhibited, however, CAD cannot be the sole morphogenetic factor triggered by caspases [6]. Here we show that DNA topoisomerase IIalpha (Topo IIalpha), which is essential for both condensation and segregation of daughter chromosomes in mitosis [9], also functions during apoptotic execution. Simultaneous inhibition of Topo IIalpha and caspases completely abolishes apoptotic chromatin condensation. In addition, we show that CAD binds to Topo IIalpha, and that their association enhances the decatenation activity of Topo IIalpha in vitro.  相似文献   

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