Discovery of a New Pyrimidine Dimer in Bacteriophage T4 DNA

BioScience ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 33 (8) ◽  
pp. 517
Author(s):  
John D. Childs ◽  
Michael J. Ellison ◽  
Raymond Pilon
1989 ◽  
Vol 259 (3) ◽  
pp. 751-759 ◽  
Author(s):  
V Bailly ◽  
B Sente ◽  
W G Verly

Bacteriophage-T4 UV endonuclease nicks the C(3′)-O-P bond 3′ to AP (apurinic or apyrimidinic) sites by a beta-elimination reaction. The breakage of this bond is sometimes followed by the nicking of the C(5′)-O-P bond 5′ to the AP site, leaving a 3′-phosphate end; delta-elimination is proposed as a mechanism to explain this second reaction. The AP site formed when this enzyme acts on a pyrimidine dimer in a polynucleotide chain undergoes the same nicking reactions. Micrococcus luteus UV endonuclease also nicks the C(3′)-O-P bond 3′ to AP sites by a beta-elimination reaction. No subsequent delta-elimination was observed, but this might be due to the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol in the enzyme preparation.


1997 ◽  
Vol 325 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans E. KROKAN ◽  
Rune STANDAL ◽  
Geir SLUPPHAUG

A wide range of cytotoxic and mutagenic DNA bases are removed by different DNA glycosylases, which initiate the base excision repair pathway. DNA glycosylases cleave the N-glycosylic bond between the target base and deoxyribose, thus releasing a free base and leaving an apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site. In addition, several DNA glycosylases are bifunctional, since they also display a lyase activity that cleaves the phosphodiester backbone 3′ to the AP site generated by the glycosylase activity. Structural data and sequence comparisons have identified common features among many of the DNA glycosylases. Their active sites have a structure that can only bind extrahelical target bases, as observed in the crystal structure of human uracil-DNA glycosylase in a complex with double-stranded DNA. Nucleotide flipping is apparently actively facilitated by the enzyme. With bacteriophage T4 endonuclease V, a pyrimidine-dimer glycosylase, the enzyme gains access to the target base by flipping out an adenine opposite to the dimer. A conserved helix–hairpin–helix motif and an invariant Asp residue are found in the active sites of more than 20 monofunctional and bifunctional DNA glycosylases. In bifunctional DNA glycosylases, the conserved Asp is thought to deprotonate a conserved Lys, forming an amine nucleophile. The nucleophile forms a covalent intermediate (Schiff base) with the deoxyribose anomeric carbon and expels the base. Deoxyribose subsequently undergoes several transformations, resulting in strand cleavage and regeneration of the free enzyme. The catalytic mechanism of monofunctional glycosylases does not involve covalent intermediates. Instead the conserved Asp residue may activate a water molecule which acts as the attacking nucleophile.


Nature ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 286 (5769) ◽  
pp. 182-185 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric H. Radany ◽  
Errol C. Friedberg

1988 ◽  
Vol 202 (3) ◽  
pp. 683-684 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kosuke Morikawa ◽  
Michiko Tsujimoto ◽  
Morio Ikehara ◽  
Tetsuya Inaoka ◽  
Eiko Ohtsuka

Genetics ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 107 (4) ◽  
pp. 525-536 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark A Conkling ◽  
John W Drake

ABSTRACT When ultraviolet-irradiated bacteriophage T4 is assayed at plating temperatures ranging from 20° to 40°, its survival increases at the higher temperatures. This "thermal rescue" requires an intact WXY system but not the denV pyrimidine dimer excision system. Mutation rates decrease with increasing temperature, indicating that some lesions processed in a mutagenic manner at lower temperatures are accurately repaired or circumvented at high temperatures. When both the cold sensitivity of UV survival in the wild type and the temperature sensitivity of newly isolated ts mutants of uvsX and uvsY were used, expression of the WXY system was monitored in temperature shift UV survival experiments and was found to be biphasic: the uvsX and uvsY functions increase UV survival in two increments, one at an early and another at a late stage of infection. The uvsW function, however, increases UV survival only early in infection.


2021 ◽  
Vol 265 ◽  
pp. 04009
Author(s):  
Alexandra N. Karmanova ◽  
Yinhua Lu ◽  
Andrei A. Zimin

Compost is a promising source of thermotolerant enzymes for their application in biotechnology. Homologues of bacteriophage T4 DNA glycosylase can find their application in pharmaceuticals and perfumery. Five homologues of glycosylase of pyrimidine dimers of bacteriophage T4, a product of the denV gene, were found by comparing using the DELTA-BLAST algorithm with the compost metagenome proteins. Phylogenetic analysis of the found sequences of enzyme homologues was carried out using the Maximum Likelihood algorithm in the MegaX software package. Thus, an interesting spectrum of promising proteins, homologues of the repair enzyme, DNA glycosylase of pyrimidine dimers of bacteriophage T4, was found. After structural modeling, they can be tested for their thermal stability and tested as a basis for therapeutic and prophylactic drugs.


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