Hindering the strand passage reaction of human topoisomerase IIα without disturbing DNA cleavage, ATP hydrolysis, or the operation of the N-terminal clamp

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Standard

Hindering the strand passage reaction of human topoisomerase IIα without disturbing DNA cleavage, ATP hydrolysis, or the operation of the N-terminal clamp. / Oestergaard, Vibe H.; Giangiacomo, Laura; Bjergbaek, Lotte; Knudsen, Birgitta R.; Andersen, Anni H.

I: Journal of Biological Chemistry, Bind 279, Nr. 27, 02.07.2004, s. 28093-28099.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Oestergaard, VH, Giangiacomo, L, Bjergbaek, L, Knudsen, BR & Andersen, AH 2004, 'Hindering the strand passage reaction of human topoisomerase IIα without disturbing DNA cleavage, ATP hydrolysis, or the operation of the N-terminal clamp', Journal of Biological Chemistry, bind 279, nr. 27, s. 28093-28099. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M402120200

APA

Oestergaard, V. H., Giangiacomo, L., Bjergbaek, L., Knudsen, B. R., & Andersen, A. H. (2004). Hindering the strand passage reaction of human topoisomerase IIα without disturbing DNA cleavage, ATP hydrolysis, or the operation of the N-terminal clamp. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(27), 28093-28099. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M402120200

Vancouver

Oestergaard VH, Giangiacomo L, Bjergbaek L, Knudsen BR, Andersen AH. Hindering the strand passage reaction of human topoisomerase IIα without disturbing DNA cleavage, ATP hydrolysis, or the operation of the N-terminal clamp. Journal of Biological Chemistry. 2004 jul. 2;279(27):28093-28099. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M402120200

Author

Oestergaard, Vibe H. ; Giangiacomo, Laura ; Bjergbaek, Lotte ; Knudsen, Birgitta R. ; Andersen, Anni H. / Hindering the strand passage reaction of human topoisomerase IIα without disturbing DNA cleavage, ATP hydrolysis, or the operation of the N-terminal clamp. I: Journal of Biological Chemistry. 2004 ; Bind 279, Nr. 27. s. 28093-28099.

Bibtex

@article{1beb2ab83cd641a081f09447fd9385bd,
title = "Hindering the strand passage reaction of human topoisomerase IIα without disturbing DNA cleavage, ATP hydrolysis, or the operation of the N-terminal clamp",
abstract = "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 IIα 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 IIα 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.",
author = "Oestergaard, {Vibe H.} and Laura Giangiacomo and Lotte Bjergbaek and Knudsen, {Birgitta R.} and Andersen, {Anni H.}",
year = "2004",
month = jul,
day = "2",
doi = "10.1074/jbc.M402120200",
language = "English",
volume = "279",
pages = "28093--28099",
journal = "Journal of Biological Chemistry",
issn = "0021-9258",
publisher = "American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.",
number = "27",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Hindering the strand passage reaction of human topoisomerase IIα without disturbing DNA cleavage, ATP hydrolysis, or the operation of the N-terminal clamp

AU - Oestergaard, Vibe H.

AU - Giangiacomo, Laura

AU - Bjergbaek, Lotte

AU - Knudsen, Birgitta R.

AU - Andersen, Anni H.

PY - 2004/7/2

Y1 - 2004/7/2

N2 - 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 IIα 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 IIα 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.

AB - 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 IIα 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 IIα 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.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=3142580462&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1074/jbc.M402120200

DO - 10.1074/jbc.M402120200

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 15123700

AN - SCOPUS:3142580462

VL - 279

SP - 28093

EP - 28099

JO - Journal of Biological Chemistry

JF - Journal of Biological Chemistry

SN - 0021-9258

IS - 27

ER -

ID: 238744367