Purification of norman murine sarcoma DNA polymerase alpha forms with different DNA template primer binding affinity and different specific activity

1989 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 203-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
V.L. Sylvia ◽  
J.O. Norman ◽  
G.M. Curtin ◽  
J. Stec ◽  
D.L. Busbee
1970 ◽  
Vol 119 (5) ◽  
pp. 839-848 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. G. Lindsay ◽  
S. Berryman ◽  
R. L. P. Adams

1. DNA polymerase activity is present in both nuclear and supernatant fractions prepared from rapidly dividing L929 mouse cells. 2. Nuclear preparations are 2–5 times more active with added native DNA as template and the supernatant fractions show an equivalent preference for heat-denatured DNA. 3. Isolated nuclei can carry on limited DNA synthesis in the absence of added template but are stimulated five- to ten-fold by addition of 50μg of native DNA per assay. 4. DNA polymerase activity can be released from intact nuclei by ultrasonic treatment or by extraction with 1.5m-potassium chloride. 5. The activities in nuclear and supernatant fractions, with their preferred templates, respond similarly to changes in pH and Mg2+ and K+ concentrations. 6. Maximal enzyme activity is approached with 40μg of DNA per assay and activation of the DNA template by treatment with deoxyribonuclease does not decrease the amount of DNA required to reach saturation. 7. The nuclear enzyme, incubated with native DNA, is markedly inhibited by the addition of heat-denatured DNA to the assay. In contrast, the supernatant DNA polymerase activity on denatured templates is not affected by the presence of native DNA. 8. The nuclear enzyme exhibits high activity in the absence of one or more deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates but this is much diminished after partial purification of the enzyme by precipitation at pH5 and fractionation on Sephadex G-200 columns. 9. The 3H-labelled DNA products formed by Sephadex-purified nuclear and supernatant fractions, with their preferred templates, were found to be resistant to treatment with exonuclease I. Alkali-denaturation of the 3H-labelled DNA products rendered them susceptible to attack by exonuclease I. 10. Analysis of the products on alkaline sucrose density gradients suggests that the newly synthesized material may not be covalently bound to the original DNA template. 11. By using their preferred templates the specific activity of supernatant fractions varies markedly with the position of the cells in the cell-cycle, but the specific activity of nuclear fractions varies only slightly.


1984 ◽  
Vol 99 (5) ◽  
pp. 1794-1802 ◽  
Author(s):  
H C Smith ◽  
E Puvion ◽  
L A Buchholtz ◽  
R Berezney

Biochemical fractionation was combined with high resolution electron microscopic autoradiography to study the localization in rat liver nuclear matrix of attached DNA fragments, in vivo replicated DNA, and in vitro synthesized DNA. In particular, we determined the distribution of these DNA components with the peripheral nuclear lamina versus more internally localized structural elements of isolated nuclear matrix. Autoradiography demonstrated that the bulk of in vivo newly replicated DNA associated with the nuclear matrix (71%) was found within internal matrix regions. A similar interior localization was observed in isolated nuclei and in situ in whole liver tissue. Likewise, isolated nuclear lamina contained only a small amount (12%) of the total matrix-bound, newly replicated DNA. The structural localization of matrix-bound DNA fragments was examined following long-term in vivo labeling of the DNA. The radioactive DNA fragments were found predominantly within interior regions of the matrix structure (77%), and isolated nuclear lamina contained less than 15% of the total nuclear matrix-associated DNA. Most of the endogenous DNA template sites for the replicative enzyme DNA polymerase alpha (approximately 70%) were also sequestered within interior regions of the matrix. In contrast, a majority of the endogenous DNA template sites for DNA polymerase beta (a presumptive repair enzyme) were closely associated with the peripheral nuclear lamina. A similar spatial distribution for both polymerase activities was measured in isolated nuclei before matrix fractionation. Furthermore, isolated nuclear lamina contained only a small proportion of total matrix-bound DNA polymerase alpha endogenous and exogenous template activities (3-12%), but a considerable amount of the corresponding beta polymerase activities (47-52%). Our results support the hypothesis that DNA loops are both anchored and replicated at nuclear matrix-bound sites that are predominantly but not exclusively associated with interior components of the matrix structure. Our results also suggest that the sites of nuclear DNA polymerase beta-driven DNA synthesis are uniquely sequestered within the characteristic peripheral heterochromatin shell and associated nuclear envelope structure, where they may potentially participate in DNA repair and/or replicative functions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 89-92
Author(s):  
Muhammad Amir ◽  
Sabeera Afzal ◽  
Alia Ishaq

Polymerases were revealed first in 1970s. Most important to the modest perception the enzyme responsible for nuclear DNA replication that was pol , for DNA repair pol and for mitochondrial DNA replication pol  DNA construction and renovation done by DNA polymerases, so directing both the constancy and discrepancy of genetic information. Replication of genome initiate with DNA template-dependent fusion of small primers of RNA. This preliminary phase in replication of DNA demarcated as de novo primer synthesis which is catalyzed by specified polymerases known as primases. Sixteen diverse DNA-synthesizing enzymes about human perspective are devoted to replication, reparation, mutilation lenience, and inconsistency of nuclear DNA. But in dissimilarity, merely one DNA polymerase has been called in mitochondria. It has been suggest that PrimPol is extremely acting the roles by re-priming DNA replication in mitochondria to permit an effective and appropriate way replication to be accomplished. Investigations from a numeral of test site have significantly amplified our appreciative of the role, recruitment and regulation of the enzyme during DNA replication. Though, we are simply just start to increase in value the versatile roles that play PrimPol in eukaryote.


1983 ◽  
Vol 258 (11) ◽  
pp. 6698-6700 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Yagura ◽  
S Tanaka ◽  
T Kozu ◽  
T Seno ◽  
D Korn

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