A New Mitochondrial Topoisomerase from Rat Liver That Catenates DNA
Abstract
Type-II DNA topoisomerases generate transient double-strand breaks and permit a double-stranded segment of DNA to pass through the break prior to resealing (Brown and Cozzarelli 1979; Liu et al. 1980; Mizuuchi et al. 1980). These enzymes not only can relax supercoiled DNA, possibly acting as swivelases, but also can reversibly generate catenanes and knots from closed circles. (Type-I enzymes can also generate catenanes, but at least one of the circles must be nicked [Tse and Wang 1980; Brown and Cozzarelli 1981].) DNA gyrase, a type-II topoisomerase, can also catalyze supercoiling. Such action could periodically introduce negative superturns into replicating mtDNA, keeping the molecule in an even greater energetically favorable state for unwinding W-C turns than could the relaxation induced by the N-C enzyme.
Evidence for an mtDNA gyrase has been obtained (Castora and Simpson 1979; F. J. Castora et al., in prep.). Using intact mitochondria capable of DNA replication (Parsons and Simpson 1967Parsons and Simpson 1973; Karol and Simpson 1968), we showed that in the presence of gyrase inhibitors, i.e., novobiocin. coumermycin, nalidixic acid, and oxolinic acid, (1) incorporation of [3H]dATP into mtDNA is inhibited, (2) incorporation into supercoiled DNA is inhibited...
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PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.143-154