Gene interactions and pathways from curated databases and text-mining
Biochemistry 1986, PMID: 3026453

The dnaB protein of Escherichia coli: mechanism of nucleotide binding, hydrolysis, and modulation by dnaC protein.

Biswas, E E; Biswas, S B; Bishop, J E

The mechanism of nucleotide binding and hydrolysis by dnaB protein and dnaB X dnaC protein complex has been studied by using fluorescent nucleotide analogues. Binding of trinitrophenyladenosine triphosphate (TNP-ATP) or the corresponding diphosphate (TNP-ADP) results in a blue shift of the emission maximum and a severalfold amplification of the fluorescence emission of the nucleotide analogues. Scatchard analysis of TNP-ATP binding indicates that TNP-ATP binds with a high affinity (Kd = 0.87 microM) and a 8.5-fold enhancement of fluorescence emission of the nucleotide. Only three molecules of TNP-ATP or TNP-ADP bind per hexamer of dnaB protein in contrast to six molecules of ATP or ADP binding to a dnaB hexamer. TNP-ATP and TNP-ADP are both competitive inhibitors of single-stranded (SS) DNA-dependent ATPase activity of dnaB protein. TNP-AMP neither binds to dnaB protein nor inhibits the ATPase activity. Formation of dnaB X dnaC complex by dnaC protein results in diminution of the TNP-ATP fluorescence enhancement and a concomitant decrease in the SS DNA-dependent ATPase activity. Kinetic analysis of the ATPase activity of dnaB X dnaC complex indicates that the decrease in the ATPase activity on complex formation is due to a reduction of the maximal velocity (Vmax). The dnaB protein hydrolyzes both TNP-ATP and dATP, however, with an extremely slow rate in the presence of single-stranded M13 DNA. The 2'-OH group of the nucleotide most likely plays an important role in the hydrolysis reaction but not in the nucleotide binding.

Document information provided by NCBI PubMed

Text Mining Data

ATPase ⊣ TNP-AMP: " TNP-AMP neither binds to dnaB protein nor inhibits the ATPase activity "

Manually curated Databases

No curated data.