Retroviral integrase, one of only three enzymes encoded by the virus, catalyzes the essential step of inserting a DNA copy of the viral genome into the host during infection. Using the avian sarcoma virus integrase, we demonstrate that the enzyme functions as a tetramer. In presteady-state active site titrations, four integrase protomers were required for a single catalytic turnover.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Escherichia coli MutY adenine glycosylase plays a critical role in repairing mismatches in DNA between adenine and the oxidatively damaged guanine base 8-oxoguanine. Crystallographic studies of the catalytic core domain of MutY show that the scissile adenine is extruded from the DNA helix to be bound in the active site of the enzyme (Guan, Y., Manuel, R.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntegrase catalyzes insertion of a retroviral genome into the host chromosome. After reverse transcription, integrase binds specifically to the ends of the duplex retroviral DNA, endonucleolytically cleaves two nucleotides from each 3'-end (the processing activity), and inserts these ends into the host DNA (the joining activity) in a concerted manner. In first-turnover experiments with synapsed DNA substrates, we observed a novel splicing activity that resembles an integrase joining reaction but uses unprocessed ends.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe integrase-catalyzed insertion of the retroviral genome into the host chromosome involves two reactions in vivo: 1) the binding and endonucleolytic removal of the terminal dinucleotides of the viral DNA termini and 2) the recombination of the ends with the host DNA. Kukolj and Skalka (Kukolj, G., and Skalka, A.
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