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Tat'yana I. Kolocheva

Bio: Tat'yana I. Kolocheva is an academic researcher from Russian Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Primer (molecular biology) & DNA polymerase I. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 9 publications receiving 209 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: RNA polymerase was treated in the presence of promoter-containing templates with 16 affinity reagents, derivatives on NMPs, NDPs and NTPs with reactive substituents at the terminal phosphate with super-selective affinity labelling because affinity reagent residues bound outside the active center were not elongated and thus remained non-radioactive.
Abstract: A method is proposed for localization of the sites of affinity labelling of the β subunit of Escherichia coli RNA polymerase. The principle of this method is similar to that of the methods of rapid sequencing of nucleic acids. The polypeptide bearing a radioactive affinity label at one of the amino acid residues is subjected to short-term treatment with cyanogen bromide. The conditions of this reaction are selected in such a way that less than one cleavage occurs on average per polypeptide chain. Two series of radioactive peptides are formed, one involving all the possible N-terminal peptides and the other the C-terminal peptides. The distribution of the lengths of these peptides is studied by means of gel electrophoresis and compared with the theoretical ones based on the known amino acid sequence of the β subunit. Obviously, the affinity label resides between the C-terminus of the shortest N-terminal radioactive peptide and the N-terminus of the shortest C-terminal radioactive peptide. In order to increase reliability and resolution of the method, partial trypsinolysis may be employed. The evidence obtained suggests that lysine residues over the regions 1036–1066, 1234–1242, and histidine-1237 are situated in the nearest neighbourhood to, or directly involved in the formation of the active center of initiating substrate binding of the β subunit of E. coli RNA polymerase.

101 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A hypothetical model for the template-primer interaction with DNA polymerases is suggested and it is likely that the mononucleoside units of the template form hydrophobic contacts with the enzymes.
Abstract: Pt2+ -containing derivatives of oligodeoxyribonucleotides were used to evaluate the ligand affinity to the template sites of Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I from E. coli and DNA polymerase I fr...

23 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present results and previously reported data indicate that the nucleoside components of the template form complexes as a result of their hydrophobic interactions with the enzyme.

20 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The possibility of using the short specific oligonucleotides and its derivatives as topoisomerase I-targeting drugs could not be excluded.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The interaction of Eco RI with different oligodeoxyribonucleotides (ODNs) was analyzed using the method of the slow step‐by‐step simplification in their complexity and Orthophosphate, 2‐deoxyribose 5‐phosphate and different dNMPs were shown to be the minimal ligands of the enzyme.
Abstract: The interaction of EcoRI with different oligodeoxyribonucleotides (ODNs) was analyzed using the method of the slow step-by-step simplification in their complexity. Orthophosphate (KI = 31 mM), 2-deoxyribose 5-phosphate (KI = 4.6 mM) and different dNMPs (KI = 2.1-2.5 mM) were shown to be the minimal ligands of the enzyme. The lengthening of a nonspecific d(pN)n (n = 1-6) by one nucleotide unit resulted in the increase of their affinity by a factor of approximately 2.0. Weak nonspecific electrostatic contacts of EcoRI with internucleotide phosphate groups of ODNs can account for about 5 orders of magnitude in the ligand affinity, whereas the contribution of specific interactions between EcoRI and d(pN)n is no more than 2 orders of magnitude of a total ODN's affinity.

18 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
16 Apr 1993-Science
TL;DR: Although this cocrystal structure appears to be an editing complex, it suggests that the primer strand approaches the catalytic site of the polymerase from the direction of the 3' to 5' exonuclease domain and that the duplex DNA product may bend to enter the cleft that contains the polypeptide catalyst site.
Abstract: Klenow fragment of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I, which was cocrystallized with duplex DNA, positioned 11 base pairs of DNA in a groove that lies at right angles to the cleft that contains the polymerase active site and is adjacent to the 3' to 5' exonuclease domain. When the fragment bound DNA, a region previously referred to as the "disordered domain" became more ordered and moved along with two helices toward the 3' to 5' exonuclease domain to form the binding groove. A single-stranded, 3' extension of three nucleotides bound to the 3' to 5' exonuclease active site. Although this cocrystal structure appears to be an editing complex, it suggests that the primer strand approaches the catalytic site of the polymerase from the direction of the 3' to 5' exonuclease domain and that the duplex DNA product may bend to enter the cleft that contains the polymerase catalytic site.

490 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Primer-directed amplification of DNA, at first used in PCR to amplify cognate regions present at very low levels in the genome, has extended DNA analysis to regions adjacent to sequenced DNA segments, to unknown DNA, and to the study of RNA-expressed sequences.
Abstract: G e n e t i c molecular markers are DNA segments that behave as landmarks for genome analysis. These segments usually represent variant or polymorphic sites that can be identified using general strategies such as molecular hybridization or enzymatic amplification of DNA. For years, DNA-based diagnostic markers have been used in general organismal identification and in the construction of genetic linkage maps. (1) The widely used restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs), for example, are molecular markers identified by endonuclease restriction and blot hybridization of DNA. (z) DNA amplification using PCR (3'4) has also been used extensively in many applications to study polymorphic loci, like hypervariable minisatellites (s) or microsatellites harboring simple sequence repeats, (6-8) and to generate sequence-tagged sites (STSs) (9) for genetic and physical mapping. Several strategies involving DNA replication, DNA ligation, or RNA transcription have been used for in vitro amplification of nucleic acids. (1~ However, PCR remains the most widely accepted amplification tool. Primer-directed amplification of DNA, at first used in PCR to amplify cognate regions present at very low levels in the genome, has extended DNA analysis to regions adjacent to sequenced DNA segments, to unknown DNA, and even to the study of RNA-expressed sequences. (~s-~7) Amplification strategies can be grouped according to the mechanism of the amplification process (Table 1). Amplification with specific primers in the PCR, for example, is a determinate process that requires prior knowledge of the template sequence and targets usually one defined amplification site. Similarly, amplification of interspersed repetitive sequences (IRS), like Alu-PCR (18) or REP-PCR, (19) are determinate processes that target multiple sites of defined sequence in both DNA strands. In contrast, amplification with degenerate primers in random indeterminate amplification processes, like random primed amplification (RPA), (2~ primer-extension preamplification (PEP), (21) and random PCR (rPCR), (22) take advantage of stochastic annealing events that randomly amplify nucleic acid stretches or even whole genomes by targeting sites of a noncognate nature. These random DNA amplification procedures are generally used for radioactive or fluorescent labeling of nucleic acids, to increase the amount of DNA in the construction of representative cDNA libraries, or for PCR typing of single haploid cells. Other kinds of amplification processes, although still determinate, do not require prior knowledge of template sequence and can target single or multiple sites in a genome or template molecule. These strategies can use either one arbitrary primer in conjunction with a specific primer (23) or one or more arbitrary primers (24-26) to study single or multiple amplicons, respectively, and can even be extended to the analysis of RNA populations. (27-28) In particular, strategies like gene-walking PCR (23) and differential cDNA PCR (27) study specific template regions arbitrary in length but juxtaposed to a known DNA segment defining a specific primer. Like anchored PCR, (29) these hemispecific reactions allow analysis of unknown genomic regions corresponding to mRNA sequences, or adjacent to STSs or sequenced stretches of DNA.

295 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence that a functional group on one of the tRNA substrates plays an essential catalytic role in the reaction is reported, suggesting that substrate assistance has been retained as a catalytic strategy during the evolution of the prebiotic peptidyl transferase center into the modern ribosome.
Abstract: The ribosome accelerates the rate of peptide bond formation by at least 10(7)-fold, but the catalytic mechanism remains controversial. Here we report evidence that a functional group on one of the tRNA substrates plays an essential catalytic role in the reaction. Substitution of the P-site tRNA A76 2' OH with 2' H or 2' F results in at least a 10(6)-fold reduction in the rate of peptide bond formation, but does not affect binding of the modified substrates. Such substrate-assisted catalysis is relatively uncommon among modern protein enzymes, but it is a property predicted to be essential for the evolution of enzymatic function. These results suggest that substrate assistance has been retained as a catalytic strategy during the evolution of the prebiotic peptidyl transferase center into the modern ribosome.

274 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The nucleotide sequence of the rpoB gene of Salmonella typhimurium was compared with known sequences from other sources and the conservative regions were detected, allowing some interesting conclusions to be made about the distribution of the functional domains in bacterial RNA polymerase and about the three-dimensional structure of its β subunit.
Abstract: The nucleotide sequence of the rpoB gene of Salmonella typhimurium has been determined in this work. It was compared with known sequences of the gene from other sources and the conservative regions were detected. This allowed some interesting conclusions to be made about the distribution of the functional domains in bacterial RNA polymerase and about the three-dimensional structure of its β subunit.

208 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
09 Jun 2000-Cell
TL;DR: The results provide a comprehensive description of protein-DNA interactions in RPo, permit construction of a detailed model for the structure of Rpo, and permit analysis of effects of a transcriptional activator on theructure of RPo.

183 citations