Publication | Open Access
A deoxyribonucleic acid unwinding protein isolated from regenerating rat liver. Physical and functional properties.
67
Citations
27
References
1978
Year
Functional PropertiesMolecular BiologyDeoxyribonucleic AcidMolecular GeneticsSv40 DnaDouble HelixProtein ExpressionProtein FoldingBiochemical GeneticsDna PolymeraseProtein DegradationBiochemistryLiver PhysiologyOligonucleotideDna ReplicationNuclear OrganizationGene ExpressionCell BiologyLiverRat LiverProtein BiosynthesisChromatinNatural SciencesNucleic Acid BiochemistryLiver DiseaseMetabolismMedicine
A DNA-unwinding protein has been purified from regenerating rat liver cytosol to apparent homogeneity. The protein is present in about 10(6) copies per cell. It is a tetramer, composed of 25,000-dalton subunits which does not exhibit enzymatic activity for ATPase, DNA polymerase, or DNase. The protein is able to unwind the double helix of poly[d(A-T)], depressing the melting point of this synthetic polymer by about 40 degrees. It also binds to supercoiled SV40 DNA, probably by melting A-T-rich regions in the genome. The fully saturated complex of protein and SV40 DNA sediments at 30 S. Homologous DNA polymerases-alpha and -beta are stimulated by the protein at a different level depending on the templates used. This result argues in favor of the intervention of the unwinding protein in replication processes.
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